19 Mo. App. 329 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1885
This is an action to recover damages-for personal injury. The controlling and material facts, as disclosed at the trial, are substantially as follows: The plaintiff, a minor about eleven years old, was sent by his employer with a wagon drawn by two mules to a field after corn. To reach the field plaintiff had to cross defendant’s railroad track. This crossing was a public-highway. At the point of intersection both the railroad and the highway pass through a deep cut almost at right angles to each other. The evidence showed that plaintiff ’ s employer cautioned him on setting out, to look out for any train that might be on said railroad. The uncontradicted evidence is, that the most eligible, if not the only proper place, at which to stop, before entering on the railroad track, to take observations for an-approaching train, was forty or fifty yards from the track, and just before entering the cut of the public highway leading on to the track. At this point of observation an approaching train could be seen eighty rods, and the sig
The plaintiff recovered judgment, and the defendant has appealed.
I. The first question raised by appellant is, that under the evidence the plaintiff should have been non-suited, on the ground that he was guilty of contributory negligence. Wherein this case differs materially from that of Johnson v. Ry. Co. (77 Mo. 546), except that it be a stronger case for the plaintiff, I am unable to discover. The plaintiff stopped and listened at the only eligible place to see and hear. This was so near the track of the railroad as to justify any reasonable person similarly situated, in believing that, at the speed the plaintiff went, he would clear the track before a train would approach. Having started into the cut, it was solely a question for the jury as to whether prudence and common sense would not dictate that the course of safety was to proceed right on without halting again in so precarious a situation. Moberly v. R. R. Co. (17 Mo. App. 518). At all events this was peculiarly a question for the jury, and it would be a bold usurpation of authority for the court to take such an issue, under such state of facts, from the jury. Case, supra.
The defendant was guilty of gross and most culpable negligence in running its train, as the evidence shows it did, onto such a crossing at a speed of twenty-five miles an hour, in utter disregard of the mandate of the statute
II. It is assigned for error that on the trial the plaintiff was permitted, over the objection of defendant, to introduce evidence tending to show that plaintiff’s injuries were permanent. The physicians, in testifying to the character of the injuries, stated that one of plaintiff’s legs was so injured that it would necessarily be shorter than the other. The objection to this proof is based on the proposition that the petition does not, in so many words, allege that the injuries received were of a permanent character. The averments of the petition in this respect are, that by reason of the collision the plaintiff’s leg was broken, and he was otherwise greatly bruised, wounded and injured.
The law is too well settled to admit of discussion that in the action for injuries to the person, by the person injured, it is not essential that the petition should specially aver that the injury is permanent in order to recover therefor. “The gist of the action is the injury to the person, and the prospective damages are considered to be the immediate and natural consequences of the injury.” 2 Thompson on Neg. 1250, sect. 33 ; Bradbury n. Benton, 69 Mo. 194 ; Tyson v. Booth, 100 Mass. 256; Filer v. N. Y. Cent. R. R. Co., 49 N. Y. 42 ; Russell v. Columbia, 74 Mo. 480.
III. Exception is taken to the following instruction given on behalf of plaintiff:
“2. If the jury find for the plaintiff, in assessing his damages they will take into consideration the physical injury sustained, the mental anguish endured, as well as the bodily pain suffered by the plaintiff, the expense 6f being treated for said injury and all damages to the plaintiff, necessarily resulting from said injury, and will allow*334 Mm such damages as from the evidence they may find that he has sustained, not exceeding $2,000.”
The objection urged against it is, that there was no allegation in the petition to authorize the admission of evidence, nor was there any special proof of mental suffering. Without conceding that such averment is necessary to be made in the petition, it is sufficient to .say that the petition does distinctly aver: “that he (plaintiff) has suffered great pain and anguish from the injuries so sustained.” The word “anguish” certainly applies inter alia, to an operation of and upon the mind. Webster defines it: “Extreme pain, either of body or mind, and as synonymous with agony, distress, pang, torment, etc.” Mental suffering is so allied to and inseparable from physical injury, of the character in question, that it follows as effect does cause. We may conceive of a child so young that it could hardly be affirmed of it that it suffered in mind-felt anguish and like emotions, but in the instance of a person of the age of this plaintiff, if of ordinary intelligence, which his testimony indicates he possesses, the jury may infer the mental pain from the inevitable physical pain, on “ the known and experienced connection subsisting between collateral facts or circumstances proved, and the fact in controversy.” 1 Greenl. Ev. 17; Randolph v. R. R. Co., 18 Mo. App. 609, and cases therein cited.
We discover no error in this record. The judgment •of the circMt court is, therefore, affirmed.