DocketNumber: Civ. No. 12240
Citation Numbers: 56 Cal. App. 2d 436, 132 P.2d 873, 1942 Cal. App. LEXIS 223
Judges: Nourse
Filed Date: 12/31/1942
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
In this action for personal injuries the defendant appeals from a judgment entered on a verdict of a jury for $4,000. At the trial the defendant admitted liability. The only question presented by this appeal is the excessiveness of the damages awarded.
On July 3,1941, the plaintiff, a boy of fifteen years, was struck by an automobile driven by defendant and was thrown into a ditch. As a result of the accident he received a broken leg, numerous cuts and abrasions and a bump on the head. At the time of the trial in February, 1942, although the doctors testified that he suffered no permanent injuries, his leg was still not normal; he suffered pain in his leg if he walked too far, and he still had headaches. He was in the hospital for ten days; his leg was in a cast for about four months, and he was unable to walk without crutches for five months.
Where the question of excessive damages is before an appellate court the determining factors are said to be in Davis v. Renton, 113 Cal.App. 561 [298 P. 834] at 563: “The remedy for safeguarding against the danger of excessive verdicts is committed necessarily to a great extent to the judge who presides at the trial, and the reviewing court may interfere only in cases where the excess appears as a matter of law, or where the recovery is so grossly disproportionate to any compensation reasonably warranted by the facts as to shock the sense of justice or at first blush raise a presumption that it is the result of passion, prejudice or corruption rather than honest and sober judgment (Bond v. United Railroads, 159 Cal. 270 [Ann.Cas. 1912C, 250, 48 L.R.A. N.S. 687, 113 P. 366]; Pedrow v. Federoff, 77 Cal.App. 164
The judgment is affirmed.
Sturtevant, J., and Spence, J., concurred.