45 W. Va. 51 | W. Va. | 1898
On a demurrer to evidence in the case of James H. Couch, Jr., administrator, etc., against the Chesapeake & Ohio Kailway Company, the Circuit Court of Kanawha County gave judgment for the defendant. The plaintiff obtained a writ of error. The material part of the evidence is as follows: Frank Morris Hodge, an infant two years of age, was killed while sitting on the end of a cross-tie on the defendant’s road, by one of defendant’s freight engines. He had but a few moments prior thereto slipped away from the. presence of his parents, who resided across the public road from the place of the accident. There were no obstructions in the waj^, and it was a bright, sun'
This case comes exactly within the rule established by this Court in the case of Gunn v. Railroad Co., 42 W. Va., 676, (26 S. E). 546): “If a child trespassing on a railroad track is struck by an engine, the company is liable, if the engineer, by such careful and vigilant lookout as is consistent with other duties, could have seen the child in time to prevent the accident.” “So if the child is going towards the track, or running near it, evidently g'oing'on it.” The undisputed circumstances show that there was no natural object in the way to prevent the engineer from seeing the child. The situation therefore necessarily raises the presumption of neg'ligence, and casts on the defendant the burden of showing- that a proper lookout was kept, and the failure to see the child was occasioned by other fault than that of the engineer. The eng'ineer testifies that the lookout was kept, and that he did not see the child until it was too late to save it. He was looking along the track. There was a glare on the rails about a foot wide, and when he got within two hundred yards, he saw something that looked like a chicken, but on closer observation turned out to be a child. If the testimony of the engineer is to be taken as true, then the court did right in sustaining the demurrer. But on whom does the law place the duty of weighing his testimony with the facts and circumstances surrounding the case, and determining- his credibility? Not upon the court, but upon the jury. If the jury could say that the facts and. circumstances are such, including
If the undisputed facts and circumstances did not tend to contradict the evidence of the engineer, but corroborated it, then the court would sustain the judgment, not because of the evidence of the engineer or other witnesses, but because the corroborating facts render it unnecessary to pass on the weight of the oral testimony or the credibility of the witnesses. Such was the case of Davidson v. Railway Co., 41 W. Va., 407, (23 S. E. 593). The engineer is an interested witness. His apparent negligence is the alleged cause of-the accident. He would naturally want to relieve himself from blame and remain in good repute with his employers. His future employment might depend thereupon. The common law, through abundant caution, out of tenderness for the frailties of human nature, excluded the testimony of those in interest; not for the reason that all men, owing to interest, would swear falsely, but that many, under great temptation, would either testify falsely, color their evidence or suppress the truth. Our present law, with more confidence in the integrity of human nature, with but few exceptions, allows all witnesses, however great their interest in the result, to testify, and leaves their credibility and the weight to be given to their evidence to their fellow men who compose the jury. This is a duty that cannot be imposed on the court, and litigants have the right to have it exercised by the jury, where the law places it. If a party, by interposing his demurrer to the evidence, prevents the jurj7 from passing on the credibility of his witnesses, he must be taken to have waived such credibility in so far as the same is contradicted by the facts and circumstances of the case. As to whether the engineer could have seen the child if keeping a proper lookout is a question of fact to be deter
On the question of damages, the jury fixed the amount at five hundred dollars. The plaintiff assigns as error that the circuit court improperly gave the following instruction, to wit: “The court instructs the jury that in allowing damages in this case, where an infant of only two years of age has been killed by the negligence of defendant’s employes, the jury shall not assess punitive, exemplary, or vindictive damag'es, nor shall it allow damage for the mental suffering or anguish of the parents as a consolation.” This is clearly an unauthorized invasion of the province of the jury. The law Sciys: “In every such action the jury may give such damages as they may déem fair and just, not exceeding ten thousand dollars.” At common law, damages were not recoverable in such cases. By the English law, commonly called “Lord Campbell’s Act,” damages in satisfaction of pecuniary losses anticipated were recoverable. The Scotch law allowed punitive damages. Our first enactment on the subject (Acts 1863, c. 98, s. 2) provided that “in every such action the jury may give such damages as they shall deem fair and just, not exceeding $5,000.00, with reference to the pecuniary injury resulting from such death to the wife and next of
As to the character and amount of damages, the legislature has full control. Mayer v. Frobe, 40 W. Va., 246, (22 S. E. 58). It might have provided that the damages should be wholly punitive, vindictive or exemplary; and it would probably have been better to have so done. Death of near relatives produces vague, uncertain, and nonascertaiiiable pecuniary losses, and damages founded thereon are very uncertain, and tend to produce confusion and false swearing; while punitive damages, measured by the loss inflicted and the degree of negligence causing the same, would be much more reasonable, exemplary and satisfactory, punishing the wrongdoer for the preservation of human life and the prevention of unnecessary homicide. The legislature, having great confidence in the integrity and purity of the jury system, and a full reliance on the intelligence, moral uprightness, clear sense of justice, and impartiality of their fellow citizens when called upon, in the capacity of jurors, to sit in solemn judgment upon the lives, liberty and property of others, clothed the jury with full power to determine the amount and character of damages that should be imposed upon a wrongdoer who by his negligence caused the death of his neighbor; the only restric
The question of imputed contributory negligence of the father, not being legally sufficient to bar his action, may be taken into consideration bjr the jury as a circumstance to be considered in determining the amount of damages to be assessed. This is also a matter under the circumstances of this case, entirely within the province of the jury; and as it affects the measure of the damages, it would be error for the court to give them any instruction in regard
In the foregoing opinion McWhorter, Judge, concurs; but, Judges Brannon and English being of the opinion that the judgment of the circuit court should not be disturbed, it stands affirmed by operation of law.
Frank Morris Hodge, a child two years old, was killed while sitting on the end of a cross-tie, by a freight train on the Chesapeake & Ohio Railway, April 18, 1896, and his
Affirmed by Divided Court.