134 W. Va. 889 | W. Va. | 1950
This is an action of law, instituted in the Circuit Court of Harrison County on October 15, 1947, in which Francis J. Wine was plaintiff and the City Lines of West Virginia, Inc., a corporation, was defendant, in which the plaintiff seeks recovery from the defendant for injuries alleged to have been sustained by him through the negligence of an employee of the defendant in the operation of a passenger bus operated for hire in the City of Clarksburg in said county. The trial of the case began on February 9, 1948, and a verdict in favor of the plaintiff was returned on the day following in the sum of $4,986.50. A motion to set aside the verdict was made at the time, and on April 25, 1949, said motion was sustained. On October 31, 1949, on the petition of the plaintiff, we granted this writ of error.
The injury alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff, and on which he instituted this action, occurred on October 21, 1946. Shortly after five o’clock in the afternoon of that day, plaintiff was in the act of boarding a passenger bus operated by the defendant, at the corner of Main and Sixth Streets in the City of Clarksburg, prepared to pay his fare, making him a passenger for hire. Several other persons boarded the bus at the same time and preceded the plaintiff. One or more of these passengers had taken seats in the bus, and immediately preceding plaintiff was .a lady who stopped at the front of the bus where the •driver was seated. While standing there paying her fare, she obscured the driver’s view of anyone who might be back of her seeking to board the bus. The driver of the hus, defendant’s employee, apparently assuming that all persons seeking to board the bus were inside the same,
Plaintiff suffered an accident in the year 1942, by which his right wrist was fractured. After partical recovery
It is these former accidents which furnish the background for defendant’s contention that the alleged accident on the bus on October 21, 1946, did not cause the condition which followed, or, at least, that there was no sufficient showing to warrant a jury finding that the bus injury caused the condition complained of. The contention of the plaintiff is that even if the median nerve had been injured in either of these former accidents, it was not responsible for the condition from which plaintiff now suffers; and further, that the accident occasioned by closing the doors of the bus could have reactivated an old injury and caused such condition.
One of the grounds on which the trial court held that the injury alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff, could not have resulted from the closing of the bus doors, was that the bus .doors when closed create a cushion of soft rubber about 4%" thick. This is true when the door is entirely closed, but the testimony also shows that, considering the presence of plaintiff’s body in the door space, the door could not have been entirely closed, and that the parts of the door which struck plaintiff’s body must have been the partially unfolded panels held together by hinges which opened first, and which, if unimpeded, would open automatically by the unfolding of the two panels next to the center of the door on which the soft rubber was placed. All this makes problematical just how the accident occurred or could have occurred. The exact position of plaintiff’s body, the part of the door which came in contact with his wrist all contribute to the uncertainty of just how plaintiff’s injury came about. It is not impossible that plaintiff’s body could have been in a position where the impact of the door would have been at the point where it could have crushed plaintiff’s wrist against the hard leather belt he wore. But all this is largely theory. No one testified clearly as to the exact position of plaintiff’s body in the door space. Neither the driver of the bus, nor any other witness, other than the plaintiff, actually know how the plaintiff’s wrist was struck, if it was struck, although the witness Edward Wine comes close to saying that he saw how the accident happened. We must depend on plaintiff’s testimony on that point. We agree that it may be plausibly argued that the accident coul'd not have occurred in the manner in which plaintiff testified that it did occur; but when we consider
The second question involved the amount of the verdict. Plaintiff was injured on October 21, 1946. This case was tried in February, 1948, approximately sixteen months thereafter. The evidence is clear that plaintiff "has been disabled from following his usual occupation during all
We are not unmindful of the weight which should be .given to the findings of a trial court on the question of sustaining or overruling the verdict of a jury. As has been often said, a trial court is in a position to hear the testimony, observe the witnesses, and an opportunity to •observe the trial in all of its stages, such as an appellate court does not have. For this reason, the inclination of this Court has been to sustain trial courts in cases where they disapprove of verdicts, one reason being that in sustaining such action no rights are .permanently settled. This whole question was discussed by this Court in Ware v. Hays, 119 W. Va. 585, 195 S. E. 265, where the trial court had set aside a verdict, and this Court felt impelled to reverse its action, reinstate the verdict, and enter judg
On the whole, we are of the opinion that the evidence-, in the case sustains the jury verdict of liability against the defendant, and that the verdict returned is not excessive.
Therefore, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Harrison County, entered on the 25th day of April, 1949, setting-aside the verdict returned by the jury, and granting a new trial, will be reversed, and this court will reinstate the said verdict and enter judgment thereon in favor of' the plaintiff.
Judgment reversed; verdict reinstated; judgment entered.