Lead Opinion
Thе overruling of the general demurrer to the petition as amended is enumerated as error.
“In actions for wrongful death, as in the case of actions for personal injuries generally, it is essential to a recovery of damages that the wrongful act or default of the defendant shall have been the proximate cause of the death resulting therefrom.
“However, where the wrongful act produces such a rage or frenzy that the injured person destroys himself during such rage or frenzy, or in response to an uncontrollable impulse, the act is considered • as within and a part of the line of causation from defendant’s negligent injury to the death, and the defendant’s act is the proximate cause of death.” 11 ALR2d 751, 758, §§ 4, 5; Prosser, Law of Torts, pp. 273, 274. The latter limitation of the above general rule has been recognized in a number of cases and was the basis of the decision in the case of Elliott v.
The following еvidence relative to the decedent’s condition and state of mind at the time of his suicide was adduced at the trial: After the collision, decedent was in the bedroom of the Appling home, where the collision victims were lying, and after being. requested to do so, he ran and got a towel to help stop
Certainly, a serious accident such аs this one, wherein the plaintiff’s decedent not only was shaken up himself but actually saw and assisted in administering to the needs of the injured and bloodied victims, was enough to have an appreciable effect on this young, seventeen-year-оld boy, and might easily explain his nervousness, pallor, emotional upset and other unusual behavior. There is too much evidence of his rational, conscious behavior after the collision, however, to find that his act of suicide was committed -in a “rage,” “frenzy,” or “delirium,” or “in response to an uncontrollable impulse,” while “insane,” “bereft of reason,” “mentally irresponsible,” or “without conscious volition to produce death.” His wandering through the Appling home, looking in closets аnd emptying drawers could well have been connected with his search for towels or other items to assist with the care of the injured parties. His asking several times where the telephone was might be explained as a temporary lapse of memory due to his recent, harrowing experience, the fact that he was in a strange house, and his distraction caused by his apparent sense of
The verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff were not authorized by the evidence; therefore, the court erred in its judgment on the motion for a judgment n.o.v. Allen v. Rome Kraft Co.,
Judgment reversed with direction.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially. The enumerations of error, pertaining to the questions here decided, were as follows: “2. The court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion for a directed verdict. 3. The court erred in overruling the dеfendants’ motion for a judgment notwithstanding a verdict.” The court has passed upon Enumeration of error 3. In my opinion, since the appeal is from the judgment upon the -verdict, no enumeration of error on the actions or rulings of the court thеreafter can be considered or passed upon by this court. I
