132 P. 1133 | Mont. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
On the evening of November 4,1910, while plaintiff was riding a bicycle along First street, in the city of Kalispell, he ran into an unguarded excavation, was thrown to the ground and injured. He brought this action and recovered a judgment for $3,500. The city has appealed from the judgment and from an order denying it a new trial.
There is presented to us a record of more than eighty pages, which does not contain a single exception reserved by either party. The appellant contends: (a) That the complaint does not state a cause of action; (b) that the evidence-shows that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence as a matter of law; and (c) that the verdict is excessive.
1. The complaint is attacked because it fails to state facts exculpating plaintiff from the imputation of contributory
Counsel for appellant invoke the rule applied in Kennon v. Gilmer, 4 Mont. 433, 2 Pac. 21, Badovinac v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 39 Mont. 454, 104 Pac. 543, and Lynes v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co., 43 Mont. 317, Ann. Cas. 1912C, 183, 117 Pac. 81. In each of those cases the plaintiff alleged in his complaint that he jumped from a moving vehicle and sustained the injury of which he complained. This court held in each instance “that where plaintiff’s own act is a proximate cause of his injury, he must allege and prove that in doing the particular act he was moved by those considerations for his own safety which would actuate a reasonably prudent person, similarly situated, to do as he did.” But the rule of those cases has no application here. As pointed out in the recent decision in Hollenback v. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp., 46 Mont. 559, 129 Pac. 1058, the rule above referred to applies only to a complaint which shows affirmatively that the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury was his own act. This complaint charges that the negligence of the city in leaving the excavation unguarded was the proximate cause of plaintiff’s injury, and for this reason it is not open to the attack made upon it.
2. Does the evidence show contributory negligence on plaintiff’s part as a matter of law? Waiving the question of the
It is no argument at all to say that if plaintiff had traveled in the middle of the street he would not have been injured, for there was a safe driveway about twelve feet wide provided in that part of the street. The most favorable view for appellant
The very charge now made by the city that the plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence presupposes actionable
The instructions fairly presented to the jury the duty imposed upon plaintiff as well as the rights and liabilities of the city.
3. Finally, appellant insists that the verdict is excessive. We shall not undertake to give even a summary of the evidence. There is not any fixed standard by which to measure the money compensation for a personal injury. In every instance where the elements of pain andi suffering enter into consideration, much must be left to the enlightened judgment and common sense of the jurors. In Bourke v. Butte El. Ry. Co., 33 Mont. 267, 83 Pac. 470, this court said: “However, the elements of physical and mental pain and suffering are entirely uncertain and no fixed standard can be established for ascertaining the damages occasioned by them. The amount must, of necessity, rest in the sound discretion of the jury, and courts are very reluctant to interfere with the verdict upon the ground that it is excessive or insufficient. The parties are entitled to a verdict from the jury, and courts ought not to substitute their judgments for those of juries, except in those exceptional eases where it manifestly appears that the jurors made a mistake in calculation, considered an item or items of damages which should not have been considered or abused that sound discretion which by law is vested in them.” Again, in Hollenback v. Stone & Webster Engineering Corp., above, it was said: “If it is possible from the evidence in this record to account for the amount of the verdict, then this court oug’ht not to interfere. * * * Under the statute, the amount of the verdict must, of necessity, rest in the sound discretion of the jury. The parties are entitled to a verdict from the jury; and it is only in rare instances that the court is justified in interfering, unless the record discloses that the elements of passion and prejudice have influenced the minds of the jurors in arriving at the result.”
At the time of his injury, plaintiff was an able-bodied man, forty-four years of age, with a life expectancy of about twenty-five years. He was apparently a skilled mechanic — a woodworker by occupation — capable of earning, and actually earning, from $160 to $175 per month. For the first nine months after the injury he was under the doctor's care and for six
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Affirmed.