Seddon v. Hill
Seddon v. Hill
Opinion of the Court
This was an action brought by Alfred A. Seddon, a boy of nineteen, to recover compensation for personal injuries received by him through being run down by an automobile driven by the defendant. The jury awarded the boy $1,000, and he now asks us to set aside the verdict as inadequate.
The proofs showed that the tibia and the fibula of his right leg were fractured; that his leg was in a cast for six weeks; that when the cast was removed it was found that there had been no knitting of the bones; that another cast was put on, and later a third one; that the bones finally united, but that the injured leg is not entirely straight. The proofs further showed that the boy had suffered a great deal of pain from muscle soreness, as well as from the break itself, and that the pain still persists to some extent; that after he left the hospital, where he had been confined for sixteen weeks, he had to use crutches for a month; that he was not able to resume work until six months after the happening of the accident; that he had been emancipated by his father, and was entitled to his own earnings, which amounted to $75 a month.
The rule to show cause will be made absolute.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- ALFRED A. SEDDON, BY NEXT FRIEND v. FRED H. HILL
- Status
- Published