Sherlock v. Dinneen

176 N.W. 519 | S.D. | 1920

GATE.S, . J.

Action for personal injuries. Verdict and judgment for plaintiff for $2,541.67 and costs. Defendants appeal from an order denying new trial, the appeal from the judgment not having been taken within the time allowed by law.

Plaintiff, a man 52 years of age, was in the employ, of defendants, as janitor of the Dinneen block, a business block in the city of Huron, and had been for about seven months prior to the injury. He also did janitor wforlc for the Elks’ building. In the sidewalk in front of the Dinneen block there was an iron trapdoor, opening (into- a stairway to the basement, where was situated the heating plant. Attached to the door was a large heavy stone as a counterbalance, the purpose of which was to ease the weight in lifting the door from the sidewalk, and to retard its progress in going down. The stone was attached by means of an iron band around the long way of *536the stone. In the early morning of January 22, 1917, plaintiff opened the trapdoor as usual, but for some reason the door came down upon him as he Went down the stairway, and rendered him temporarily unconscious. Plaintiff testified that he found the stone had slipped out from the iron band. One finger of ,his right hand was pinched severe^, resulting in partially loosening the nail from its bed. He promptly seoured thé services of a physician, who cleansed and dressed the wound, and plaintiff resumed his work until about February 3. After that he superintended the work, having a subemploye. He had the wound treated every day for three or four days; after that, every other day until February 9. On the last-named date, or 18 days after the injury, infection developed, which caused plaintiff much pain and suffering, loss of time, and medical expense.- A permanent cure Was not effected until the following. November, but the result was a permanently stiff finger. -The undisputed evidence is that plaintiff never complained to defendants in regard to the accident. One of the defendants who had the management of the building testified that he saw plaintiff with his finger bound up, and asked him what the matter was, and that plaintiff said he got it pinched in the door; that about a week after the accident he asked plaintiff how his finger was, and plaintiff said, “Getting along fine.” This testimony is undisputed. The undisputed testimony also shows that the same defendant was one of the managers of the Elks’ building, and that on February 9, he discharged plaintiff from both jobs for incompetence. The first knowledge defendants had of any complaint about the injury was after thip time, when they received a letter from plaintiff’s- attorney, Mr. Kelley.

[1, 2] Plaintiff’s physician testified that if infection developed from a wound, it usually came within three to five days after the injury. The defendant submitted the testimony of two physicians, who testified that in their opinion the infection arose from some cause other than the injury, and at a later date. One of them testified that infection might arise from 12 to 100 hours after the injury; -but, if it arose later than that, it was improbable that the injury whs the cause of the infection. The other testified that infection 'would' be more apt to be from a later cause, if it arose eight or ten days after *537the injury. Here the infection did not arise until r8 days after the injury. If the infection was not attributable to the injury, but arose fromi some later cause, the primary injury was not the proximate cause of the serious results occurring from -the infection. In view of the evidence and the probability that germs got into the wound by reason of the continuance of the plaintiff at his janitor work until February 3, the following instruction to the jury, requested by defendants, should have been given:

“Relative to the infection that developed from the injury to the plaintiff’s finger, you are instructed' that the plaintiff must- satisfy you by a preponderance of the evidence that this infection was caused by the primary injury on January 22, 1917, and not from any secondary infection from any cause whatever subsequent to January 22, 1917, and if you are not satisfied that a preponderance of the evidence shows that this infection actually developed from the injury of January 22, 1917, and not from any cause subsequent thereto, the plaintiff cannot recover for any pain or suffering or injury resulting from such infection.”

[3] The court not only refused that instruction, but told the jury that: “The opinions of witnesses as experts are merely advisory, and not binding on the jury.” This, however, was not excepted to, but in view of the giving of that instruction and the refusal of the other, coupled with the facts in the case, we think it clearly apparent that prejudice resulted from- the refusal of the requested instruction.

[4] Testimony of a former janitor, and who was janitor when the counterbalance was affixed, was -excluded. It was material and relevant to the issues, and should have been received.

• Upon the last day of the trial, the following proceedings occurred, the plaintiff being examined by defendants’ counsel:

“Q. Last night after this case adjourned, were you not in communication with jurymen, showing them this door where this injury was claimed to have occurred? A. I didn’t have nothing to do with the door. I stood there when the door was raised.
“Q. You were talking to them? A. I. don’t know as I was talking to them. Mr. Bowe and I were talking there.
*538“0. You were talking to them, weren’t you, and- you showed . them the door, too, didn’t you ?”

An objection and a court ruling prevented further examination at that time. Upon the motion for new trial the affidavits of E. B. Dinneen and A. W. Wilmarth stated, in substance, as follows:

“That dulling the trial of this case, on coming from the courthouse, they saw near the trapdoor in the sidewalk, where the accident occurred, the plaintiff, in conversation with two of the jurors, and pointing to> the door and the opening. That plaintiff saw these affiants, and immediately turned and walked away from' the door and the jurors, and that subsequent to this time the case was argued and the court charged the jury.”

The affidavit of plaintiff, after referring to the above affidavits was as follows:

“That he denies the statements contained therein, and especially denies that deponents therein saw the plaintiff in con-, versatiom with two of the jurors, or pointing to the trapdoor in question, and that plaintiff looked around and saw these affiants coming, and immediately turned and walked awa)r from the door and the jurors with whom he was conversing. Deponent further alleges that he had no conversation, with any of the jurors, either before or during the trial of said action, or was in any way associated with them, or any of them, or in any way talked wlith them, either in relation to this case or otherwise. And that deponents, one of whom is a defendant in said action, and the other, who is the attorney for the defendant, are absolutely mistaken in making the declarations contained in said affidavit relative to this deponent having any conversation with any juror whatever during’ the trial of said action.”

[5] By his own admissions while on the witness stand, it clearly appears that plaintiff, the witness Bowe, and.two jurors were present at the place of injury; that the door .was,raised, and that plaintiff was talking to the witness Bowe in the presence of the two jurors. Thlis was not in any way denied or qualified in plaintiff’s affidavit. The trial court should have promptly granted a new trial for this reason if for no other. McDaniels v. McDaniels, 40 Vt. 363, 94 Am. Dec. 408. The *539confidence of litigants and the public in the integrity of verdicts must not be allowed to be diminished, as it would be if this verdict should be permitted to stand.

[6] Finally, we think the verdict was grossly excessive and -unconscionable, and mu-st have been, granted under the influence of passion- or prejudice. We find a basis-from which such prejudice probably arose in certain remarks to the jury, made by counsel for plaintiff, to which exception was taken, and from affidavits of j-uror.s, taken for another purpose, in which it appeared that the lowest amount any juror voted for was $i,8oo, while some of them, voted for $5,000. Plaintiff was a man 52 years of age. He had learned no trade. His capabilities were limited to ordinary manual labor. His‘ permanent injury was a stiffened finger. Plis physician’s bill was $162. Even if all of this hill and all of his pain and suffering and his partial loss of wages from February to November and the stiffened finger were caused solely by the injury, yet the amount of the verdict -was grossly excessive. At the time of injury plaintiff was receiving $80 per month from the two sources. At the time of trial, 14 months after the injury, he was serving as janitor at a school building, and was receiving $70 a month. It does not appear from' the evidence that plaintiff is barred' from effectively doing such work by reason of the-stiffened finger.

The order denying a new trial is reversed.