206 Mass. 53 | Mass. | 1910
The questions in this case come before us upon exceptions taken at the hearing
In submitting the case to the jury the judge directed them toreturn a general verdict, and also to answer two questions, as follows:
“ 1. Was the plaintiff thrown from his seat toward the middle of the car by the collision ?
“ 2. Is the present condition of the plaintiff due to violence received at the time of the collision?”
In connection with the first question the judge said: “ The form of the answer I shall not attempt to prescribe for the jury; the jury will make such answer as to the jury seems proper. . . . You may answer Yes or No, or in any other form of words which expresses the response of the jury to the question.” In connection with the second question the judge said of the answer : “It may be Yes or No simply, or with any addition which the jury think should be added to a simple Yes or No, or in any other form whatever which is satisfactory to the jury.” The jury returned a general verdict for the plaintiff for $3,000, and to the first question answered “ No,” and to the second question answered “ Disagree.”
A motion to set aside the verdict and grant a new trial was filed on eight different grounds, stated at length, but those which present a substantial question of law may be summarized as being, in substance, although expressed in different forms, that the answer to the second question was inconsistent with the proper and lawful return of a general verdict for an agreed sum as damages.
The answers must be considered as parts of the whole verdict, and if different parts of it are necessarily inconsistent with one another, it is erroneous in law, and must be set aside. Lufkin v. Hitchcock, 194 Mass. 231. Wakefield v. Wakefield Water Co. 182 Mass. 429.
The judge found at the hearing that one of the main questions in the case was whether the permanently diseased condition of the spinal cord was due to violence inflicted at the time of the collision. A general agreement of the jury as to the extent of the injury caused by the collision was essential to a return of a proper verdict as to the amount of the damages, and this
This finding seems well warranted by the evidence. When we keep in mind the direction of the judge as to the answer to the second question, and the difficulty of framing an answer which would express with accuracy, to the satisfaction of all the different jurors, the particulars in which the present condition of the plaintiff was due to violence received at the time of the collision, and the particulars in which it was not caused or affected thereby, and the extent and degree to which the present condition was due to violence, although the jury might be in agreement as to the general effect of the violence and the impairment produced by it, we do not think that the failure of the jury to agree upon the form of an answer, shows that they did not agree in substance upon all the elements that necessarily enter into a proper assessment of damages. There was no error of law in the refusal of the judge to set aside the verdict on this ground. Wakefield v. Wakefield Water Co. 182 Mass. 429. Florence Machine Co. v. Daggett, 135 Mass. 582. Sutherland v. Standard Ins. Co. 87 Iowa, 505, 513. Chicago & Northwestern Railway v. Dunleavy, 129 Ill. 132, 148. Schneider v. Chicago, Burlington & Northern Railroad, 42 Minn. 68.
Another ground on which the plaintiff moved for a new trial was that the “ verdict was irregularly and improperly found, returned, received and recorded.”
It is apparent that all parties acted in good faith after the jury went out, and there is no reason to suppose that the mistake of the officer, in thinking that there had been no agreement and in leaving the papers unsealed upon the desk of the clerk of the court until morning,
Exceptions overruled.
Before Schofield, J., the trial judge.
The ear was a closed one with seats running lengthwise on each side. The plaintiff testified that he was thrown from his seat toward the middle of the car by the force of the collision.
An affidavit of one of the counsel for the plaintiff in support of the motion for a new trial stated that such counsel made inquiry of Robert McLeish, the court officer in charge of the jury in the case of Joseph W. Reilly, regarding the custody of the verdict, and that the officer told him that in accordance with his instructions he, late at night, took the papers