Jones v. Co-operative Ass'n

88 A. 406, 111 Me. 163, 1913 Me. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 8, 1913
StatusPublished

This text of 88 A. 406 (Jones v. Co-operative Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Co-operative Ass'n, 88 A. 406, 111 Me. 163, 1913 Me. LEXIS 97 (Me. 1913).

Opinion

King, J.

This action was commenced March 14, 1910, to recover damages for personal injuries received -by the plaintiff by being thrown from an elevator operated by the defendant.

■At a former trial a nonsuit was ordered with the stipulation that if that ruling .should not be sustained the question of damages only should be submitted to the jury. The ease has been again tried resulting in a verdict of $4,136.75 for the plaintiff, and it is now before this court on the defendant’s exceptions, and motion for a new trial on 'the ground that the damages awarded are excessive. The exceptions.

The jury were inistuoted to reokon interest at 6% from the date of the writ on the amount they should find the plaintiff was entitled to recover for her injuries and include that interest in the amount of the verdict.

That instruction was .erroneous. Such is not the rule in actions to recover damages for personal injuries. The plaintiff’s compensation was not limited to the damages resulting to her from the injuries complained of up to the date of her writ, but included all the damages that had resulted to her from those injuries up to the trial, and also such future damages as the evidence made reasonably certain will result to her from those injuries. The effect of the instruction was to give the plaintiff interest from the date of the writ on compensation for damages that had not then resulted to her.

But the defendant was injured by the erroneous instruction to the extent only of the amount of interest improperly included in the verdict. That can be determined by computation with reasonable accuracy. The learned counsel for the defendant states the amount of the verdict, less the interest, .as $3,487.15. Our computation gives practically the same result, and shows that sum to be at least safe and conservative. .Accordingly it is the opinion of the court that if the plaintiff remits so much of the verdict returned as is in excess [165]*165of $3,487.15, justice will not require that a new trial should be granted .because of the instructions complained of. See Moulton v. Scruton, 39 Maine, 287, 291.

The motion. The amount of -damages was the only issue.

The plaintiff was injured September 10, 1909. 'She was then 67 years old and weighed 207 .pounds. 'She and her daughter, having lunched in the defendant’s store at Lewiston, Maine, came down the elevator to the first floor. The daughter .stepped out, and just as the plaintiff was in the act of -stepping out, and before her feet reaohed the floor, the elevator was negligently permitted to start up with a jerk whereby she was thrown head -lon-g .and helplessly to the floor striking on her right side, -.shoulder and head. The head of her right arm-, the humerus near the shoulder, was fractured, and her leg, knee and ¡aiikl-e were bruised. She was immediately taken to -the house of Dr. Garcelon, who reduced the fracture and properly attended to .her other injuries. On account of anticipated swelling her arm was at first -swathed in soft bandages, and after a few days a ¡permanent dressing of silicate of soda, which when dry becomes hard and brittle, and is -called a “glass bandage,” was put on. By this her whole -right sidle from the neck ¡down was bandaged, the arm being bound to the si-die, the bandage extending to the wrist. On Tuesday, following th-e accident on Friday, she was taken to her home in Cambridge, -Massachusetts.

Shortly thereafter, on September 21st, Dr. Coggswell was called. H-e found ithe plaintiff in bed, “a good part -of the -time crying, and evidently very nervous.” He visited her ten times in the course of thirteen weeks, his last visit being December 14th. The glass bandage was removed about the middle of October — five weeks and a half from the time of -the injury. Dr. Coggswell, the fairness -of whose testimony the defendant’s attorney -commends, testified, that during the four weeks after he first saw her, and while she had the bandage on, there was a complaint at every visit of pain, especially bothering her at night, so that she was unable to sleep well; that at the time the bandage was removed, there were the remains -of a large abrasion of the tissues on the front of the shoulder, a bruise -extending down, especially -on the inside of the upper arm, and some on the outside, and on the Side of the chest; that on taking the bandage off the shoulder was rigid, and that Mrs. Jones herself -could not move it [166]*166in any way, and .any effort of others to move it caused her much pain; that the arm was then put in a sling and carried there night and day; that an effort was made 'by him and her daughters to move the arm so as to limber the tissues around the broken j oint. On the 18th of November he saw her in company with Dr. 'Chase, a physician sent by the defendant to examine her. At that time her arm was still in the sling and she was able to move it up not quite to a horizontal position and was unable to move it back of her side. On December 14th, the time of his last visit, she could move her arm a little more, and she still complained of the pain in her shoulder and extending down into the arm. He was also present at an examination of the plaintiff by several physicians at the time of a former trial of this case, in January, 1913, and as to her condition then as compared with what it .was .over three years before, he said: “I should say she had more free use of it now, a little more, but not much.” And, finally, after describing her nervous condition as it was during the first four weeks, and .after the bandage was removed, he said: “and subsequently she showed there was something wrong medically with the nerves here around the seat of the injury.”

It was claimed that the plaintiff has neuritis caused by her injuries, and some of the physicians called in her behalf expressed their opinion to that effect, while others thought her symptoms, subjective and objective, may indicate a neuritic condition of the nerves, or that such a condition is developing. On the other hand Dr. Chase; called by the defense, who examined her in November, 1909, and was present at her examination in January, 1913, testified that 'he discovered nothing in her condition to lead him to believe that she was suffering from neuritis. That disease is admittedly serious and probably incurable.

All the physicians agree that the plaintiff is now suffering from a condition known as a hardening of the spinal cord. Such a condition may bé the result of some previous disease, or. of exposure to cold and hard work, or of an injury. It develops more commonly after middle life. In the absence, in this case, of any evidence of a previous disease, or of .such exposure and hard work as might have caused it, her physicians were inclined to the opinion that it may be the result of her injuries. But Dr. Chase testified that when he examined the plaintiff in November, 1909, about a month after her [167]*167injuries, he found «clear evidences that she was then suffering from hardening of .the spinal cord), and that it muist ihave had its origin long 'before the time of her injuries, because it develops slowly. And we think the weight of the medical testimony is, that, assuming the plaintiff «Showed «clear «symptoms of hardening of the cord in November, 1909, the «disease probably had its «origin, prior to the accident, notwithstanding the plaintiff herself did not realize it, but felt that she was perfectly healthy.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 406, 111 Me. 163, 1913 Me. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-co-operative-assn-me-1913.