Counsel for appellee, in their brief, aptly say that the “question presented in this case is whether or not appellee is entitled to recover damages for personal injuries caused by fright, and resulting in nervous prostration and a permanent impairment of health.” The record, by the assignment of errors, presents but two questions: (1) The sufficiency of the amended complaint, and (2) the overruling of the motion for a new trial.
If the amended complaint, upon its conceded theory, does not state a cause of action, questions arising under the motion for a new trial need not be noticed. The amended complaint is somewhat lengthy, but it will be necessary to set it out quite fully, to the end that its general scope and theory may more clearly appear. As preliminary to the averments stating facts upon which appellee bases her right of action, it is averred that appellant is a common carrier; that the appellee had been seriously ill, and was just recovering; that she, in company with her husband and two children, had purchased tickets which entitled them to be earned over appellant’s road from Muncie, Indiana, to Indianapolis, Indiana, and then continues as follows: “That while plaintiff and her said companions were waiting at said station, * * * said train arrived at said station, and was stopped at the platform thereof for the purpose of discharging and receiving passengers; that the plaintiff and her said husband and children attempted to get upon and enter one of defendant’s passenger coaches, then and there a part of defendant’s said train, in which coach plaintiff and her said companions were then and there entitled to be carried by reason of the tickets held by each of them, respectively; that plaintiff, assisted by her said husband, got
Under the well established rule in this State, a complaint must be, construed upon the theory which is most apparent and clearly outlined by the facts stated therein. As only one theory can be contained in a single paragraph, the court must construe the pleading most strongly against the pleader, and determine the theory from its prominent and leading allegations. Cleveland, etc., R. Co. v. Dugan,
The complaint can not have the double theory of asking damages on account of delay and inconvenience caused by appellee’s failure to get passage upon the train she attempted to enter, and having to wait for another train which went a few hours later, and also to recover damages for personal injuries caused by fright, resulting in nervous prostration and permanent impairment of health. These two theories are inconsistent, and rest upon entirely different reasons. It is not only apparent from the prominent and leading allegations of the complaint that the pleader bottomed it upon the latter theory, but counsel for appellee concede in their brief that that is the theory, and-they' ground their entire argument thereon. So we have this anomaloits questmiT presented by the complaint: Will an action lie for damages for fright, resulting in nervous prostration and permanent impairment of health, when such fright does not arise from impending or apparent danger to the party demanding damages, but from impending, apparent and possible danger or peril to another? Of course, this implies negligence on the part of the party causing the
Appellant’s learned counsel urge and argue with much force and strong reason that the fright to appellee was not the proximate result of any negligence on the part of appellant, anc^, even if it were, there could be no recovery, because the nervous prostration and permanent impairment of health, alleged tо have resulted from the fright, was not the proximate result of any negligence on the part of appellant, and because public policy forbids a recovery in such case* The complaint does not pretend to base appellee’s right to recover upon any negligence toward her. She was not on the car, nor upon the steps of the car, but upon the station platform, waiting to enter the car, when the door was opened. • WhileTn that position, before any part of her person came in contact with the car, the train started. She was not frightened because the train started before she got on, but because her daughter was in “imminent danger of being drawn under the wheels of said moving train, and mangled and killed before her eyes; that plaintiff saw the danger of her said daughter, * * * and was greatly terrified and frightened,” etc. It is nowhere averred that the daughter was on the car, or on the steps thereof, and as to 'how she was “dragged upon the platform,” etc., is left to mere conjecture. Whether she had hold of the hand-railing, or some other part of the car, is not shown by the complaint, but it is evident she could not be “dragged along the platform” unless some part of hеr person or clothing came in contact with the ear.
The general rule of law is that where a party relies upon negligence as a groimd for the recovery of damages, such negligence must be the proximate cause of such damages, and there must not be any intervening independent human
The complaint fails to show any negligence on the part of the appellant toward the appellee that caused her injury or fright. The appellee was not frightened because appellant’s servants did not hold the train until she nould enter the car, but because of the train starting before any of the party had entered. The proposition is not disputed that appellant did not owe the appellee any duty to hold the train till her daughter got on. Such duty, if it owed it to any one, was to the daughter herself. It j^ejdainly. owed appellee no duty to keep her from becoming frightened at what her daughter did. If the latter placed herself in peril, appellant was not responsible therefor, unless such peril was brought about by the negligence of the appellant, or by some breach of duty which it owed to the daughter; and, (2)there was such negligence or breach of duty, the right of action would be in the daughter, and not in the appellee. The proposition now under consideration is tersely and plainly stated in Bank of Rome v. Matt,
' In Hoosier Stone Co. v. Louisville, etc., R. Co.,
In Ewing v. Pittsburgh, etc., R. Co., 147 Pa. St. 40,
In Haile’s Curator v. Texas, etc., R. Co., 60 Ped. 557,
In the case of Washington, etc., R. Co. v. Dashiell (D. C. App.)., 24 Wash. Law 40, it was held that while mental pain' and suffering attendant upon a physical injury as a natural consequence might be considered as an element of damages in awarding compensation for the injury, yet a nervous shock and its consequences could not furnish any independent ground for awarding damages. In the decision of that case, we find this language: “The jury were instructed that, in addition to damages for pain and suffering [growing out of the bodily injury], they could award damages for any impairment of the plaintiff’s nervous system, if such nervous impairment was produced as a direct result of the nervous shock received by her on the occasiоn of the collision. Thus making the nervous shock and the consequences thereof a separate and independent ground for awarding damages. This is certainly a most indefinite element to be considered by the jury, and one that is most difficult, if not quite impossible, to regulate by any reasonable standard for assessing damages. * * * To attempt to furnish a legal remedy in such case would open the door to the widest speculation. Without for a moment intimating that simulation existed in this case, yet the nature of such claim would render it easy of simulation; and if not simulated, the temptation would be strong to 'exaggeration, and the assigning of one cause for another in the production of the morbid state of the nervous sensibilities; and all this, though it might be without real foundation, would be most difficult to disprove by the party sought to be charged. Such claims for compensation are subject to all the objections to remote and speculative damages.”
The recent case of Kalen v. Terre Haute, etc., R. Co.,
In the case of Braun v. Craven,
In the case of Gulf, etc., R. Co. v. Trott,
In Spohn v. Missouri Pacific R. Co.,
In Spade v. Lynn, etc., R. Co.,
It is remarkable that no precedent has been cited by appellee’s learned counsel, and we confess our inability to find any, of an action similar to the present having been successfully maintained; and, in the face of the authorities, we are not willing to establish such a precedent by an affirmance of the judgment. We mean by thisjto^ay that wejhave not been cited to any case, nor have ,we been able, after the most" diligent research, to find anv case holding that fright to one person occasioned by imminent danger and peril to another, can be made_the basis of an action' for damages by the former.
In the case of Atchison, etc., R. Co. v. McGinnis,
The judgment is reversed, and the court below is directed to sustain appellant’s demurrer to the amended complaint.
