297 P. 603 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1931
The plaintiff had judgment against the defendant in the sum of $10,800, for and on account of personal injuries suffered in an automobile collision alleged to be due to the negligence of the defendant. From this judgment the defendant appeals.
The complaint alleges that on or about the seventeenth day of March, 1929, the plaintiff was riding in a certain automobile which was being driven in a southerly direction along the state highway running between the towns of Fairfield and Cordelia, in the county of Solano; that on the same day the defendant was driving an automobile in a general northerly direction along the same highway; that the defendant so carelessly, negligently and unlawfully drove and operated his automobile as to cause the same to collide with the automobile in which the plaintiff was riding, thereby causing the plaintiff serious personal injuries, which injuries were alleged to be as follows: A fracture and dislocation of the coccyx; a fracture of the fifth *578 lumbar vertebra on the right side in the lamina; and severe bruises of the body and legs. The complaint further alleges that by reason of such injuries plaintiff has been unable to attend to her ordinary duties as housewife, etc., has employed doctors, has incurred expenses, etc. The complaint also contains a second cause of action wherein it is alleged that at the time the defendant was driving his automobile in a general northerly direction along the highway referred to, the defendant was under the influence of intoxicating liquor, and so carelessly and negligently operated and drove his automobile as to cause the same to collide with the automobile in which the plaintiff was riding, causing the personal injuries set forth herein. The answer of the defendant denies that he carelessly, negligently or unlawfully drove his automobile, or caused the same to collide with an automobile in which the plaintiff was riding; denies that the plaintiff has suffered the injuries alleged in her complaint, and likewise denies that at the time of the collision the defendant was under the influence of intoxicating liquor, in any degree whatsoever; and further denies the allegations set forth in plaintiff's second cause of action that he operated his automobile in a careless or negligent or unlawful manner.
Upon this appeal the appellant alleges three reasons why the judgment should be reversed: 1. That the court erred in permitting the plaintiff to prove the facts and circumstances surrounding and attendant upon the collision; 2. That the court erred in the admission of testimony, and that counsel for the plaintiff was guilty of misconduct prejudicial to the defendant; and 3. That the judgment is excessive.
[1] After the jury had been impaneled, and before any opening statement had been made, counsel for the defendant made the following statement: "Mr. Raines: Your Honor, before counsel proceeds, I think it is now in order for the defendant, under the conditions here, to make a statement as to his position, that is, as to the position of the defendant Rennick, so that it will expedite the matter and clarify the issues to be presented to the jury in this case. The defendant, of course, is charged with negligence; we are admitting, what we call admitting, liability in this action; we are admitting responsibility for the accident itself, which, under the conditions, will limit the question to *579 go to the jury as to the amount of damages to be awarded the plaintiff. I make this statement at this time so that this may guide counsel and ourselves in making the statement and the conduct of the case itself." Following this admission on the part of the defendant, counsel for the plaintiff made an opening statement detailing the facts and circumstances of the collision, and then introduced testimony to prove the facts and circumstances as outlined in the opening statement. To all of these matters the defendant interposed timely and appropriate objections, which the court overruled.
While the argument of counsel for appellant is confined to the second error alleged, to wit, the admission of certain testimony, it is necessary in the consideration thereof, to determine whether, under the state of the pleadings, the plaintiff in this case was entitled to introduce testimony as to the facts and circumstances constituting the grounds upon which it sought to charge the defendant with liability for the injuries suffered by the plaintiff.
It will be noted that the defendant did not admit the facts and circumstances resulting in the collision. The admission is only, in the language of counsel, "what we call admitting liability in this action; we are admitting responsibility for the accident itself". This, under the settled law of this state, does not preclude the plaintiff from introducing testimony to substantiate the allegations in the complaint.
In the case of Martin v. Pacific Gas Elec. Co.,
To the same effect we may cite the following: Jones v.Allan, 85 Fed. 523; 5 Wigmore on Evidence, 2d ed., p. 607, sec. 2591; People v. Fredericks,
With the holding of these cases in view, we may now consider the testimony alleged to be prejudicial. A witness on the part of the plaintiff testified that he had a conversation with the defendant immediately after the collision, a considerable portion of which is confessedly immaterial, and we will quote only that portion to which appellant's argument is directed. "I asked him his name (referring to the defendant); he said `J.L. Doaks'. Q. Did you have any further conversation with him? A. Well, yes, I did. Q. Well, what else, if anything, was said if anything, between you and the occupant of the car? (referring to the defendant). A. He said, `I'm in a hell of a hole'; and I said, `I know you are'. A. He said, `I'm drunk and I know I'm drunk; I don't care about anything. Is the baby all right?' (defendant looking up and seeing the baby). I said, `The baby is all right'; and then I asked him where he lived, and got no answer. Q. Anything else said? A. He said, `Don't worry, everything is all right. I got 100,000. or 200,000. dollars insurance, and you don't have to worry about insurance; I will take care of everything; but is the baby all right?'"
[2] Upon motion of defendant the court struck out the answer in so far as it related to insurance, and directed the jury to disregard the same. The witness further testified as to the intoxicated condition of the defendant, which was corroborated by other witnesses. The admission of the answer of the defendant is assigned as prejudicial error, and the eliciting of the same as misconduct on the part of counsel for the plaintiff, necessitating a reversal of the judgment.
A number of cases have had to do with testimony disclosing the fact of insurance. Before considering these cases we may call attention, very properly, to the character of the answer made by the defendant that he had one hundred thousand or two hundred thousand dollars insurance, as being the vaporings of a drunken mind, and not a statement of any facts whatever. Even if it be assumed *582 which seems to us incredible, that the defendant was insured to the amount of $100,000 or $200,000, as he stated, the question still remains whether his answer elicited in the manner in which it was, constituted prejudicial error, irrespective of the order of the court striking it out and directing the jury to disregard the same.
This court has had to do recently with several cases involving reference to insurance. In Loggie v. Interstate Transit Co.,
In the case of Squires v. Riffe et al.,
In the case at bar, from an examination of the record, we find that the jury could not, consistently with their oaths, have rendered any verdict for the defendant. It is not a question of where the testimony is evenly balanced, but one where it is only a question of how much.
In the case of Bach et al. v. C. Swanston Son,
In the case of Symons v. Wooden et al.,
A number of other cases cited by counsel for respondent might be reviewed showing that where the fact of insurance is disclosed in an answer, coupled with an acknowledgment of liability, prejudicial error cannot be assigned, but the *585 authorities which we have heretofore cited, we think sufficient to establish the following rules: First, that where the answer disclosing the insurance is inextricably coupled with an acknowledgment of liability, the answer is admissible; second, that where it appears from the testimony in the record that no verdict could have been rendered for the defendant, the admission of testimony relative to insurance is not alone sufficient to authorize a reversal of the judgment. It must further appear that the judgment returned was the result of passion or prejudice. This involves the third assignment of error, to wit, that the verdict is excessive.
In the case of Potter v. Driver, supra, this court quoted from Zibbell v. Southern Pac. Co.,
That the jury may have erred in judgment, or awarded damages in a greater sum than would have been fixed by an appellate court, furnishes no legal reason for a reversal of the judgment. [3] The fixing of the amount of damages to be awarded an injured person rests primarily upon the every-day experience and common judgment of the jury, dependent upon the circumstances of the particular case involved, subject to the revision and determination of the trial judge who has had the opportunity, as well as the jury, to learn all the facts at first hand, and the responsibility resting upon the trial judge cannot be shifted to an appellate court unless the award is so great and so disproportionate to the injuries suffered as to clearly show the verdict to be a result of something other than a proper consideration of the testimony in the case — there must be a showing of passion, prejudice or other undue influence. As we have shown, the record contains no testimony that should not have been submitted to the jury. The rulings *586 of the trial court appear to be wholly unobjectionable. We are presented, really, with the simple question of the amount of the verdict in a case where liability stands confessed.
[4] Is the verdict so excessive as to shock the conscience and lead us to the conclusion that it is not fairly supported? The record shows that the plaintiff in this case was a married woman of about twenty-six years of age, the mother of one child; that at the time of the collision the plaintiff was hurled back and forth in the automobile, suffered a fractured coccyx (the coccyx being the last segment of the spine), a fracture of the lamina of the lower lumbar vertebra. As a result of the injuries, respondent suffered much pain, and continued to suffer pain up to the time of the trial. While the respondent did not spend much time in the hospital, she was confined to her bed for a considerable period. The testimony shows that the dislocated coccyx projected into the rectum so that its functions became very acute. The coccyx is the center of very sensitive terminal nerves of the spine, and a fracture thereof produces much pain. It also appears that the fractured vertebra resulted in much pain to the respondent; that these pains will continue unless the respondent undergoes a rather serious surgical operation; that it would be necessary to remove the coccyx or the broken portion thereof; that the respondent is compelled to wear a brace, and must continue to wear the same unless she undergoes what one of the doctors called "two surgical operations"; that the respondent, though a married woman, will have to forego motherhood in the future, unless she is willing to suffer abnormal pains. Besides these injuries, the respondent has been rendered nervous, and also is unable to sit in a normal position.
Some of these facts which we have related were disputed by testimony introduced on the part of the appellant, but what we have stated we think the jury was entitled to accept as true, as following from a clear preponderance of the testimony.
In an extended note covering approximately 196 pages appended to the case of Quinn v. Chicago, Mil. St. Paul Ry. Co., 46 A.L.R. 1928, are collected a large number of cases dealing with verdicts in personal injury cases. A considerable number of these cases involve causes which *587 were tried at a time when the purchasing power of money was much greater than at present, which fact must be taken into consideration when considering an award of damages, as an award of damages in the sum of $7,500 made prior to the World War would, in purchasing power, we think, equal the award in this case. The difference in the purchasing power of money is a common fact of which we think we may properly take notice.
An examination of the cases quoted in the annotation to which we have referred, and which is so extensive that we cannot catalogue any of them, leads to the conclusion that the verdict in this case, based upon the injuries suffered by the plaintiff, is in nowise disproportionate to corresponding cases there quoted.
The recent case of Wulferdinger v. Pickwick Stages System,
A number of other cases have been cited by respondent but their consideration appears to us unnecessary. We find nothing in the record justifying a conclusion that the verdict is excessive or that the amount thereof has been increased by reason of any improper conduct upon the part of counsel, or error of the court in the admission of testimony.
The judgment is affirmed.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the District Court of Appeal on April 15, 1931, and a petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the Supreme Court, after judgment in the District Court of Appeal, was denied by the Supreme Court on May 14, 1931. *588