The opinion of the Court was delivered by
The plaintiff, a section master of the defendant company, while returning on a hand car to his home at Bethune, on November 8, 1900, was overrun by a wild freight car of defendant, which had escaped from the siding- at Cassett, on the main line, and thereby sustained serious personal injuries, for which this action was brought. The jury rendered a verdict in favor of plaintiff for $22,000; but, in consequence of an order for a new trial nisi, the plaintiff remitted from the verdict so as to reduce it to $10,000, for which judgment was entered, from which comes this appeal.
4.
The second subdivision of the fifth exception presents the point that it was error to charge that punitive damages were recoverable where there was evidence of recklessness or wanton disregard of the rights of others, because it indicated that evidence of recklessness alone would entitle the plaintiff to recover such damages. This exception must be overruled, because an examination of the charge as a whole shows that the jury were repeatedly instructed that to justify punitive damages it must appear that the acts alleged were wantonly or wilfully done. There may be a recklessness so great as to imply wilfulness, and in such case punitive damages may be awarded.
Procter
v.
Railway,
61 S. C., 189,
The exceptions are overruled, and the judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.
