Case ID: conn_87/html/0707-01.html
Source: Caselaw Access Project
Author: {"author": "Per Curiam.", "license": "Public Domain", "url": "https://static.case.law/"}
Date Created: 2024-08-24T03:29:51.129683

William H. Stanford vs. Fitz C. Hyde.
    Third Judicial District.
    Argued June 10th
    —decided July 25th, 1913.
    Action to recover damages from a physician for alleged malpractice in the treatment of an injury to the plaintiff’s shoulder, caused by a fall, brought to the Superior Court in Fairfield County and tried to the jury before Case, J.; verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $2,000, and appeal by the defendant. No error.
    
    
      George D. Watrous and William B. Boardman, for the appellant (defendant).
    
      Homer 8. Cummings and Adelbert A. 8keel, for the appellee (plaintiff).
   Per Curiam.

In the conflict of the testimony the jury might reasonably have found that the fall from the ladder was the cause of some injury to the plaintiff, and that if the shoulder was thereby dislocated the defendant ought in the exercise of reasonable care to have discovered it.

The most serious issue of fact in the case was whether one of the injuries suffered by the fall was a dislocation of the shoulder. There was evidence before the jury from which the existence or nonexistence of this fact might have been found. We cannot hold that the jury in finding its existence acted so unreasonably as to warrant us in setting aside the verdict. Steinert v. Whitcomb, 84 Conn. 262, 263, 79 Atl. 675. Nor can we hold that the damages assessed by the jury were so excessive that the verdict ought for that reason to be set aside, when the special damages might have been found to be $478, and the injury to have resulted in an appreciably permanent impairment of the shoulder affecting the plaintiff’s pursuit of his trade. The evidence excluded assigned as error was at the most harmless error.

There is no error.