90 So. 245 | Miss. | 1921
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellee, David Branciere, sued appellants, E. Bonelli Company, in the circuit court of Warren county for an injury received by him in the loss of four fingers of his left hand alleged by him to have been caused by the negligence of appellants’ driver of their auto delivery truck, and recovered a judgment in the sum of twelve thousand dollars, from which appellants prosecute this appeal.
Appellants assign several errors. Only those which were argued are considered of sufficient importance to notice. The action of the trial court in refusing appellants’ request to direct a verdict in their favor is assigned as error. This assignment is based on the contention on behalf of appellants that the evidence did not tend to establish liability. In considering this question every fact favorable to appellee’s case, either proven directly or reasonably infer-able from the evidence should be treated as established. We find that the testimony either established or tended to establish the following facts: Appellants were merchants in the city of Vicksburg and made delivery of goods sold to their customers in the city and vicinity by means of an auto-delivery truck, which on the occasion in question was driven by one McGuire accompanied by a negro boy who carried the packages from the truck to the residences of the customers. Appellee was a pipe fitter, 81 years of age, with a wife and child. The rear of the premises where he resided bordered on the west side of an alley running-north and south fourteen and one-half feet wide, from which there was an entrance into his back yard by means of two folding gates opening out east into the alley. The injury to appellee occurred about noon. Appellants’ delivery truck was being driven by their employe McGuire through this alley from north to south making delivery of goods to their customers. It stopped at or near the back entrance to appellee’s premises to make delivery of a package of goods to a customer on the east side of the alley.
It is true, as argued on behalf of the appellants, that every negligent act does not carry with it liability of the guilty person for any and all resulting injuries to others; that such wrongful act must be the proximate cause of the injury which follows; that the person guilty of the wrong must have reasonably anticipated that some injury might result therefrom to another. But it cannot be said in this case the testimony did not tend to show that the driver of the truclrknew or should have reasonably anticipated, when the truck struck the gate while the appellee was in the act of closing it, some injury might result therefrom to the appellee. There was nothing to prevent the driver’s seeing the gate and the conduct of the appellee in trying to close it, unless at the time of the injury the front part of the truck had passed the gate, which appellee denies, for he says his fingers Avere cut off by the front fender. This Avas a question for the jury. We conclude therefore there Avas no error in refusing to direct a verdict for the appellants.
The court refused an instruction requested on behalf of appellants to the effect that if the evidence showed that the injury Avas caused solely by the negligence of the appellee they should find a verdict for the appellants.
This instruction embodied a correct statement of the law, because the appellee \Aras not entitled to recover for an injury attributable entirely to his OAvn fault. How
The action of the court in granting the third instruction for the appellee covering the elements and measure of damages is assigned as error. By that instruction the jury were told, among other things, that if they found for the appellee in assessing damages they “should be governed by the application of the sense of justice and right to the facts of this case.” It is claimed that this clause in the instruction is erroneous because the jury were by it turned loose to their own imagination as to the amount of verdict they should return. The instruction in another clause informed the jury that their verdict should be based on the evidence. Therefore the trial court simply meant to tell the jury that in fixing the damages they should be guided by their sense of justice and right arising out of the evidence. Appellants insist that this part of the in-
One fault of the instruction was that the jury were authorized to assess such damages as they saw fit without regard to the evidence. If that instruction had contained the qualification that the judgment of the jury as to what was fit should be based on the evidence, there would have been no fault in this respect. The court said in that case that verdicts must be based upon facte and not upon the whims or wishes, likes, or dislikes of the jury. The court said further that the instruction was faulty in another respect, in that it confined the jury in assessing damages to a consideration of the instructions given for the plaintiff. In our opinion it was eminently proper for the court to tell the jury that in assessing damages for the appellee they should return a verdict according to their sense of justice and right as shown by the facts developed in the evidence.
Another criticism of this instruction is, in addition to informing the jury that in assessing the appellee’s damages they should consider his physical and mental suffering past and future, as well as any permanent disability and loss of earning capacity, the instruction went further and told the jury they should consider as an element of damages “any disfigurement of his body” as shown by the evidence. It is argued that there can be no recovery for disfigurement of body unaccompanied with physical suffering, because disfigurement of body alone is not an element of damages; that to allow a recovery for disfigurement of body would be tantamount to permitting a recovery for mental anguish or humiliation unaccompanied by physical suffering.
In Grenada Bank v. Lester, 89 So. 2, the court held that no damages could be recovered for “embarrassment and humiliation.” The point is, that the humiliation or mental pain must be accompanied with and be a part of the physical suffering. Whenever the latter ceases to be an ele-
In So. Pac. Co. v. Hetzer, 135 Fed. 272, 68 C. C. A. 26, 1 L. R. A. (N. S.) 288, the court in discussing this question said: “But mortification or distress of mind from the contemplation of the crippled condition and of its effect upon the esteem of his fellows, that mental pain which is separable from the physical suffering caused by the injury, is too remote, indefinite, and intangible to constitute an element of the damages in such a case.”
This view does not militate against the principle, Avell established in the jurisprudence of this state, that there may be a recovery for mental pain and humiliation growing out of and accompanied with physical injury. We simply hold that when the physical suffering is at an end there can be no recovery for mental suffering or humiliation which may thereafter continue as the result of the physical disfigurement of body. The instruction in question not only authorized the jury to award the appellee damages for physical and mental suffering resulting therefrom as long- as such physical suffering continued, but further authorized the jury to return a verdict for mental suffering and humiliation which the appellee might experience in the future after his physical suffering had ceased. The case is reversed for trial alone on the question of damages.
Reversed and remanded.