86 W. Va. 379 | W. Va. | 1920
. In this action for damages consequent upon a personal injury occasioned by a defect in a city street, the principal defenses are that the defendant exercised reasonable care both in the repair work to which the defect was incident and in warning as to its existence, and that the, plaintiff sustained no actionable injury, or, if any, not enough to justify the verdict for $1,000.00, which the jury awarded him.
The defect was a soft place in an unpaved street, large enough for a wagon wheel to drop into and deep enough to cause a wagon to upset, in the event of the dropping of one of its wheels into it, and made by excavation for repair of a water-pipe and refilling with wet and soft earth, a sort of muck. This was done in hot weather and a thin crust on top hardened, but beneath it there was no support for a heavy wagon-wheel. The surface of the fill was level with the surface, of the street and smooth. According to the testimony of witnesses for the defendant, -a sharp pointed board, from three to five feet long, was stuck and left standing in the place as a warning. As described by one witness, the board was about six inches wide at one e,nd and tapered to a point and about half or more of it stood above the surface. The accident occurred the ne,xt day after the excavation and filling were done, and the plaintiff swears he saw no board sticking up there, and that he is positive there was none. The jury might well have found from the evidence, that it had
The plaintiff was the driver of a covered ice-wagon carrying something less than 1,000 pounds of ice,. When a front wheel dropped into the hole, he started to fall forward, as he thinks, and the wagon turned over on its side, the ice in it having slid forward as the wheel went down. All of his body, except his head, was under the wagon top and the ice. After he was rescued, it was found that he had sustained no fractures of any bones, nor, so far as the evidence discloses, any dislocations. His left shoulder and one hip were severely bruised, the former much worse than the latter. He swears his shoulder is still tender and gives him considerable pain and discomfort. He lost only a few days time and the professional charges on account of medical attention and treatment given him, were small.
Complaint is made of the refusal of five instructions asked for by the defendant, that, respectively, would- have, directed a verdict for it; and advised the jury that the city was under no duty to place a guard a.t the defect to prevent removal of the board, if it was put up; that, if it had observed due care and proper precaution to mark and distinguish the defect so as to prevent accident, it had performed its duty in the premises, and the verdict should be for the defendant; that the city’s obligation to keep its streets in order and repair does not make it an insurer of the safety of persons using them; and that, if the injury was the result of a pure accident, there could be no recovery.
All were properly refused. It was for the jury to say whether a board stuck up in the center of a defect three or four feet in diameter and not'otherwise disclosed was a reasonable precaution. To have told the jury the, city was under no duty to maintain a guard at the place of the accident would have been clearly misleading. It would have implied, that, after having marked the, defect, the city was under no further duty. In the case of injury by a defect in one of its streets, a city’s liability is absolute, unless the injured party has caused his own injury or contributed to it, by his negligence. Eor the same reason, the instruction absolving from liability, by reason of due care to mark and distinguish the defect, was properly refused. The warning must be, maintained as well as put up, to bar recovery on the
The extent and duration of the injury was an important issue in the ease, and the plaintiff’s testimony to pain, suffering and lameness of the arm, long after the accident, was supplemented by that of others who said they had observed manifestations or evidence, of it in his conduct, not his declarations, the court having rejected their evidence as to the latter. This evidence was properly admitted. Chicago etc. R. Co. v. Van Vleck, 143 Ill. 480; Salem, v. Webster, 192 Ill. 369; Will v. Mendon, 108 Mich. 251; Collins v. Janesville, 111 Wis. 348; 17 Cyc. 87; Wigmore Ev., secs. 220, 221 & 225.
Arguments against the verdict, on the ground of excessiveness, is predicated upon evidence tending to show the plaintiff’s injuries were too slight to justify it and also that his testimony as to the extent and duration of his injury, is self-contradicted, as well as contradicted by other witnesses, xlfter he had testified in a former trial of his case, claiming severe, injury, he was examined by a physician who had heard his testimony, in the presence of another who had also heard it, to ascertain whether he could be safely entrusted with his duties as a brakeman. They could find nothing wrong with him, and they say he told them he
As to whether he could deceive the physicians who examined him, the jurors were equally as well qualified to say as judges. His credibility as a witness was a question for them also. He worked and earned' wages. That is a circumstance tending to contradict his testimony as to his condition, but it is not conclusive. Many a man feeling the necessity of labor, notwithstanding pain -and discomfort incident thereto, goes on and performs it. Two men who worked with him swear his conduct indicated soreness and pain in his arm or shoulder. The fact that the, jury in a former trial assessed his damages at only $375.00 is not conclusive. The evidence may have been somewhat different. Besides, there is no standard by which to determine which of the two verdicts more closely approximates a just, fair and reasonable award of damages. Taking into
The judgment will he affirmed.
Affirmed.