Judges: Bodine, Heher, Wachenefeld
Filed Date: 3/1/1948
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/11/2024
A jury rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff for damages to his automobile resulting from a collision with defendant's truck; and defendant appeals.
Plaintiff adduced evidence, without objection, from an automobile mechanic that the reasonable cost of repairing the damage done was $184.25, the amount awarded by the jury; and the sole ground of appeal argued is that there was error in the denial of defendants' motion for a nonsuit for want of "proper proof of the damages" alleged. It is said that the measure of damages is the difference in the value of the car immediately before and after the injury, and therefore the evidence was "clearly insufficient to establish the amount of the damage."
But even though there was no proof of actual damage, plaintiff was entitled to nominal damages, and the motion to nonsuit was therefore properly denied. Negligence is ordinarily not actionable unless injury results to another. Injury is of the essence of the right of action — the gravamen of the cause of action. Ochs v. Public Service Railway Co.,
Moreover, while the difference in the market value of the vehicle immediately before and immediately after the injury ordinarily constitutes the measure of damage in such circumstances, the reasonable value of the repairs necessary to restore the vehicle to its former condition is evidential on this inquiry, and may be sufficient in itself to establish the damages if less than the diminution in market value due to the *Page 645
injury and not in excess of the value of the vehicle itself as it was before the injury. Parisi v. Friedman,
Judgment affirmed, with costs.