Carberry v. Acme Transit Co.

District Court, W.D. New York
Carberry v. Acme Transit Co., 203 F. 780 (1913)
1913 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1777

Carberry v. Acme Transit Co.

Opinion of the Court

HAZEL, District Judge.

[1] The principal objection to the instructions given the jury is that the court assumed that the plaintiff did not know that, while he was pulling on the wheel of the winch and winding it up, other workmen were engaged in hauling the cable, which suddenly slackened and crushed his fingers in the cog of the wheel, when it was practically admitted by him that he knew that the witness Harrington, who was in charge of the steamer and the other workmen, was engaged in hauling on the steel cable just before the plaintiff sustained injuries. The instructions of the court on this subject had relation to plaintiff’s inexperience and ignorance of the possible results of a sudden slackening of the cable, and of the method of operating the winch, and of the momentum of the wheel; and if the plaintiff was ignorant thereof, as was manifestly the opinion of the jury, it makes no difference whether he saw the men hauling on the cable or not.

[2J The question of his asserted inexperience was submitted to the jury. If the court misstated the testimony on this point, and such misstatement was thought to be prejudicial, the court’s attention should have been called thereto by counsel for defendant at the close of the charge to the jury. Any mistaken assumption as to the testimony embodied in the instructions is not sufficient ground for setting aside the verdict.

13] It was my impression that the verdict was excessive, or at least larger than was required by the extent of the injuries to compensate the plaintiff, and I have given the question of excessive damages careful consideration, but think I must decline to hold that the jury erred in making such award. It is not improbable that I should have awarded a somewhat smaller amount if 1 were to have determined the case, but at this stage my views on this subject ought not to control. The cases cited by plaintiff all hold that the matter of assessing damages in actions for injuries sustained by reason of the negligence of a defendant is entirely within the province of the jury, and that there should- be no interference by the court, unless the amount is so excessive as to show that it resulted from passion or prejudice on the part of the jury.

In Van Sickel v. Ilsley, 75 Hun, 537, 27 N. Y. Supp. 1113, the plaintiff sustained injuries similar to those of the plaintiff in suit. The jury rendered a verdict of $3,300, and the Appellate Division for the Fourth Department did not think the verdict excessive. In Eldridge v. Atlas Steamship Co., 58 Hun, 96, 11 N. Y. Supp. 468, three fingers were lost by the plaintiff while operating a steam winch on a steamboat, and the verdict of $3,700 was sustained. In Borgeson v. U. S. Projectile Co., 2 App. Div. 57, 37 N. Y. Supp. 458, there was a loss *782of the middle finger and the impairment of the first and third, and the court reduced the verdict from $8,000 to $5,000. In Teeft v. Buffalo Dry Dock Co., 147 App. Div. 918, 131 N. Y. Supp. 1146, the injuries were a broken right thumb on the hand of a carpenter, and the appellate court was of opinion that $3,500 was not excessive.

These decisions are persuasive of the reasonableness of the verdict at bar, and lead to a denial of the motion.

Reference

Full Case Name
CARBERRY v. ACME TRANSIT CO.
Cited By
1 case
Status
Published