111 S.W. 667 | Tex. App. | 1908
W. C. Groner sued the Chicago, Rock Island Gulf Railway Company on behalf of himself and his six children to recover damages for the death of Mrs. C. C. Groner, wife of the said W. C. Groner, and mother of his children, and from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $3,207.85 the defendant has appealed.
The case has been once before appealed to this court and to the Supreme Court and from the opinions rendered on that appeal a fuller statement of the case may be had. (Chicago, R.I. G. Ry. Co. v. Groner, 43 Texas Civ. App. 264[
Much reliance is placed by appellant upon the third paragraph of the court's charge, defining the measure of plaintiff's damage, as constituting reversible error. The portion of the charge called in review is as follows: "If the death of the wife of the plaintiff was approximately caused by the negligence of defendant, as charged, the plaintiff is entitled to recover on account of the death of his wife a sum, the value of which is equal to the pecuniary benefit (if any) that the plaintiff or his children, for whom he sues, or any of them, had reasonable expectations of receiving from the said C. C. Groner had she not died." The insistence is that the charge is tantamount to telling the jury to allow the plaintiff such sum now as he might reasonably have expected to receive in a pecuniary way in the future if his wife had not died, and therefore in violation of the rule announced in Ft. Worth
Denver City Ry. Co. v. Morrison,
We think appellees' special charge to the effect that if appellant's negligence aggravated or was the means of developing consumption in the deceased, even though she was predisposed to that disease and died therefrom, plaintiffs would be entitled to recover, was correct for the reasons given in our opinion on the former appeal. If appellant's negligence hastened the death of Mrs. Groner, it certainly could not escape liability altogether merely because she would ultimately perhaps have died of consumption, but, of course, the amount of the recovery would be less than if her death had been caused solely by its negligence. This is a matter for the consideration of the jury in determining appellees' loss.
Appellant's special charge No. 10 was properly refused because it assumed that Mrs. Groner died of tuberculosis of the lungs, while the evidence conflicted on this issue. Besides, the material part of the defense therein presented was contained in the main charge given.
We find no error in the record and conclude that the evidence is sufficient to support the verdict and judgment in appellant's favor.
Affirmed.
Writ of error refused.