1. Since the rendition by the Supreme Court of the opinion in the case of L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Markee, Adm'x,
In the present case there was but one count.' to the complaint, and in it the plaintiff claimed of the defendant $5,000 damages, alleged to have been received by him because the defendant so negligently ran or operated an automobile as to cause a horse which plaintiff was driving to become frightened, and to run away and throw the plaintiff out of his buggy, whereby he was severely injured, etc. The complaint was therefore one claiming damages for the simple negligence of the defendant only. Under it the plaintiff was not entitled to recover punitive or vindicative damages. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Markee, Adm’x, supra; Anniston Electric & Gas Co. v. Rosen,
It is evident, therefore, that the trial court committed reversible error in submitting, under the pleadings in this case, the question of the imposition of vindicative damages upon the defend ant. The plaintiff, in his complaint, laid no claim to such damages, and the complaint contains none of the essential averments authorizing their imposition upon the defendant. •
2. Mere recklessness, without more, does not constitute wanton or willful injxu’y. Exemplary damages are allowable to one injured by the wrong of another, when the wrong is maliciously perpetrated, or where the wrongful act is done knowingly, wantonly, and recklessly, under such circumstances, as indicate that the wrongdoer knew that the act was fraught with prob
While malice is not necessarily personal hate or ill will, it is “that state of mind which is reckless of law and of the legal rights of the citizen.” To 'authorize a recovery, therefore, of vindicative damages, the act producing the injury must be done either from personal hate or ill will, or the evidence must show that when he did the act the wrongdoer was in a .state of mind which was reckless of law and of the legal rights of the citizen.' — Birmingham Water Wks. Co. v. Keiley,
Of course, the circumstances attendant upon the perpetration of a wrong largely determine the character of the wrong. An act, done in one place, or under one set of circumstances, may not amount to an act of simple negligence even; the same act, done in another place, or under another set of circumstances, may amount to that reckless disregard of the persons, lives, or property of others as to amount, in law, to wantonness.. There must, however, exist more than the mere doing of an act recklessly for the act to amount to such wanton misconduct or intentional wrong as will justify the imposition of exemplary damages upon its perpetrator. — Highland Ave. & B. R. Co. v. Robinson,
We have above discussed the only important questions appearing in the record which we thought might present difficulty to the trial court on the next trial of this case. The bill of exceptions show's that, during the examination of the witnesses, and wThile the trial was in actual progress, the road upon which the injury occurred was treated as a public highway'. It is evident that on the next trial evidence upon that subject can he made more abundant than it appears to have been on the former trial. Confessedly the defendant, at the time of the injury, w'as running his automobile at a higher rate of speed than that allowed under the provisions of sections 6323 and 6324 of the Code. If the plaintiff’s injuries were received by' him as the natural and proximate result of that fact, then he is entitled, under the pleadings as they now' exist, to compensation for the actual damages so suffered by' him. If, on the contrary', they were not due to that fact, then did they occur as the natural and proximate result of some other act of negligence of the defendant in the operation of his automobile at the time and place of the injury? If so, the plaintiff is entitled to recover, and, if not, he is not.
The judgment of the court below' is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
