30 A. 419 | N.H. | 1892
Whether justice required the allowance of the amendment increasing the ad damnum was a question for the trial court, and ordinarily such questions will not be revised at the law term. Broadhurst v. Morgan,
The statement required by Gen. Laws, c. 75, s. 7, must be filed within ten days from the date when the traveller was injured. He is required to give, among other matters, a full description of his injuries, the extent of the same, and the amount of damages claimed therefor. The statement is sufficient, if it describes the injury as it existed at the time it was filed. "The plaintiff may recover damages not only for the injury described, but also for all the directly resultant injurious consequences, though they may not appear until long afterwards." Robin v. Bartlett,
The plaintiff's counsel, in his closing argument, said, — "When people get $1,200 or $1,500 for a fracture, is $3,000 too much in this case?" The plaintiff contends that this remark could not have influenced the verdict, unless on the question of damages; that it had no relevancy upon the question whether there was a defect in the highway, which the city was in fault for permitting to exist. By this remark it was intended the jury should understand that in this class of cases juries commonly award damages for fractures in sums varying from $1,200 to $1,500. The plaintiff would not have been allowed to show by evidence for what sums *185
verdicts for fractures have been recovered. The remark was incompetent, and tended to prejudice the defendants. It is impossible for the court here to say how far the jurors may have been influenced in their verdict upon the question of the defendants' liability by the unwarranted remark. A person cannot always appreciate the influences that lead to a result. Jacques v. Horse Railroad,
Verdict set aside.
BLODGETT, J., did not sit: the others concurred.