113 So. 403 | Ala. | 1927
Lead Opinion
To state the case very briefly, plaintiff’s (appellee’s)- version is that defendant’s electric street car stopped at a customary place of stopping where he awaited it to take passage, that he waited until a number of passengers alighted, after which, with reasonable expedition, attempting to get aboard, he reached up and caught some part of the door of the car, whereupon the door was closed, catching his hand, and the ear moved ahead, dragging him along until he was thrown against an iron post, causing the various injuries described in count 1 of the complaint. The charge was that this was negligently done. The evidence supported this theory of the case, and the jury returned a verdict accordingly.
The case went to the jury on the third count of the complaint charging simple negligence. That count, for a description of the injuries suffered by plaintiff, referred to and adopted the allegations of count 1. Count 1, among other elements of damage, alleged that plaintiff was “permanently injured and * * his 'nervous system was greatly shocked and impaired and permanently shocked and impaired * * * and [he] was made permanently sick and ill.” Appellant, defendant, contends that the trial court committed error in that part of its oral charge in which the jury were told that, if plaintiff was entitled to recover, they might assess damages to compensate him for, among other things, “any impairment of his earning capacity.” Defendant does not concede that the complaint claimed damages for impaired earning capacity. In this connec
“The plaintiff is not entitled to be redressed for any more than the wrong charged in the complaint, and such damages as naturally result from such wrongful act or such as are, in legal contemplation, its proximate result. Other damages are what is known in the law as special damages. * * * When it is sought to recover damages of this class, they must be specially averred in the complaint.”
Later on in the opinion in the Colbert Case it was said that:
“The law implies some diminished earning capacity from permanent injury.”
That statement was too broad, for, evidently, a person may suffer some permanent injury which would not permanently affect his earning capacity, and yet, for such injury, if negligently inflicted, he would be entitled to recover damages in an action properly framed; but, otherwise, it was a correct statement of law. The reason of the matter in question is reflected by the great weight of authority, which is thus stated in 17 C. J. 1015, § 313:
“Where the injury alleged will necessarily render a person less capable of performing his usual business duties in the future, proof of the impairment of his general earning capacity may ordinarily be given under the general allegation of the injury, and damages resulting therefrom, such as the inability to attend to his ordinary business, without a special averment that plaintiff will be unable to earn as much in the future as in the past, or without specially averring the nature of his occupation or employment, although a few courts seem to require a greater strictness and definiteness in the allegation.”
Decisions from some 15 different jurisdictions are cited in support of the major proposition of the quoted text. Decisions from the courts of 6 states are cited in support of the rule of “a few courts [which] seem to require a greater strictness,” among the latter the Colbert Case, 190 Ala. 229, 67 So. 513, and Dunn v. Gunn, 149 Ala. 583, 42 So. 686, decided by this court, and a case from the Kentucky Court of Appeals, we have noticed above the Colbert Case. As for the case of Dunn v. Gunn, we venture to say that the question of recoverable damages briefly mentioned in that case had relation to damages for lost time — a different sort of damages from such as are assessed for impairment of earning capacity, as the opinion in the Colbert Case very clearly points out. Of the Kentucky case, L. & N. v. Sinclair, 171 Ky. 562, 188 S. W. 648, it will suffice, in connection with our quotation from Dowdall v. King, supra, to note the language of the court as follows:
“The permanent impairment of the power to earn money is an incident to a permanent injury, and is necessarily such.”
The court is of opinion that the permanent injuries alleged in the present case imply an impairment of earning capacity, and, upon proper proof, allowed a recovery of damages for such impairment.
The more serious difficulty, under our decisions, is raised by the insistence that the evidence furnished no data for the assessment of such damages in terms of money. Defendant contends that the court erroneously allowed the assessment of such damages. Norwood Hospital v. Jones, 214 Ala. 314, 107 So. 858, is stressed in argument. The ruling in that case was that such damages in the peculiar circumstances there shown were speculative and not recoverable, since loss of earning power was not shown. The circumstances were peculiar. Plaintiff was an infant. tie had been injured ia few hours after birth. A nurse had left a hot water bottle in contact with his body, and he had suffered a burn which left a scar on his hip and thigh. In the circumstances of that case, plaintiff’s earning capacity during minority was immaterial as affecting the measure of recovery, because his earnings would belong to his parent. And it is clear.enough on the reported
“Eor a personal injury to a child nine years of age, * * *, the law furnishes no measure of damages other than the enlightened conscience of impartial jurors, guided by all the facts and circumstances of the particular ease. Amongst the results of the injury to be, considered, are pain and suffering, disfigurement and mutilation of the person, and impaired capacity to pursue the ordinary avocations of life at and after attainment of majority.”
In that case the plaintiff had suffered the loss of his right arm. Plaintiff in the present case was a young man, evidently, though his age is not definitely shown by the bill of exceptions. 1-Ie was a subforeman, working for the defendant railroad in its machine shop or roundhouse. Before the accident he earned $7.90 a day. After he recovered, to some extent, at least,' he was paid the same daily wage; but his testimony, given at the trial some 10 months after the accident, was that he still suffered from his injuries and had to have some assistance in doing his work, which he could not do as efficiently as before nor as continuously from day to day. The testimony of the medical men was in conflict, but that on which plaintiff relied tended to show that some time after the accident he developed a slight curvature of the spine, in addition to the injuries to his flesh and muscles, and for the curvature he still wore a plaster cast which interfered with his work, and had lost about 20 pounds in weight. However, the physician who prescribed the plaster cast said that at the time of the trial plaintiff’s spine was straight. He also testified that plaintiff was affected by a sciatic sclerosis, the result of his injury, which caused pain. In the circumstances the court is unable to say that the jury may not have inferred injury impairing plaintiff’s earning capacity. Judgments in cases involving injuries of a sort to imply future impairment of earning capacity have been reversed in this court for the refusal to instruct the jury that such assessment must be nominal only — this because the court found no sufficient data for the assessment of such damages. The cases are cited in appellant’s brief. But in A. G. S. v. Flinn, 199 Ala. 177, 74 So. 246, B. R. L. & P. Co. v. Bush, 175 Ala. 49, 56 So. 731, L. & N. v. Binion, 107 Ala. 645, 18 So. 75, and M. & O. R. Co. v. George, 94 Ala. 199, 10 So. 145, the court seems to have had in mind a rule substantially to this effect. If plaintiff has suffered permanent injury under circumstances implying liability on the part of defendant, and the jury are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that such permanent injury will cause a loss of earning capacity, the assessment of damages on that account will be left to the fair and enlightened discretion of the jury, subject always to the control of the court. Considering the facts and circumstances of this ease from plaintiff's viewpoint, which the jury may very well have accepted, it is not perceived that damages for loss of earning capacity are more .speculative than in case of pain and suffering, mutilation, disfigurement, or loss of an organ, for all which juries have in general been allowed to assess damages to the successful plaintiff. South & N. A. R. Co. v. McLendon, 63 Ala. 273; M. & O. R. Co. v. George, 94 Ala. 199, 10 So. 145. The plaintiff in A. G. S. v. Taylor, 196 Ala. 42, 71 So. 676, had been doing the same sort of work as plaintiff in this case. There was evidence that the wages of plaintiff in that ease had been reduced, but the future effects of the injuries suffered were no more clearly shown than in this case, if as clearly ; there is no statement in the report of the case as to whether the age of the plaintiff was shown, but it is certain that no mortality table was put in evidence, as it.might have been, as affording data from which the jury may have ascertained the future duration of impaired earning capacity entailed by the injury. B. R. L. & P. Co. v. Wright, 153 Ala. 107, 44 So. 1037. But plaintiff was before the jury as a witness, as was the plaintiff in the last-cited case, and in that case the court said:
“The failure to offer the mortality tables in evidence does not authorize the conclusion that there was no evidence before the jury from which the jury could form a judgment as to the probable duration of the permanent injury suffered by the plaintiff, if such injury was sustained by him. As is indicated by the reference heretofore made to the presence of the plaintiff before the jury and to the tendencies of the evidence touching the damnifying effect of his injury upon his capacity to work and to earn wages, it cannot be held that there was an entire absence of evidence bearing upon the damnifying effect of his injury, if his injury was found by the jury to be permanent. Mary Lee Coal Co. v. Chambliss, 97 Ala. 171, 175, 11 So. 897.”
So in the present case we think, after such consideration as seemed to be made necessary by the confused state of the authorities, that the question of damages for impaired earning capacity was properly submitted to the jury.
The court left it with the jury to award damages for permanent injury. To the proposition that this was- error Norwood Hospital v. Jones, supra, is again - cited, and in addition two cases from the Kentucky Court of Appeals. This was a question of
Counsel for plaintiff, in his opening argument to the jury said:
“That man is injured; he has a hungry wife and hungry mouths to feed out there.”
• Counsel for defendant objected and moved the court to instruct the jury to disregard the quoted argument. The court sustained th< motion, saying to the jury: •
“I will sustain the motion, and, gentlemen of the jury, you are instructed by the court that it is not a proper argument; it is no element of damages in this case, and it is improper, and the court' instructs you not to consider that part of the attorney’s argument.”
There was no motion to enter a mistrial at the time. (That motion was made at a later time when the jury had gone out for lunch.) Counsel for plaintiff apologized and then stated:
“I don’t know whether you have a wife and family at home to support or not, and the evidence shows he has a wife then and there, and she had twin babies born to her at the time he was knocked out.”
The evidence to that effect went in without objection. But no further objection was interposed at the particular time or to the last-mentioned statement by counsel, and the argument proceeded. On the authority of Florence Cotton Co. v. Field, 104 Ala. 471, 16 So. 538, B. R. L. & P. Co. v. Drennen, 175 Ala. 338, 57 So. 876, Ann. Cas. 1914C, 1037, B. R. L. & P. Co. v. Gonzalez, 183 Ala. 287, 61 So. 80, Ann. Cas. 1916A, 543, Standridge v. Martin, 203 Ala. 486, 84 So. 266, and some other cases in the same line, the argument here is that the judgment should be reversed because of error in overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial made on this and similar objections taken against other parís of plaintiff’s argument to the jury. L. & N. v. Glick, 214 Ala. 303, 107 So. 453, Watts v. Espy, 211 Ala. 502, 101 So. 106, Alabama Fuel Co. v. Williams, 207 Ala. 99, 91 So. 879, Anderson v. State, 209 Ala. 36, 95 So. 171, Jackson Lumber Co. v. Trammell, 199 Ala. 536, 74 So. 469, and Metropolitan Ins. Co. v. Carter, 212 Ala. 212, 102 So. 130, are also referred to in the brief. Every question "of this sort is to be decided upon consideration of the peculiar facts involved and of the atmosphere created in the trial of the cause. The contention now is that the prejudicial effect of the- statement by counsel was very probably beyond the reach of the remedy applied by the trial court, and that, notwithstanding the court’s instruction, a reversal of the judgment should be ordered. Other objections to remarks of counsel were interposed as follows: '
Counsel said:
“Never in my life have I heard of such a measly defense as they are bringing up here. Dr. Beddow comes in here — the company doctor for the B. R. L. & P. Company. This man didn’t go up there at our request for Dr. Beddow to examine him. tie went up there in distress, trying to get some money to take care of his wife, to take care of his family, take care of him, and his doctor’s bills.”
To this argument defendant objected, and the court sustained the objection. Whereupon Mr. Taylor, counsel for plaintiff, said:
“I think that was wrong.”
Defendant moved the court to enter a mistrial. This the court overruled, saying:
“I *will overrule the motion for a mistrial, and I will instruct the jury that line of argument is not proper, that is not evidence in the case, and you are not to consider that in arriving at your verdict, and you must dismiss that from your minds together and not consider it. It has nothing to do with the case and you are to decide it — are to reach your verdict— from the testimony as adduced from the witness stand in the case, and not on improper arguments or things that have been suggested to you by counsel in argument. That is not based on facts in evidence. You must disabuse your minds of any such matters as he has just stated to you in arguing the case to the jury.”
Oounsel begged to be excused, but afterward continued as follows:
“I want you to consider the facts and give this man a verdict that will compensate him as far as money will compensate him for the injury and suffering he went through and will have to go through to his grave. I think he is injured about as bad as a man can be to live. I don’t know how long the man will live. I know he is going,down every day. He has to work to earn his living by the sweat of his brow. I don’t think there is a man on this jury but what believes that is all this man wants — that he wants what is right. We don’t want any small verdict. In this day and time people can’t live on the money they once could.”
Objection wag taken to bis remark:
“In this day and time peqple can’t live on the money they once could.”
Objection sustained. Motion for a mistrial overruled. Oounsel again expressed his sorrow on account of what he said. Thereupon the court said to the jury:
“Gentlemen, the last remarks are improper argument, and you will not give any consideration to them. Your verdict is not to be based on anything except the evidence adduced from the witness stand, and those remarks are improper, and you should not consider them at all in arriving at your verdict.”
Defendant again moved for a mistrial, which motion was overruled.
“That motorman standing up there—you know how they are. They have a mirror in front of them. They don’t have to look to see whether any passengers or fare] getting on or off the car. All this man had to do was to cut his eyes into that mirror, and there was no way in the world for him to miss seeing this man getting on. I don’t think he tried to catch this man in there and hurt him. I think he was looking up the street; he wasn’t noticing what he was doing. He had his mind on something else. He closed the gate and caught that boy. There was nothing to prevent him looking in that mirror and back down the side of the car, and nothing to prevent him from doing his duty. v
“I don’t believe this conductor—I don’t believe he was on that car the boy got hurt on. They caught this boy and hurt him, and they are not going to tell the company. Whoever that conductor and motorman are, they are not going to let it be known. I tell you, it is almost too much to ask that they go to their boss man and let it be known. Why? Because they are not going to lose their jobs. They can’t whip those cars off down that line any time they get reach and catch a man in there and whip him against a post—they can’t do it.”
Objection by defendant to that part of the argument, last quoted, that the street car men would not tell anything because they were afraid they would lose their jobs. Overruled. Counsel for plaintiff! withdrew the remark and requested the court to instruct the jury not to consider it. The court thereupon said to the jury:
“Gentlemen of the jury, there is no evidence before you that any employee of this defendant company is going to lose his job by any action of his, and any argument based on any such assertion of counsel is improper and should not be considered by you.. As I told you before, your verdict is to be based on the evidence as adduced from the witness stand in this case, and not on any argument made by counsel which is not based on facts in the case.”
We have been at pains to show all those parts of plaintiff’s argument to the jury to which objection was made and what the court said on the subject of each instance. We find no very serious objection'to those parts subsequent to the first as being wide departures from the line of legitimate argument.. The court cannot too narrowly circumscribe the scope and latitude of argument. Counsel must be allowed, within limits, to draw their own conclusions and to express their arguments in their own way, provided, of course, they do not travel out of the record or make use of unfair means to create prejudice in the minds of the jury. As for one of the objections argued in the brief, this court has taken judicial notice of the decreased purchasing power of money. As for another, counsel had a right to their opinion that the defense was “measly” and to advise the jury of that opinion. If the language employed was not such as to meet the approval of a fastidious taste, that objection goes to the form and not the substance of the argument. So with respect to the statement by counsel:
“I don’t believe this conductor. * * * Because they are not going to lose their jobs.”
It occurs to us that this was merely to call attention to the natural tendency of employee witnesses to favor their employers as a reason why, in- connection with other facts in evidence, the jury might not be bound by the witness’ testimony; but, however that may be, with the corrective applied by the court we are unwilling to affirm reversible error at this point. L. & N. v. Cunningham Hdw. Co., 213 Ala. 252, 104 So. 433.
It appears to us clear enough that it was open to the jury to find that plaintiff suffered injury caused by the negligence of defendant’s conductor in charge of the car. The main question in the case related to the measure of damages. And the only remark of counsel prejudicially affecting that question was that one which we considered in the first place. The court, responding to the several objections, said as much as it could reasonably be expected to say to the jury in the way of removing any impression these remarks may have made upon them. The motion for a mistrial should have been promptly made; instead, it was delayed until the jury had gone from the court room and the court had proceeded for some time with the trial. And while the same objection, in substance, was available on the motion for a new trial, the trial judge, who witnessed the proceedings, was of opinion that there was no sufficient reason for granting the motion, and we are not prepared to say the court committed reversible error.
The charge which we have marked (20) on the margin of the record stated its proposition in a way calculated to mislead the jury, and we do not find error in its refusal. It was calculated to mislead the jury to think that defendant’s acceptance of plaintiff must have been indicated by some formal action on the part Of its conductor. What is said in Alabama City, etc., R. R. v. Bates, 149 Ala. 490, 43 So. 98, is true enough, but the opinion in that case does not tell the whole story. This question arose in Mobile Light & R. R. Co. v. Ellis, 209 Ala. 580, 96 So. 773.
Proceeding on principles stated in that case, the jury in this were authorized by the evidence to find that defendant extended an invitation to the public to board its car at the station where plaintiff was injured, that plaintiff made reasonably prompt effort to get aboard, and thereby it became the duty of defendant’s agents in charge of the car to exercise reasonable care and diligence to see that no person, in the actual process of accepting such invitation in the usual way, was so related to the car as that, if the door were closed without due notice or in negligent haste, the intending passenger, plaintiff in
The duty of defendant in the operation of its car at the point in question, with respect to persons in the situation of plaintiff — if his theory of the facts was accepted by the jury — was absolute; that is, it was a duty resting unequivocally on defendant. How such duty was to be discharged is another matter. As to that the charge shown by the fifteenth assignment of error was in some confusion. The duty and the decree of care necessary in its discharge were stated to the jury by the court in its oral charge, as follows:
“Now, the law in regard to the conduct of those operating street cars is this. That when a street car stops at a point for the manifest purpose of discharging and taking on passengers, that is, extends an invitation to that end, and it is accepted by persons waiting at said stopping place for the purpose of boarding the car, it is the duty of those in charge of the operation of the street car to exercise reasonable care and diligence to see that no person in the act of accepting such invitation in the usual way and boarding the car is in a position which would be rendered dangerous by moving the car without warning, and to exercise reasonable care and diligence to see that the intending passenger would not likely be injured by denying or obstructing his entry into the car.”
This, perhaps, stated the rule as to what degree of care should be exercised by defendant to ascertain the situation of persons about to board the car with some undue favor to defendant, but of that defendant cannot complain. However that may he, this part of the oral charge covered the case, and there was no reversible error in refusing to give a charge which exacted of defendant a higher degree of care.
As for the thirteenth, fourteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth assignments of error, the charges shown by these assignments to have been refused on defendant’s request are argued in solido. They either pretermit mention of defendant’s duty to know that plaintiff was attempting to get aboard the car, as was the case in the charge shown by the sixteenth assignment, or they leave it to the jury to say in what circumstances such duty rested upon defendant or its agent, or agents, then and there in charge of the car. The facts were for the jury, certainly, but the law was reserved for statement by the court for the guidance of the jury in ascertaining the legal significance of the facts to be found. These charges failed in that, and there was no error in refusing them.
Appellant also contends that the damages assessed were excessive. As to that the testimony was in conflict. Booking to all the circumstances, the court is of opinion that this contention on the part of appellant is well taken, and that $10,000 will fully compensate appellee for the damage shown, and, accordingly, in pursuance of section 6150 of the Code, will affirm the judgment if appellee within 30 days thereof shall certify to the clerk of this court a remittitur of damages in excess of the said amount; otherwise, the judgment will be reversed.
Affirmed conditionally.
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *457 To state the case very briefly, plaintiff's (appellee's) version is that defendant's electric street car stopped at a customary place of stopping where he awaited it to take passage, that he waited until a number of passengers alighted, after which, with reasonable expedition, attempting to get aboard, he reached up and caught some part of the door of the car, whereupon the door was closed, catching his hand, and the car moved ahead, dragging him along until he was thrown against an iron post, causing the various injuries described in count 1 of the complaint. The charge was that this was negligently done. The evidence supported this theory of the case, and the jury returned a verdict accordingly.
The case went to the jury on the third count of the complaint charging simple negligence. That count, for a description of the injuries suffered by plaintiff, referred to and adopted the allegations of count 1. Count 1, among other elements of damage, alleged that plaintiff was "permanently injured and * * * his nervous system was greatly shocked and impaired and permanently shocked and impaired * * * and [he] was made permanently sick and ill." Appellant, defendant, contends that the trial court committed error in that part of its oral charge in which the jury were told that, if plaintiff was entitled to recover, they might assess damages to compensate him for, among other things, "any impairment of his earning capacity." Defendant does not concede that the complaint claimed damages for impaired earning capacity. In this connection *459
we are referred to B. R. L. P. Co. v. Colbert,
"The plaintiff is not entitled to be redressed for any more than the wrong charged in the complaint, and such damages as naturally result from such wrongful act or such as are, in legal contemplation, its proximate result. Other damages are what is known in the law as special damages. * * * When it is sought to recover damages of this class, they must be specially averred in the complaint."
Later on in the opinion in the Colbert Case it was said that:
"The law implies some diminished earning capacity from permanent injury."
That statement was too broad, for, evidently, a person may suffer some permanent injury which would not permanently affect his earning capacity, and yet, for such injury, if negligently inflicted, he would be entitled to recover damages in an action properly framed; but, otherwise, it was a correct statement of law. The reason of the matter in question is reflected by the great weight of authority, which is thus stated in 17 C. J. 1015, § 313:
"Where the injury alleged will necessarily render a person less capable of performing his usual business duties in the future, proof of the impairment of his general earning capacity may ordinarily be given under the general allegation of the injury, and damages resulting therefrom, such as the inability to attend to his ordinary business, without a special averment that plaintiff will be unable to earn as much in the future as in the past, or without specially averring the nature of his occupation or employment, although a few courts seem to require a greater strictness and definiteness in the allegation."
Decisions from some 15 different jurisdictions are cited in support of the major proposition of the quoted text. Decisions from the courts of 6 states are cited in support of the rule of "a few courts [which] seem to require a greater strictness," among the latter the Colbert Case,
"The permanent impairment of the power to earn money is an incident to a permanent injury, and is necessarily such."
The court is of opinion that the permanent injuries alleged in the present case imply an impairment of earning capacity, and, upon proper proof, allowed a recovery of damages for such impairment.
The more serious difficulty, under our decisions, is raised by the insistence that the evidence furnished no data for the assessment of such damages in terms of money. Defendant contends that the court erroneously allowed the assessment of such damages. Norwood Hospital v. Jones,
"For a personal injury to a child nine years of age, * * * the law furnishes no measure of damages other than the enlightened conscience of impartial jurors, guided by all the facts and circumstances of the particular case. Amongst the results of the injury to be considered, are pain and suffering, disfigurement and mutilation of the person, and impaired capacity to pursue the ordinary avocations of life at and after attainment of majority."
In that case the plaintiff had suffered the loss of his right arm. Plaintiff in the present case was a young man, evidently, though his age is not definitely shown by the bill of exceptions. He was a subforeman, working for the defendant railroad in its machine shop or roundhouse. Before the accident he earned $7.90 a day. After he recovered, to some extent, at least, he was paid the same daily wage; but his testimony, given at the trial some 10 months after the accident, was that he still suffered from his injuries and had to have some assistance in doing his work, which he could not do as efficiently as before nor as continuously from day to day. The testimony of the medical men was in conflict, but that on which plaintiff relied tended to show that some time after the accident he developed a slight curvature of the spine, in addition to the injuries to his flesh and muscles, and for the curvature he still wore a plaster cast which interfered with his work, and had lost about 20 pounds in weight. However, the physician who prescribed the plaster cast said that at the time of the trial plaintiff's spine was straight. He also testified that plaintiff was affected by a sciatic sclerosis, the result of his injury, which caused pain. In the circumstances the court is unable to say that the jury may not have inferred injury impairing plaintiff's earning capacity. Judgments in cases involving injuries of a sort to imply future impairment of earning capacity have been reversed in this court for the refusal to instruct the jury that such assessment must be nominal only — this because the court found no sufficient data for the assessment of such damages. The cases are cited in appellant's brief. But in A. G. S. v. Flinn,
"The failure to offer the mortality tables in evidence does not authorize the conclusion that there was no evidence before the jury from which the jury could form a judgment as to the probable duration of the permanent injury suffered by the plaintiff, if such injury was sustained by him. As is indicated by the reference heretofore made to the presence of the plaintiff before the jury and to the tendencies of the evidence touching the damnifying effect of his injury upon his capacity to work and to earn wages, it cannot be held that there was an entire absence of evidence bearing upon the damnifying effect of his injury, if his injury was found by the jury to be permanent. Mary Lee Coal Co. v. Chambliss,
So in the present case we think, after such consideration as seemed to be made necessary by the confused state of the authorities, that the question of damages for impaired earning capacity was properly submitted to the jury.
The court left it with the jury to award damages for permanent injury. To the proposition that this was error Norwood Hospital v. Jones, supra, is again cited, and in addition two cases from the Kentucky Court of Appeals. This was a question of *461 fact. Judicial precedents are not of much account in the decision of such questions. We have stated our conclusion that plaintiff's evidence tended to establish permanent injury. The court is still of that opinion. As for the credibility of the evidence given, that was a matter of consideration by the jury.
Counsel for plaintiff, in his opening argument to the jury said:
"That man is injured; he has a hungry wife and hungry mouths to feed out there."
Counsel for defendant objected and moved the court to instruct the jury to disregard the quoted argument. The court sustained the motion, saying to the jury:
"I will sustain the motion, and, gentlemen of the jury, you are instructed by the court that it is not a proper argument; it is no element of damages in this case, and it is improper, and the court instructs you not to consider that part of the attorney's argument."
There was no motion to enter a mistrial at the time. (That motion was made at a later time when the jury had gone out for lunch.) Counsel for plaintiff apologized and then stated:
"I don't know whether you have a wife and family at home to support or not, and the evidence shows he has a wife then and there, and she had twin babies born to her at the time he was knocked out."
The evidence to that effect went in without objection. But no further objection was interposed at the particular time or to the last-mentioned statement by counsel, and the argument proceeded. On the authority of Florence Cotton Co. v. Field,
Counsel said:
"Never in my life have I heard of such a measly defense as they are bringing up here. Dr. Beddow comes in here — the company doctor for the B. R. L. P. Company. This man didn't go up there at our request for Dr. Beddow to examine him. He went up there in distress, trying to get some money4 to take care of his wife, to take care of his family, take care of him, and his doctor's bills."
To this argument defendant objected, and the court sustained the objection. Whereupon Mr. Taylor, counsel for plaintiff, said:
"I think that was wrong."
Defendant moved the court to enter a mistrial. This the court overruled, saying:
"I will overrule the motion for a mistrial, and I will instruct the jury that line of argument is not proper, that is not evidence in the case, and you are not to consider that in arriving at your verdict, and you must dismiss that from your minds together and not consider it. It has nothing to do with the case and you are to decide it — are to reach your verdict — from the testimony as adduced from the witness stand in the case, and not on improper arguments or things that have been suggested to you by counsel in argument. That is not based on facts in evidence. You must disabuse your minds of any such matters as he has just stated to you in arguing the case to the jury."
Counsel begged to be excused, but afterward continued as follows:
"I want you to consider the facts and give this man a verdict that will compensate him as far as money will compensate him for the injury and suffering he went through and will have to go through to his grave. I think he is injured about as bad as a man can be to live. I don't know how long the man will live. I know he is going down every day. He has to work to earn his living by the sweat of his brow. I don't think there is a man on this jury but what believes that is all this man wants — that he wants what is right. We don't want any small verdict. In this day and time people can't live on the money they once could."
Objection was taken to his remark:
"In this day and time people can't live on the money they once could."
Objection sustained. Motion for a mistrial overruled. Counsel again expressed his sorrow on account of what he said. Thereupon the court said to the jury:
"Gentlemen, the last remarks are improper argument, and you will not give any consideration to them. Your verdict is not to be based on anything except the evidence adduced from the witness stand, and those remarks are improper, and you should not consider them at all in arriving at your verdict."
Defendant again moved for a mistrial, which motion was overruled. *462
In his closing argument Mr. Taylor said:
"That motorman standing up there — you know how they are. They have a mirror in front of them. They don't have to look to see whether any passengers or [are] getting on or off the car. All this man had to do was to cut his eyes into that mirror, and there was no way in the world for him to miss seeing this man getting on. I don't think he tried to catch this man in there and hurt him. I think he was looking up the street; he wasn't noticing what he was doing. He had his mind on something else. He closed the gate and caught that boy. There was nothing to prevent him looking in that mirror and back down the side of the car, and nothing to prevent him from doing his duty.
"I don't believe this conductor — I don't believe he was on that car the boy got hurt on. They caught this boy and hurt him, and they are not going to tell the company. Whoever that conductor and motorman are, they are not going to let it be known. I tell you, it is almost too much to ask that they go to their boss man and let it be known. Why? Because they are not going to lose their jobs. They can't whip those cars off down that line any time they get reach and catch a man in there and whip him against a post — they can't do it."
Objection by defendant to that part of the argument, last quoted, that the street car men would not tell anything because they were afraid they would lose their jobs. Overruled. Counsel for plaintiff withdrew the remark and requested the court to instruct the jury not to consider it. The court thereupon said to the jury:
"Gentlemen of the jury, there is no evidence before you that any employee of this defendant company is going to lose his job by any action of his, and any argument based on any such assertion of counsel is improper and should not be considered by you. As I told you before, your verdict is to be based on the evidence as adduced from the witness stand in this case, and not on any argument made by counsel which is not based on facts in the case."
We have been at pains to show all those parts of plaintiff's argument to the jury to which objection was made and what the court said on the subject of each instance. We find no very serious objection to those parts subsequent to the first as being wide departures from the line of legitimate argument. The court cannot too narrowly circumscribe the scope and latitude of argument. Counsel must be allowed, within limits, to draw their own conclusions and to express their arguments in their own way, provided, of course, they do not travel out of the record or make use of unfair means to create prejudice in the minds of the jury. As for one of the objections argued in the brief, this court has taken judicial notice of the decreased purchasing power of money. As for another, counsel had a right to their opinion that the defense was "measly" and to advise the jury of that opinion. If the language employed was not such as to meet the approval of a fastidious taste, that objection goes to the form and not the substance of the argument. So with respect to the statement by counsel:
"I don't believe this conductor. * * * Because they are not going to lose their jobs."
It occurs to us that this was merely to call attention to the natural tendency of employee witnesses to favor their employers as a reason why, in connection with other facts in evidence, the jury might not be bound by the witness' testimony; but, however that may be, with the corrective applied by the court we are unwilling to affirm reversible error at this point. L. N. v. Cunningham Hdw. Co.,
It appears to us clear enough that it was open to the jury to find that plaintiff suffered injury caused by the negligence of defendant's conductor in charge of the car. The main question in the case related to the measure of damages. And the only remark of counsel prejudicially affecting that question was that one which we considered in the first place. The court, responding to the several objections, said as much as it could reasonably be expected to say to the jury in the way of removing any impression these remarks may have made upon them. The motion for a mistrial should have been promptly made; instead, it was delayed until the jury had gone from the court room and the court had proceeded for some time with the trial. And while the same objection, in substance, was available on the motion for a new trial, the trial judge, who witnessed the proceedings, was of opinion that there was no sufficient reason for granting the motion, and we are not prepared to say the court committed reversible error.
[9] The charge which we have marked (20) on the margin of the record stated its proposition in a way calculated to mislead the jury, and we do not find error in its refusal. It was calculated to mislead the jury to think that defendant's acceptance of plaintiff must have been indicated by some formal action on the part of its conductor. What is said in Alabama City, etc., R. R. v. Bates,
Proceeding on principles stated in that case, the jury in this were authorized by the evidence to find that defendant extended an invitation to the public to board its car at the station where plaintiff was injured, that plaintiff made reasonably prompt effort to get aboard, and thereby it became the duty of defendant's agents in charge of the car to exercise reasonable care and diligence to see that no person, in the actual process of accepting such invitation in the usual way, was so related to the car as that, if the door were closed without due notice or in negligent haste, the intending passenger, plaintiff in *463
this case, would likely be injured, and, on a finding in agreement with the foregoing statement, the jury should have found that to every intent and purpose of this case plaintiff was entitled to be treated as a passenger. In Sweet v. B. R.
E. Co.,
The duty of defendant in the operation of its car at the point in question, with respect to persons in the situation of plaintiff — if his theory of the facts was accepted by the jury — was absolute; that is, it was a duty resting unequivocally on defendant. How such duty was to be discharged is another matter. As to that the charge shown by the fifteenth assignment of error was in some confusion. The duty and the decree of care necessary in its discharge were stated to the jury by the court in its oral charge, as follows:
"Now, the law in regard to the conduct of those operating street cars is this. That when a street car stops at a point for the manifest purpose of discharging and taking on passengers, that is, extends an invitation to that end, and it is accepted by persons waiting at said stopping place for the purpose of boarding the car, it is the duty of those in charge of the operation of the street car to exercise reasonable care and diligence to see that no person in the act of accepting such invitation in the usual way and boarding the car is in a position which would be rendered dangerous by moving the car without warning, and to exercise reasonable care and diligence to see that the intending passenger would not likely be injured by denying or obstructing his entry into the car."
This, perhaps, stated the rule as to what degree of care should be exercised by defendant to ascertain the situation of persons about to board the car with some undue favor to defendant, but of that defendant cannot complain. However that may be, this part of the oral charge covered the case, and there was no reversible error in refusing to give a charge which exacted of defendant a higher degree of care.
As for the thirteenth, fourteenth, sixteenth, and seventeenth assignments of error, the charges shown by these assignments to have been refused on defendant's request are argued in solido. They either pretermit mention of defendant's duty to know that plaintiff was attempting to get aboard the car, as was the case in the charge shown by the sixteenth assignment, or they leave it to the jury to say in what circumstances such duty rested upon defendant or its agent, or agents, then and there in charge of the car. The facts were for the jury, certainly, but the law was reserved for statement by the court for the guidance of the jury in ascertaining the legal significance of the facts to be found. These charges failed in that, and there was no error in refusing them.
Appellant also contends that the damages assessed were excessive. As to that the testimony was in conflict. Looking to all the circumstances, the court is of opinion that this contention on the part of appellant is well taken, and that $10,000 will fully compensate appellee for the damage shown, and, accordingly, in pursuance of section 6150 of the Code, will affirm the judgment if appellee within 30 days thereof shall certify to the clerk of this court a remittitur of damages in excess of the said amount; otherwise, the judgment will be reversed.
Affirmed conditionally.
All the Justices concur, except SOMERVILLE, J., who dissents.
SAYRE, THOMAS, BOULDIN, and BROWN, JJ., concur.
ANDERSON, C. J., dissents, being of opinion that the judgment should be reversed on account of the argument of counsel for appellee (plaintiff).
SOMERVILLE and GARDNER, JJ., dissent on the first three points discussed in the prevailing opinion.
Dissenting Opinion
dissents, being of opinion that the judgment should be reversed on account of the argument of counsel for appellee (plaintiff).
Rehearing
On Rehearing.
The application for a rehearing is overruled.