127 Ky. 548 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1907
Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
Appellant, Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company, owned and operated a telephone line along the Dixon and Henderson road, in Henderson county, Ky. The wire at the place of the accident which will be hereinafter described was attached to the limb of a tree on one side of the road, and to a fence post on the other, and hung so low as not to permit a buggy with a top to pass under it. This condition of the wire was known to appellant for some time prior to the accident to appellee. On December 7, 1905, appellee was driving a gentle horse along the road, when her buggy came in contact with the wire. The horse became frightened, and, after rearing and plunging several times, finally ran away. The wire cut through the bed of the buggy below the seat, and'
On April 1, 1906, appellee instituted this action to recover of appellant damages for her injuries. The first trial took place in September, 1906, and resulted in a hung jury. The second trial, which occurred in February, 1907, resulted in a verdict for appellee in the sum of $7,500. A new trial was refused, and the Cumberland Telephone & Telegraph Company is here on appeal with the following assignment of errors: (1) The court erred in permitting the deposition of appellee, plaintiff below, to be- read to the jury after several witnesses had testified for her in chief. (2) Instruction No. 1 assumes that appellant, defendant below, “negligently permitted” its wire to hang over the road and obstruct public travel thereon. (3) The instruction to find for appellee “for any permanent reduction in her power to earn money” was error, as there was no averment nor proof justifying it. (4) The error in instructing the jury to find ‘ ‘ also a reasonable compensation for the time she has lost from her'business, if any, by reason thereof.” was not cured by erasing those words from the instruction after the conclusion of the arguments on both sides, and just before the jury retired. (5) A verdict for $7,500 for personal injury, caused by being thrown from a buggy, with no proof of its permanency, and no evidence nor instruction authorizing punitive damages, is flagrantly excessive.
These alleged errors will be considered in their order.
But counsel for appellant further insists that appellee was not entitled to recover compensation for any permanent reduction in her power to earn money, as there was no evidence of her earning capacity. In Fisher v. Jansen, 128 Ill. 549, 21 N. E. 598, the rule is thus stated: “A party personally injured from negligence may recover of the defendant damages for his inability to labor or transact business in the future, without any evidence of his success in business prior to his injury, or the extent of his earnings. Direct proof of any specific pecuniary, loss is not indispensable to a recovery.” In Macon v. Paducah St. Ry. Company, 110 Ky. 680, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 46, 62 S. W. 496, this court said: “The court also allowed for loss of capacity to perform the kind of labor for which he was fitted. This was error. It is not for the court or jury to undertake to determine the kind of labor for which he was or might become fitted.” In South Covington & Cincinnati Ry. Co. v. Bolt, 59 S. W. 26, 22 Ky. Law Rep. 906, this court laid down the following rule: “Under the laws of this State she was entitled to earn wages, and, if she was deprived of her ability to do so by the negligence of the appellant, she is entitled to recover a fair equivalent in money. * * * Our opinion is that, if a married woman is injured by the negligent act of another, she is entitled to maintain an action for damages, and the same criterion of damages exists as to her as to a man or a single woman.” • Furthermore, in the case of a permanent injury to an infant, his recovery for permanent reduction in power to earn money, in a suit by his next friend, is limited to the time after he arrives at his majority. It is manifest, therefore,
One of the physicians who testified for appellant stated that he called to see appellee on September 1, 1906; that he examined her, and found her right side and arm sore and tender; that appellee said she was paralyzed, but she was not; that she could put her hand to her head, and could walk across the floor with difficulty; that it was exceedingly painful, and that she could not bear weight on her right leg; that in his opinion she was suffering from neurasthenia, and kind of nerve tire and exhaustion, and that she also had symptoms of hysteria; that he did not believe her condition was due to the injury received; that he did not know what it was due to; that it might be due to massage or a number of causes; that without any knowledge of her accident he would say that she was a neurotic, and that she was suffering from hysteria alone; that he found no evidence of concussion of the brain or spinal cord. The other physician who testified for appellant said that he called to see appellee on January 26, 1907; that she seemed thin, emaciated, and her general health not good; that this condition was due to the nervous strain through. which she had been going, and was not due to the accident; that she seemed ansemie and of a weak, nervous make up; that he ascribed her condition to hysteria, confinement in the house, and lack of exercise; that hysteria was a very difficult disease to treat and overcome; that it might have been due to the accident; that in his opinion appellee was able to come to court. It is manifest from the verdict in this case that the jury adopted the views of appellee’s witnesses both as to the character of her injuries and the cause thereof. And we confess that this con
Judgment affirmed.