22 A.D. 117 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1897
The action was brought to recover for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the defendants’ negligence. Upon proofs sufficient for the consideration of the jury, the case was submitted to them upon a charge which was entirely unexceptional. The jury at first returned a verdict for the plaintiff for six cents damages. This the learned trial judge refused to accept. We quote his observations as they appear in the record :
*117 “ The Court: We cannot accept that verdict. That verdict is inconsistent. If yon believe the plaintiff was injured in the manner in which she claims she was injured, and through the fault of the defendants solely and without any fault of her own, she is entitled to more than nominal damages. You may again retire and further deliberate on your verdict.
“ If the plaintiff sustained the injury she complains of in this*118 action, and if she has sustained these injuries solely through the fault of the defendants and without fault of her own, she is entitled to more than nominal damages. I need only call your attention to that, and you will see that that verdict is inconsistent. You may again retire and see if you can agree.” The defendants’ counsel excepted to this ruling and asked that the jury be discharged. The jury, however, retired and subsequently returned a verdict for the plaintiff for $250, upon which the judgment appealed from was entered.
As we have seen, the evidence fully warranted the judge’s action in requesting reconsideration, and we think he acted discreetly as well as firmly in sending the jury back. In view of the verdict for the plaintiff, the mistake was solely in the award of nominal damages. The jury could not, upon the evidence, have said that the damages were inappreciable. The judge was right, therefore, in calling their attention to the inconsistency of such a verdict, and instructing them that they had made a mistake, and that, if the plaintiff was entitled to recover at all, which was thus still left to them to decide, she was entitled to at least more than nominal damages.
The judgment was right and should be affirmed, with costs.
Van Brunt, P. J., Bumset, Williams and Patterson, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed, with costs.