127 Minn. 144 | Minn. | 1914
While working for defendant, a carrier of interstate commerce, William M. Ward, a switchman, was killed. Tbe administrator of bis estate brought this action under tbe Federal Employer’s Liability Act to recover damages, tbe claim being that Ward’s injuries and death resulted from defendant’s negligence. • Plaintiff received a verdict, and defendant appeals from tbe order denying its alternative motion for judgment or a new trial.
Appellant claims that the testimony establishing its negligence is so discredited that a verdict based thereon should not be permitted to stand; that tbe proof of instantaneous death was conclusive, and hence tbe court erred in submitting tbe question of tbe survival of Ward’s cause of action to tbe jury wbicb, if found true, permitted tbe damages to be measured by tbe loss of Ward’s earning capacity and not by tbe pecuniary loss to bis beneficiaries; and that tbe damages are excessive.
Tbe circumstances attending tbe fatality are in brief these: Ward, an experienced switchman, was engaged, under a foreman, one Rogers, and crew, in distributing a string of 14 cars, in an extensive switchyard in Minneapolis. Tbe cars were to be “kicked” from tbe lead track and switched onto tbe proper yard tracks. In tbe operation tbe locomotive was in tbe rear pushing tbe cars west, and it was necessary to speed up sufficiently so that, when a car from tbe forward end was uncoupled, the momentum would be sufficient to carry it beyond tbe intended switch to its destination, tbe remaining cars would be stopped before reaching tbe switch, or else tbe
The negligence claimed was high speéd, and the giving of the slow-down signal by Rogers so quickly after the uncoupling that Ward, who understood his duty to be to get onto the uncoupled car and ride it to its destination, did not have time to reach it from where he was standing before the cars parted; also that when Rogers had given the cut-off signal, he signalled the engineer for a quick check of speed, so that the car on which Ward was walking, or standing, was stopped so abruptly and violently as to throw Ward over the end. Counsel for defendant frankly concedes that a case for the jury upon defendant’s negligence is made by the testimony of Holden, the switchman who was standing on the ground near Rogers, and who, upon observing the signals and the probability that Ward would not be able to get on the “kicked” car, rushed forward and boarded it in such hurry as almost to trip the pin puller. But it is said, Holden’s story is so discredited by his written statements of the occurrence made soon thereafter to defendant and its claim agent, and by his cross-examination, that the verdict should not be permitted to stand. No witness observed Ward the few moments elapsing between the time the car was uncoupled and when he was
Ward’s injuries were received .subsequent to the amendment of 1910 of the Federal Employer’s Liability Act, and we do not understand that defendant challenges the correctness of the instructions of the court as to the proper damages in case Ward’s cause of action survived. There being no conscious suffering, nor any expenses for medical attendance, the court limited the recovery, in case he was not instantly killed, to the lost earning capacity. There was testimony that Ward, though unconscious, lived some moments after being removed from the train. The court instructed the jury that, if they found that he lived an appreciable length of time after the injury, his cause of action survived. The defendant contends that, since Ward “never regained consciousness and had no conscious period of suffering, there is no reason why the action should * * * surviveand' that “the theory of a survival of an action is that there was a period of time during which the deceased could have brought an action in his own behalf.” By that, we assume, it is meant that there should have been a physical possibility to begin an action in his behalf before his death. The authorities cited do not support the contention. In Kearney v. Boston & W. Ry. Co. 9 Cush. (Mass.) 108, a cause of action was held not to survive where “it is in evidence that there was only a momentary, spasmodic struggle, and the death instantaneous.” In the later case of Hollenbeck v. Berkshire Ry. Co. 9 Cush. (Mass.) 478, Chief Justice Shaw says: “The accruing of the right of action does not depend upon intelligence, consciousness, or mental capacity of any kind, on the part of the sufferer.” Chief Justice Bigelow in Bancroft v. Boston & W. Ry. Co. 11 Allen, 34, says: “The continuance of life after the accident, and not insensibility and want of consciousness, is the test by which to determine whether a cause of action survives.” “If the
If the jury found that Ward lived an appreciable length of time after the injury, and we conclude the evidence so warrants, it cannot be said that the damages are excessive.
Order affirmed.