Appellee (plaintiff below) brought this action on the case to recover for-the loss of the services of his wife, occasioned by the alleged negligence of appellant. The right of recovery is appropriately challenged; appellant’s chief conten *319 tion being that the damages in question were the result of a fright, and were not recoverable. Defendant introduced no testimony, and its version of the circumstances of the case are to be had only from its answers to interrogatories propounded to it under the statute, and which were introduced by the plaintiff. From these, it appears, the defendant’s version of the matter was widely variant from that of the eyewitnesses of the plaintiff, which was accepted by the jury as the basis of its verdict. Briefly stated, the plaintiff’s testimony was about as. follows: Appellee was a miner, working for defendant at Margaret, a mining camp or village; there he rented a house from the defendant for himself and family, consisting of his wife, Marie, and a five-year-old daughter. OnepSelf^was employed by the company, who was charged with the duty of policing or keeping order in and about the camp, and also that of renting the houses. On the day of the wrong complained of, Self rode up to the home of appellee and inquired of his wife if he had gone to his work. While seated on his horse talking to the wife, who was then on the porch of her house a few feet away, Self shot the dog of appellee. According to the testimony of the two eyewitnesses — the wife and her next door neighbor — the dog and appellee’s little girl were, at the time of the shooting, but a few feet apart, and both within a few feet of the steps to the porch where appellee’s wife was. Self was then also but a few feet away from the dog, but further from it than he was from the child. The wife was enceinte, the allegation of the complaint being that she was far gone in pregnancy. The shooting of the dog, under the circumstances of its occurrence, so unnerved and upset the wife that she took to her bed, and the following day had a miscarriage. From this, it is alleged, she has never fully recovered, and is still unable to attend to her household duties; she was confined to a hospital three months, and appellee, besides losing the society of his wife, incurred and paid out upwards of $400 in and about her medical treatment.
Counsel for appellant, following a long line of decisions to that effect, earnestly insist that damages for injuries superinduced by fright are not recoverable. It may be justly said that the decisions on this subject, both English and American, and particularly the latter, are in irreconcilable confusion.
The authorities holding that such damages may not be recovered may be summarized as grounding their opinions on the following reasons: (1) It is argued that since there can be no recovery for fright alone, it must necessarily follow that there can be no recovery for the consequences of fright; (2) that physical injury resulting from fright caused by negligence is not the proximate result of the negligence; and (3) that on the ground of expediency or public policy, recovery should be denied because of the danger of opening the door to fictitious litigation, easily sixniated, and the impossibility of estimating the damages.
*322
In the case of
Engle v. Simmons,
Again in
Engle v. Simmons, supra,
our Supreme Court quotes with approval from
Brownback v. Frailey,
In the case of
Louisville & Nashville R. R. Co. v. Melton,
Consonant with the foregoing views may be cited
Purcell v. St. Paul City R. Co.,
As said above, numerous authorities hold contrary to the views .herein expressed; many of them will be found collated in the following authorities:
Gulf, C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Hayter,
Counsel insist, however, that it is not shown that the damages proximately flowed from any tort directed against the wife; but, on the contrary, her fright was purely vicarious suffering in her anxiety for the child. We cannot agree'with"this view. The wife was in her home, and had a right to the peaceful and-undisturbed enjoyment thereof; and the negligent demeanor of Self in firing his pistol at the dog, especially in view of her then condition, was liable to inflict physical injury upon her as well mayhap .the child. Speaking to this point, Judge Cooley observes: “But if there may be a recovery for physical injuries resulting from fright wrongfully caused by the defendant, it would seem that an assault committed in view of a [pregnant] woman whose presence is known, especially upon a member of her family, was an act of negligence towards the woman, a failure to exercise the due care towards her which the occasion and circumstances required, and was therefore a legal wrong against her which will *324 support an action, if damage follows.” — 1 Cooley on Torts (3d Ed.) 98.
And in support of the text Judge Cooley cites
Hill v. Kimball, supra,
cited with approval in
Engle v. Simmons, supra.
See, also,
Watson v. Dilts,
We do not think prejudicial error is shown in any of the several exceptions relating to the admission of testimony (assignments 9 to 14, inclusive).
The written requests to charge are not numbered in the transcript, making comparison or cross-reference from refused to given charges awkward. Requests embraced in assignments of error Nos. 15 and 17 were properly refused in the state of the evidence, and, in view of what we have said above, being requests for the general affirmative charge.
We find no reversible error, and the judgment of the court . below is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.
