DocketNumber: No. 31 57 26
Judges: STODOLINK, J.
Filed Date: 3/5/1997
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
The plaintiff claimed special damages of $16,000 in medical bills, and future medical bills for surgical repair of a torn rotator cuff of at least $8000. In addition, the plaintiff claimed lost income from December 21, 1991 to January 1, 1995. This claim for lost wages was clouded by the fact that the plaintiff was receiving social security disability payments during the same period and his claim was only based on his own testimony.
The amount of the jury's award, in the court's opinion, had to include the bills not only for the laceration to the forehead and the bruised ribs, but also for some portion of the bills for plaintiff's torn rotator cuff. Thus, the jury's award was for substantial economic damages that they found were the result of plaintiff's injury to his head, ribs and rotator cuff. Thus, the question of liability had to be found in favor of the plaintiff. Liability does not appear to be in doubt with an award of $21,000 of $24,000 of special damages claimed excluding the tenuous lost income claim.
After a review of the case of Childs v. Bainer,
For the foregoing reasons, having heard the evidence relating to plaintiff's claim for noneconomic damages and weighing the credibility of the witnesses relating to noneconomic damages, the court orders an additur of $20,000 reduced by plaintiff's contributory negligence of 30 percent to $14,000. If said additur is not accepted by the parties in accordance with the terms of General Statutes §
Stodolink, J.