Longo v. Monast

40 A.2d 433, 70 R.I. 460
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedDecember 8, 1944
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 40 A.2d 433 (Longo v. Monast) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Longo v. Monast, 40 A.2d 433, 70 R.I. 460 (R.I. 1944).

Opinion

*461 Condon, J.

These are actions of trespass on the case for negligence which were tried together in the superior court to a jury and resultéd in a verdict for the plaintiff for $1,000. in each case. A motion for a new trial in each case was denied by the trial justice and the cases are now here on defendants’ identical bills of exceptions.

The cause of action arose out of a collision between an automobile owned and operated by the plaintiff and a taxicab owned by defendant McNamara and operated by defendant Monast. In each action the plaintiff claims damages for injuries to his person and property. Since both cases are based on the same cause of action and have been brought here on identical exceptions to rulings in the trial below, we shall hereinafter discuss the points raised by such exceptions as though we had but one case before us.

At the hearing in this court defendant briefed and argued his exception to the denial of his motion for a new trial and five other exceptions to rulings admitting certain evidence *462 over his objections. He expressly waived all his other exceptions.

It appears from the evidence that on August 28, 1941, defendant's taxicab, while proceeding southerly on Newport avenue in the city of Pawtucket collided with plaintiff's automobile, which was proceeding easterly on Beverage Hill avenue in that city. At the time of the collision plaintiff was driving his automobile through the intersection of the two avenues in response to a favorable signal from a police officer who was directing traffic at such intersection. It further appears that the officer was then signaling with his hand for traffic on Newport avenue to stop and that, disregarding such signal, defendant, while operating his taxicab at a fast rate of speed, drove into the intersection and crashed into plaintiff’s automobile on its left side at the left door. The taxicab continued rolling thereafter for a distance of about seventy-five feet before it came to a stop. Plaintiff's automobile was badly damaged and he was deprived of its use for about forty-three days. Defendant Monast was arrested, charged with driving so as to endanger, pleaded guilty in the district court of the tenth judicial district and was fined $10. and costs.

At the trial plaintiff proved property damage amounting to $581. Included therein was $43. which plaintiff had expended for the use of another automobile for forty-three days at $1. a day. Plaintiff testified as to his personal injuries that, after the collision, he was “Naturally, very nervous”; also that such nervous condition lasted “Not over a month, two or three weeks or a month.” It further appears from his testimony on this matter that he suffered no other injuries ; that, although he was examined at the hospital immediately after the collision, he received no medical treatment or x-ray examination, as he did not feel he needed any.

He also testified that he lost no time from his employment and continued to drive to work in an automobile, although for some time he felt that he “didn’t want to drive a car”. There was no other evidence of plaintiff’s “nervous condi *463 tion” and no evidence that he ever complained of it to his physician or to members of his family. All of the plaintiff’s testimony was given by way of deposition because, at the time of the trial, plaintiff, due to physical disability not connected with this accident, was not able to testify in court personally.

Under his exception to the denial of his motion for a new trial, defendant contends that the'trial justice erred because the damages awarded by the jury .are grossly excessive. In arguing this contention defendant has confined himself to the damages which the jury awarded for plaintiff’s personal injuries, apparently conceding the correctness of the amount awarded for property damage, except that he claims that the item of $43. for loss of use of plaintiff’s automobile was not properly proved. He urges that there is little or no evidence of any real substantial personal injury sustained by the plaintiff; that, if there is, it is so weak as to be incapable of affording the jury any basis for measuring it in pecuniary terms; and, in any event, that an award of $419., which includes a hospital fee of. $3., is so gross and disproportionate to the evidence of personal injury as to reflect not reasonable compensation therefor but rather sympathy for the plaintiff or punishment for the defendant.

The trial justice has expressly approved this verdict in his rescript. Ordinarily in such a case the trial justice’s decision is not disturbed, unless it is clearly wrong. Wilcox v. Rhode Island Co., 29 R. I. 292. The instant case is out of the ordinary in that, in so far as evidence of the plaintiff’s personal injury is concerned, the trial justice was in no better position to evaluate it than we are, because all the testimony on that phase of the case was given to the court and jury below, not personally on the witness stand but by way of deposition. In such circumstances, we are as able as the trial justice to consider and weigh the testimony on the issue of plaintiff’s personal injury and are, therefore, not bound by the rule of the Wilcox case in deciding whether or not the damages awarded by the jury for such personal injury correspond" *464 fairly to the evidence and do substantial justice between the parties.

With this in mind we have carefully examined the evidence on that issue and have come to the conclusion that the jury’s verdict on the damages is grossly excessive. The evidence here of any real personal injury is very scanty but there is some tending to show that plaintiff was shaken up by the impact of the taxicab against his automobile and was rendered somewhat nervous thereby. However, the extent of such nervousness is not shown and it nowhere appears in the evidence that it amounted to a nervous shock in the strict meaning of that term in medical science.

On the contrary, the inference is plain that it was no more than a slight feeling of nervousness which gradually wore off in a month or so. Indeed it is clear from plaintiff’s testimony quoted above that such was his own view of his condition. He complained to no one about it, sought no medical advice or assistance to overcome it and submitted to no medication to relieve it. To measure pecuniarily an injury of this kind on such slight evidence is a task that ought to be undertaken with a strict regard to the rules governing the award of damages as compensation and nothing more. The sum of $416., which the jury allowed for such injury, seems to us to amount to a gross disregard of those rules and should not be approved. A fair award of compensation for such pain as the plaintiff suffered from his nervousness ought not to exceed, in our opinion, the sum of $100. The jury’s award of total damages ought, therefore, to be reduced by $316. or a new trial ought to be granted to the defendant.

Defendant’s other exceptions raise a single issue. May the plaintiff prove loss of use of his automobile in going to and from his employment daily merely by' testifying that he lost the use of his car for such purpose for forty-three days and had paid $1.

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40 A.2d 433, 70 R.I. 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/longo-v-monast-ri-1944.