This is an appeal from an order denying motions for judgment n. o. v. and new trial. A jury awarded damages to appellees in their negligence action against appellant. The sole issue before us is whether the lower court erred in not granting appellant’s request that it charge the jury that:
If you find as a fact that the car operated by the Plaintiff, Tiny Jo Parise, was equipped with a seat belt system and that the Plaintiff, Tiny Jo Parise, failed to use the seat belts at the time of the accident, you may use this fact of a failure to use the seat belt as evidence of contributory negligence on the issue of damages only, if you also find as a fact that there was competent testimony showing a causal connection between the nonuse of the ^eat belt and the injuries.
*81 Record at 19a-20a.
Mrs. Parise testified that her car was equipped with lap seat belts, but that she was not wearing them at the time the accident occurred. Record at 81a. She testified that when her car collided with appellant’s car, she was thrown forward, her chest hitting the steering wheel and her knees going into and under the dashboard, Record at 81a, and that when she regained consciousness, she was lying on the steering wheel, face down, Record at 89a. Mrs. Parise was taken to the hospital, where she noticed bruises on her chest around her ribs; she attributed these to having hit the steering wheel. Record at 44a. She testified that since the accident she has had continuous problems with her legs and lower back. Record at 65a. Dr. Evan C. Reese, an orthopedic surgeon, testified that he had treated Mrs. Parise for an injury to her left knee, which he regarded as consistent with the history she had given him of being hurt in the accident. Record at 142a-145a.
The lower court, sitting en banc, upheld the trial judge’s refusal to give the requested instruction by stating that “no causal connection between the non-use of the seat belts and [Mrs. Parise’s] injuries has been demonstrated in this case.” Record at 221a.
It is axiomatic that “a trial judge should not instruct a jury to find a material fact in the absence of evidence to support the finding.”
Heffernan
v.
Rosser,
*82
Appellant argues that “it is within the realm of common knowledge that seat belts restrain sudden forward motion,” and that “[t]his being true,” the jury should have been allowed to infer “that had such restraint been used in the present case, the force with which Mrs. Parise struck the wheel and dashboard would have been reduced or eliminated, thereby reducing the extent of her knee and chest injuries altogether.” Appellant’s Brief at 8-9. We are not persuaded by this argument. As appellant acknowledges, “of course, it is true that the jury could have inferred that the use of a seat belt would not have restrained Mrs. Parise’s forward motion and accordingly could have concluded Mrs. Parise’s nonuse of restraint had no effect on her knee and chest injuries.” Appellant’s Brief at 9. In
Spier v. Barker,
Our decision today should not be seen as foreclosing the possibility of a so-called “seat belt defense” in future cases. There is a split of authority as to the seat belt defense. Illinois, New York, and Wisconsin recognize the rule that the plaintiff’s failure to wear seat belts may, on proper proof, result in a finding that the plaintiff failed to mitigate damages.
See Dudanas v. Plate,
Affirmed.
