188 Mo. App. 529 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1915
Plaintiffs, husband and wife, father and mother of Joseph J. Dalton, referred to in the record as Jerry Dalton, brought their action against defendant to recover damages for the death of that son, a minor.
The defendant is a company organized and incorporated under what is now article 7, chapter 33, Revised Statutes 1909, to carry on the business 'of mining, smelting and refining ores and mineral substances, to purchase, transport and work such ores, and generally to establish and carry on whatever other business may be convenient, proper or necessary to be done incidental to and in connection with the successful operation of the aforementioned business.
In the first count of the petition upon which the case went to trial, it is averred that the defendant corporation is located in St. Francois county and there operates a railroad in connection with its mines, mills
There was a second count in the petition charging negligence on the part of the engineer in applying the air to the brakes and so reversing the brake wheel without warning to the decedent at the time when he was required to apply the brakes.
At the conclusion of the evidence for plaintiffs, the court having sustained a motion of defendant requiring plaintiffs to election between the two counts, they elected to stand on the first and dismissed as to the second count.
Answering the first count, defendant admits that it is a corporation duly incorporated under and by virtue of the laws of the State above referred to, but denies each and every allegation in that count of the petition.
Further answering this count and admitting that it owned and operated a lead mine and concentrating plant or mill near the town of Flat River in St. Francois county, and that in connection therewith and as an incident thereto it owned and maintained railroad tracks or switches laid upon its own premises, and that it operated thereon switching engines propelled by steam and also by electricity for the purpose of switching and moving cars to and from its concentrating plant or mill to other points on its property, defendant denies that it was a common carrier for hire of passengers or of property.
Averring that its corporate charter does not authorize and empower it to construct, maintain or operate a railroad and that it was not, on the day young Dalton was injured and died, or on any other day, maintaining or operating a railroad, but on the con
For other defenses it pleaded assumption of risk and contributory negligence on the part of the decedent.
The new matter in the answer was met by a general denial.
There was a verdict in favor of plaintiffs in the sum of $1500, judgment following. Interposing a motion for new trial as well as one in arrest, and excepting to the action of the court in overruling these motions, defendant has duly perfected its appeal to this court.
Here defendant assigns sixteen errors. It is only necessary to notice a few of them.
The first, second, third, sixth and ninth rest upon the proposition that this first count of the petition wholly fails to state a cause of action against appellant, the point of this being that it wholly fails to allege that the relation of master and servant existed between the respondent parents and their minor son, and as correlative to this, that an instruction given on behalf of respondents as to the measure of damages failed to limit those damages to compensation to respondents, as plaintiffs, to the value of their deceased minor child to them during the period of his minority, but rather permitted and directed the jury to base their estimate upon all the probable and possible benefits that respondents might derive from the life of the child during the whole course of its probable existence, thus measuring respondents’ damages by a standard not contemplated by the law.
The fourth and fifth errors assigned are levelled against the amount of the verdict, it being claimed that the instruction given on behalf of respondents as to the measure of damages was gross error, notwithstanding an instruction given on behalf of appellant correctly declared the law with respect to that matter,
The seventh and eighth assignments are to failure of the court to sustain demurrers at the close of the testimony for respondents and at the close of all the testimony in the ease.
The tenth is to error in giving the first instruction asked by respondents.
The eleventh is to alleged error in admitting evidence tending to prove that appellant owned and was operating a railroad, and in admitting evidence as to the methods of operating trains on other railroads.
Turning to the first group of alleged errors, which all tend to the same proposition, that the petition in failing to allege that the relation of master and servant existed betweén the decedent and respondents, was for that reason fatally defective, it is argued that the right of the parents to the earnings of their minor son during his minority, originated, not by virtue of the relationship of parent and child, but on that of master and servant, it being argued that it was essential to aver in the first count of this petition that the minor child was a servant of respondents and that they were thereby deprived of his earnings.
In line with this, defendant challenged the petition and evidence and asked an instruction, which was refused, to the effect that unless the jury found that the relation of master and servant existed between plaintiffs and their minor son and that plaintiffs demanded and received the wages of their son from defendant on and prior to the date of his death, the verdict must be for defendant.
It is true that it was held in some cases, and as late as that of Hennesey v. Bavarian Brewing Co., 63 Mo. App. 111, l. c. 116, decided June 3, 1895, which followed St. Ferdinand Loretto Academy v. Bobb, 52
In Hennesey v. Bavarian Brewing Co., 145 Mo. 104, 46 S. W. 966, our Supreme Court held that the error underlying these decisions arises from confusing the common-law obligation of the parent, natural, or standing in loco parentis to the child, to support it during minority, carrying with the obligation the correlative right to the earning of the child, with the right conferred by statute, upon the father and mother or the survivor of them, to maintain an action against a third party for the wrongful killing of their child. In a case under the statute by the parent to recover damages for a tort, that is the killing of a minor child, Judge Marshall, in this last Hennesey case, supra, decided June 22, 1898, says (l. c. 112): “The father and mother do not recover the value of services rendered by their child, as the father or stepfather does, as a corollary to the obligation to support in cases arising ex contractu or in assumpsit, but they recover, in tort, on the right which the child would have had if he had survived the injury, and which right died with the injured party at common law, but has been by our statute expressly transmitted to them, eo nomine. No
Such has been the rule in our State ever since this last decision. Hence all of these five assignments are untenable and the trial court committed no error in its ruling as to the propositions covered by them.
This covers the first, second, third, sixth and ninth assignments of error.
The fourth and fifth assignments are untenable. It has been held in many cases that when the action is by the parents for the death of a minor child, it was unnecessary to aver or prove the amount of wages— in many cases that being impossible because the child was of such tender years that it was not earning wages, and that in actions under sections 5426 and 5427, Revised Statutes 1909, by the parents, the jury must make their estimate of damages from the facts proved, and that it was not necessary that any witness should have expressed an opinion of the amount of such pecuniary loss; that it was proper for the jury to exercise their own judgment upon the facts in proof, by connecting them with their own knowledge and experience, which they are supposed to possess in common with the generality of mankind. [See Owen v. Brockschmidt, 54 Mo. 285; Nagel v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co., 75 Mo. 653; Grogan v. Broadway Foundry Company et al., 87 Mo. 321; Parsons v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co., 94 Mo. 286, 6 S. W. 464; Tetherow v. St. Joseph & Des Moines R. R. Co., 98 Mo. 74,11 S. W. 310; Sharp v. National Biscuit Co., 179 Mo. 553, 78 S. W. 787.]
As the judgment in this case is to be reversed, it is well to call attention to the fact that in most of. the cases above cited reference is made to the fact that there was evidence of the condition in life of the parents, in some of them, to the amount of wages earned (although that was not pleaded), and in general, evidence “with reference to the necessary injury resulting from such death, to the sustaining parties who may
In a very recent case Smelser v. Missouri, K. & T. Ry. Co., 262 Mo. 25, 170 S. W. 1124, Judge Walker of our Supreme Court says matters specifically showing the pecuniary value of the injuries necessarily resulting from the death, should be both pleaded and proven. While this expression of Judge Walker, is not concurred in by the other members of the court, and the case was one by the administrator, and not, as here, by the parent, if a new trial is had, doubtless this point, while we do not hold it essential to a recovery, can be met and covered both by amendment of the petition and by the proofs. ■ It is sufficient to say, for the determination of the case as now before us, that we •do not think these fourth and fifth assignments tenable, and that we would not reverse this judgment for those reasons.
In the second instruction given at the instance of plaintiffs, the court told the jury that if they found from the evidence that the death of Jerry Dalton was caused by the negligence or default of the defendant company in using on the train on which he was working in the line of his duty as brakeman, air brakes which were so constructed that they were not reasonably safe, “then your verdict must be for the plaintiffs in such sum as you may deem fair and just, with reference to the necessary injury resulting to plaintiffs from said death, and also having regard to the mitigating or aggravating circumstances attending such neglect or default, not exceeding, however, $10,000.”
On behalf of defendant, appellant here, the court instructed the jury that if they found a verdict for plaintiffs in estimating their damages the jury “can only take into consideration what the plaintiffs have lost since September 6, 1911, and what they will lose from his services and the earnings of his labor (if any such loss of service or loss of earnings of his labor has
It is argued by learned counsel for appellant that this instruction number 2, given at the instance of plaintiffs, is grossly erroneous and in direct opposition to every adjudicated case in Missouri, and the fact that appellant’s instruction correctly declared the law does not cure this gross error.
Attending to the last proposition, we do not think that this instruction, given at the instance of appellant, is correct or that it should have been given. There was not a particle of evidence in the case as to any expenditure of cost of care and maintenance, or any expenditure for medical attendance. It was further erroneous in that it left out from consideration the provisions of the statute (section 5427) that in determining the amount of damages the jury might also have regard to mitigating or aggravating circumstances attending the neglect or default of defendant. See Owen v. Brocksehmidt, supra, in which case Judge Sherwood, considering an instruction asked by defendant and very like the one here given for defendant, has said that “the instruction . . . ignored and made no mention of the circumstances, whether aggravating' or mitigating, under which, the killing took place, but left it to the jury as a simple question of dollars and cents to say by what amount the mother had suffered actual pecuniary loss in the death of her child. Such a construction as this would make the words ‘having regard to the mitigating or aggravating circumstances attending such wrongful act, neglect or default, ’ above mentioned, wholly meaningless and inoperative. Under the statute the jury are not restricted to such.dam
Like instructions to that here given at the instance of plaintiffs have been approved in Nagel v. Missouri Pacific Ry. Co., supra. In several cases, as for example see Tetherow v. St. Joseph & Des Moines R. R. Co., supra, it is held that if defendant’s counsel thought the instruction, in following the statute, was too broad, and thought that there were mitigating circumstances, they should have presented that question to. the trial court. Not having done so, they could not now complain, the court not being required, in civil actions, to instruct the jury on questions of law not suggested at the time by counsel. So it was held in Browning v. Wabash Western Ry. Co., 124 Mo. 55, 27 S. W. 644; also in Boettger v. Scherpe & Koken Architectural Iron Co., 124 Mo. 87, 27 S. W. 466, and in Geismann v. Missouri-Edison Electric Co., 173 Mo. 654, l. c. 679, 73 S. W. 654.
The fact that this instruction given on the question of the measure of damages may be contrary to and in conflict with that given on the same subject at the instance of defendant, does not avail defendant (appellant) unless it appears that its instruction is correct. In other words, if the instruction asked by defendant, appellant here, was wrong it was self-invited error, of which appellant cannot avail itself. [See Thompson v. Moon Buggy Co., 155 Mo. App. 597, l. c. 608, and following and cases there cited, 145 S. W. 1088.] We hold, for the reasons before stated, that appellant’s instruction was wrong.
The seventh and eighth assignments, on failure of the court to sustain demurrers at the close of the testimony for respondents and at the close of all the testimony in the ease, are untenable. There was evidence
The eleventh assignment is untenable. That assignment proceeds upon the theory that evidence was improperly admitted showing that this railroad was a common carrier and allowing evidence to show that this manner of arrangement of the brakes and of the application of power to them was not common on other railroads. While it is clear that this company was not operating its railroad as a common carrier, it is also clear that no evidence to prove that was offered. But it is dear from the evidence that defendant was operating a railroad from one point to another over its property; that it was within its corporate rights in so doing and that this young man was in its employ as a brakeman on this train when killed. So that that point, as made by learned counsel for appellant, is not sound. The evidence attacked was that which was admitted, tending to show that other railroads, common carriers, did not use cars equipped with brakes operated as here. We see no error in that.
The tenth assignment is to the giving of the first instruction asked by respondents. That instruction is as follows: •
“The court instructs the jury that it was the duty of the defendant company, when operating a railway in connection with its lead mines or for any other purpose, to use ordinary care, to have and keep its said railway and all locomotives, cars and appliances which it used in connection therewith in a reasonably safe condition and to operate and manage and run the same with ordinary care and skill for the protection of its employees; and if you find from the evidence that defendant failed to use ordinary care and diligence to discharge its duty in the matters aforesaid; and*548 if you further find that Jerry Dalton was the son of plaintiffs and was, at the time of his death, under the age of twenty-one and unmarried, and that he had no children or lineal descendants; and if you also find that, while the said Jerry Dalton was working on said railway as an employee of defendant and was using ordinary care on his part, he lost his life because of the failure aforesaid of the defendant to do its duty; then your verdict must be for the plaintiffs." (Italics ours.)
We are compelled to hold that this assignment is well made and that the giving of this instruction constitutes reversible error in that it fails to point out to the jury the negligence which must be found in order to sustain the verdict for plaintiffs. All that it sets out as to the acts of negligence is in the words we have italicized. By reference to the petition it will be seen that it proceeds on a specific act of negligence— the dangerous construction of the brakes, or more exactly, the result on the action of the brakes of the manner in which the power was to be applied. Such a general instruction, under the averments of this petition, is wrong and giving it is reversible error. [See Beave v. St. Louis Transit Co., 212 Mo. 331, 111 S. W. 52; Strode v. Columbia Box Co., 250 Mo. 695, 158 S. W. 22; Sommers v. St. Louis Transit Co., 108 Mo. App. 319, 83 S. W. 268, and Crone v. St. Louis Oil Co., 176 Mo. App. 344, 158 S. W. 417.] These are a few among the many cases which lay down the rule, firmly established in our jurisprudence, that the giving of such an instruction under such issues as are here presented, is reversible error. That rule is too Well settled to admit of our ignoring the vital and radical- defect in this instruction.
As this alone necessitates a reversal of the judgment of the circuit court, it is unnecessary to notice the other assignments of error, adding however, that we discover no other reversible error.