143 N.Y. 417 | NY | 1894
The evidence supports the claim that through the negligence of the guard in closing the gate to the platform of one of the defendant's cars, before the plaintiff's wife, who was seeking to enter the car, had got upon the platform, she was seriously injured, and that as one of the consequences of the injury she had a miscarriage a few days thereafter. Her pregnancy had then existed a few weeks. *420 The court permitted the jury to consider and to include in the verdict "any damages arising from the injury and resulting in depriving the plaintiff of prospective offspring." The charge on this point was expanded and repeated by the judge. The defendant excepted to this ruling. We think the exception was well taken, construing the charge most favorably to the plaintiff, that the court intended to confine the jury to a consideration of damage to the plaintiff from the loss of the chance of offspring involved in the particular miscarriage proved.
The action was for the loss of service of the wife. The term service in actions of this character includes any pecuniary injury suffered by the husband from having been deprived of the aid, comfort and society of his wife, or which reasonably may be expected to result in the future, including charges and expenses incurred, or which he may be put to in consequence of the wrong. (Cooley on Torts, p. 266 [226].) The wife has her own action for her physical injury, and for the pain and suffering to which she has been or will be subjected. The husband's action is for the consequences affecting his estate and for depriving him of the aid, society and companionship of his wife, which, except for the wrong, he might reasonably expect to enjoy. It is doubtless true that the raising of children is one of the objects of marriage. The husband may and usually does contemplate the birth of children as one of the important advantages of the marital relation. At common law and independently of statutory enactments, the death of a person caused by the negligence of another, gave no right of action for damages to any person, however closely connected with the deceased. But recent statutes, changing the rule of the common law, recognize the ties of kindred, the mutual dependence of parents and children, husband and wife, and of persons standing in other degrees of relationship, the reasonable expectations that pecuniary aid or assistance, even outside of legal obligations, will be extended by relatives to each other in case of necessity, and upon this basis have given a statutory action for the benefit of the widow and next *421
of kin of a deceased person whose death was caused by the wrongful act, neglect or default of another against the wrongdoer, to recover the pecuniary damages, not exceeding a specified amount, resulting from such death, to the persons for whose benefit the action is given. (Chap. 450, Laws of 1847; chap. 256, Laws of 1849.) Under these statutes actions are allowed to be maintained for the death of infant children for the benefit of parents, and recoveries have been sustained, the basis of damage being the supposed pecuniary value to the parents of the life of the infant. (Etherington v. R.R. Co.,
We think there was error also in one of the rulings upon the admission of evidence. The plaintiff's wife testified to the closing of the gate and the blow received, and stated that at the time the guard was looking in the opposite direction; that immediately after the blow she made an exclamation of pain. The plaintiff's counsel then asked the witness "what the guard said in reply to her exclamation of pain." The question was objected to by the counsel for the defendant as incompetent and hearsay, whereupon the plaintiff's counsel said: "I intend to prove that the brakeman in charge of the brakes at the moment of the blow did not treat her (the plaintiff's wife) with respect, but, on the contrary, insulted her." The trial judge, after warning the plaintiff's counsel, finally allowed the question to be put, and the witness answered: "He said, I can go to hell. Shut up." The defendant's counsel excepted to the evidence. The only claim made in support of the ruling of the court is that the remark of the brakeman was part of the res gestæ. We think the ruling cannot be supported on this ground. The only circumstance upon which it can be claimed to have been part of the res gestæ was its connection in point of time with the transaction *423
under investigation, viz., the alleged injury from the closing of the gate. While proximity in point of time with the act causing the injury is in every case of this kind essential to make what was said by a third person, competent evidence against another as part of the res gestæ, that alone is insufficient, unless what was said may be considered part of the principal fact, and so a part of the act itself. But as in this case the act was complete before the remark of the brakeman was made, although closely connected with it in point of time, and was not one naturally accompanying the act, or calculated to unfold its character or quality, it was not admissible as res gestæ. It was as independent of the principal fact, and as incompetent as evidence as though the act and the remark had been much further separated in point of time. Res gestæ in a case like this implies substantial coincidence in time, but if declarations of third persons are not in their nature a part of the fact, they are not admissible in evidence, however closely related in point of time. (See Waldele's Case,
Upon both grounds stated, the judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted.
All concur, except BARTLETT, J., not voting.
Judgment reversed. *424