72 N.Y.S. 217 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The plaintiff’s judgment was recovered for damages alleged'to have been sustained while she was a passenger on defendant’s road. She was on a south-bound car on Third avenue, and as it approached One Hundred and Twenty-first street she became alarmed at the sight of flames shooting from the controller box and left the car. In stepping on or over the metal door sill at the rear of the car she claims to have received an electric shock, resulting in the condition of injury of which she complains.
There was no medical or other expert evidence to the contrary. This was abundantly sufficient to establish a prima faoie case of .
What has been said disposes of most of the objections raised in opposition to the hypothetical questions permitted by the court to-be asked the medical witnesses. Other objections have been examined and found not well taken, or not applicable to any inaccuracy which may have been exhibited in the framing of the questions. It also serves to distinguish the case from Mitchell v. Rochester Ry. Co. (151 N. Y. 107), wherein it was held that there can be no mental shock unconnected with a direct physical attack. Assuming that the doctrine of that case is applicable to a common carrier engaged in the actual transportation of a passenger, for hire, the shock occasioned by contact with an electric current must be regarded as a direct physical and personal assault for which a negligent defendant may be held liable. Besides, the jury was instructed that there could be no recovery for mere fright, or for its consequences.
The defendant’s negligence was not only established by the evidence already reverted to, but also by proof that the phenomenon described could not have existed if the electrical appliances of the car were in proper shape. There was evidence that the car after the accident was used the same day on four through trips without further harm, but there was no evidence of any subsequent inspection, and no direct evidence that it was not out of order. Under these circumstances the positive evidence was not sufficient to justify the assumption that the defendant was free from blame as matter of law. The question of the defendant’s negligence, and all' other-questions arising in the case, were submitted to the jury in a charge that was thorough, fair, accurate and impartial, to which no exception was taken by the defendant.
The plaintiff is a married woman. For some years she has lived apart from her husband, whose whereabouts are unknown to her,, and she has supported herself by the business of dressmaking, conducted on her sole behalf. It is urged that she could not recover on the original complaint for any incapacity in the conduct of that business occasioned by the accident, and that the learned trial justice erred in permitting a-n amendment of the complaint upon
It wag alleged in the complaint as originally framed that by reason of the accident and its consequences the plaintiff had been and “ will be in the future maimed and disabled from properly attending to her household and other duties a/nd business.” ' This plainly admonished the defendant that she would claim special damages by reason of injury to her business. The nature of her business was not disclosed, and in that respect the complaint may be deemed vague and uncertain, but the defendant could have had it made more definite, and could have procured the particulars before trial. On the trial the court permitted an amendment by adding to the words herein quoted the words “ of dressmaking and the loss of income therefrom by reason of being maimed and disabled as aforesaid.” There was no allegation of surprise on the part of the defendant that the business was dressmaking rather than some other business, but the surprise manifested was as to the fact that there was any claim for special damage because of the impaired power to conduct business. The amendment, if necessary, was within the discretion of the trial court, and there is nothing in the case to require a reversal by this court because of its exercise. The cases of Freeland v. Brooklyn Heights R. R. Co. (54 App. Div. 90) and Edge v. Third Avenue R. R. Co. (57 id. 29) are easily distinguishable from this one. In the former a recovery was had for an item of special damage not set up in the complaint at all. In the latter an amendment was allowed adding an item of special damage of which the original complaint contained no suggestion. In neither case was the special damage, originally alleged. Here it was alleged, although so indefinitely as probably to require an amendment making it more specific and definite, and which amendment was within the power and discretion of the trial court.
But the learned counsel for the appellant insist that there being no allegation in the complaint, either originally or as amended, to-the effect that the plaintiff,, a married woman, was carrying on the business on her own account, it was improper to allow proof of the •amount of her earnings in the business as a basis of recovery. The case of Uransky v. D. D., E. B. & B. R. R. Co. (118 N. Y. 304) may be regarded as authority for this contention, unless the
(Jones v. Niagara Junction Ry. Co., 63 App. Div. 607.) But there was no request to charge the jury that the plaintiff could not recover for loss of earnings in her business, and no exception to -the charge
The judgment and order should be affirmed.
Present: Goodrich, P. J., Woodward, Hirschberg, Jenks and Sewell, JJ.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.