133 Ky. 438 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion op the Court by
Affirming.
Appellant is a common, carrier, operating a railroad extending throng'll Pike county, Ky. Appellee was a passenger on a train on appellant’s road, and claims to have sustained injuries in a collision between its train and a log train being operated on the same road by a lessee or licensee.of appellant. It was the same collision under consideration in the appeal of this appellant against Harriett Blankenship (this day decided) 118 S. W. 315. It was there held that appellant was liable for .the negligence of the lessee where injury .was thereby inflicted upon appellant’s passenger. The additional questions presented in this case are; Did appellee receive the injuries for which she sues as the result of that collision, and did the trial court correctly submit to the jury elements of her injury for which the law allows a recovery?
Appellee claims that she was enceinte,' being about four mouths advanced with child; that in the collision she was thrown upon her side and bruised and stunned, so that she was made sick and caused to abort. The evidence on her behalf was that in the collision she was thrown violently upon her side, causing her great pain, following the temporary stunning; that within a half hour afterward her mensturation reappeared, and for the first time since she had conceived, and that that evening she had violent pains in her abdomen, which she describes as “bearing down pains;” that these pains continued intermittently for some days, when she consulted a midwife
The trial court, in instructing the jury, after defining care and negligence, gave this as the law of the case: “If the jury should believe and find from the evidence that, while the plaintiff was a passenger upon defendant’s train, the defendant company, by its agents or servants in control of said train, knew, or by the exercise of ordinary care could have known, that the log train of the Hurricane Lumber Company was upon its tracks, and ran its passenger train into and collided with said log train, and that by reason of said collision the plaintiff sustained any injury causing plaintiff to miscarry or give premature birth to her child, or caused plaintiff womb trouble, they will find for the plaintiff such sum in damages as they may believe from the evidence she has sustained, so the sum so found, if anything, does not excee-l $10.000, and, if the jury should not so believe and find, they will find for the defendant. If the jury should find for the plaintiff, they will only táke into considera
The other case cited and relied upon by appellant (Hawkins v. Front St. Cable Co.) goes further than we understand the authorities to justify, and further than we are willing to follow. It was there held that proof that an unborn child died and was prematurely delivered because of negligent injuries to its mother is not sufficient to establish her right to recover substantial damages for the injury. The court held that if the plaintiff showed “impairment of health and suffering growing out of the death and premature birth of her child, which would not have attended its birth at the usual time, either alive or dead, and also that the child’s death is attributable to a negligent injury which she received,” she-could recover for her suffering and impaired health. “But,” the court added, “she must show the injury by-appropriate evidence, and the mere proof that the child died, and was prematurely delivered, as a result of the accident, would not be sufficient to -presume substantial damage therefrom.” The reasoning of the Washington Supreme Court is that the pregnant woman must in time have delivered the child, and that as the pain of the birth was inevitable that it was prematurely brought about could not alone be actionable; that, in order to allow the woman to recover for the miscarriage caused her, she must have suffered pain, or ill health, which would not have followed at the usual time of the birth of the child dead or alive. Whether the pain of childbirth is greater in the one instance
We hold that a negligent act, inflicting bodily injury upon the plaintiff, a woman enceinte, whereby her child dies and is caused to be born prematurely, gives the woman the right of actión against the wrongdoer for her injury, including the mental and physical suffering endured as a natural and proximate result of the injury to her person. That is as far as the instructions in this case allowed the jury to go, and is the only feature of that question presented for. our review. There was evidence to take the case to the jury and to support its finding.
Judgment affirmed.
Petition for rehearing by appellant overruled.