69 F. 185 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Nevada | 1895
(orally). The defendant moves the court for a new trial upon several grounds, but the only assignment of error urged before the court is that of “excessive damages, appearing to have been given under the influence of passion and prejudice.”
The facts bearing upon this question are substantially as follows: The plain!iff is 50 years of age. On the evening of July 28, 189B, while taking a buggy ride on a public highway near the town of To.searora, in this district, Ms horses came in contact with defendant’s telegraph wire, which liad previously fallen down across the road, and there allowed to remain, in such a maimer as to cause the horses to become frightened and. unmanageable, and resulted in plaintiff being violently thrown out of the buggy and seriously injured. He received a compound comminuted fracture of the ankle "bones of the left leg. His left foot was doubled over, both bones protruded through the flesh, and through his leather shoe, into- the ground, and were denuded of the periosteum for a space of 4J- inches. The base bone in the heel of the foot was also denuded of periosteum. Over 100 pieces of the denuded bones, some of them quite large, had been, at various times, taken out. More than 20 months after the injury, pieces of the bones were still working out of the foot and matter running from the cavities. During all this time plaintiff suffered intense and constant bodily pain. He was con
“If you find for the plaintiff, you should assess his damages at such an amount as, from all the circumstances disclosed hy the evidence, would, under your best judgment, be a just, reasonable, and fair compensation to the plaintiff for the injuries sustained by him. And, in determining the amount of damages, you should take into consideration all the facts and circumstances attending the injury, as disclosed by the evidence,—such as the nature and expense of the plaintiff’s injuries and bodily pain and suffering he has endured as the result of such injury; any future disability which, from the testimony, you may believe to be the necessary result of, or caused directly by, such injury; and the amount of money necessarily paid by him, or contracted by him to be paid, for medicines or medical attention and services, and for nurses hired in order that he be healed and cured of such injury. The measure and amount of recovery must be confined to what is known in laAV as ‘compensatory damages’; that is, such a fair, reasonable,, and just sum as will compensate plaintiff for the injury, expense, and suffering which he has sustained,—no more, and no less. Your attention has been called by counsel to remember, when you go to your jury room, before you have reached a conclusion as to the amount of judgment which plaintiff is entitled to recover, that you must bear in mind the fact that plaintiff is not asking exemplary damages or punitive damages. In cases where the acts of the defendant are malicious, the plaintiff is entitled to recover what is known in law as ‘exemplary damages.’ Such damages, tending to punish the defendant, you are to avoid taking into consideration. You are to do what is fair, what is right and proper; to look at both sides of this case with reference to the rights of both parties, and to consider what would be fair, Avhat would be just, and Avhat Avould be a reasonable compensation, which the plaintiff is entitled to reeoArer.”
The jury found a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and assessed the damages at $15,000.
The question whether the amount of damages allowed in this case is excessive must be determined by the knowledge, judgment, and sound discretion of the presiding judge. Every case must necessarily depend, to a great extent, upon its own peculiar facts. An examination of the decided cases in actions to recover damages for personal injuries clearly shows that the courts have differed in opinion as much as juries, as to the amount of damages that should be allowed in such cases. Extreme cases are found in the books upon both sides of this vexed question. The tendency of some of the state courts is to allow only small damages. Other states are more liberal. What is considered as proper in one state is deemed excessive in another. The argument that juries in this state are disposed to give heavy damages in actions for personal injuries against corporations is undoubtedly true. But the records of this court will show that it has never hesitated, where the amount was deemed excessive, to set such verdicts aside. The amount allowed by the jury in the present case was large; but the injury was severe, and the bodily pain intense and continued for a long period of time. The plaintiff was present in court. The condition of his foot was plainly to be seen, and, with the testimony of his physician, the nature and extent of the injury and of the bodily pain suffered by the plaintiff was (dearly and intelligently presented to the jury. The injury and the pain were real. No attempt was made at the trial to magnify or exaggerate either the injury or the pain, as is sometimes, in bad taste, attempted to be done in cases of this character. No appeal was made to the jurors to arouse either their passions, prejudices, or sympathy. There was nothing at the trial in the acts or conduct of the jury, or of any juror, to indicate in any manner that they were influenced or controlled by any such feeling. In the very nature of the case, there Is no precise rule for estimating damages for bodily pain and suffering. The amount cannot be arrived at with any degree of mathematical certainty. Some latitude must be allowed to the sound sense and honest judgment of an impartial jury. It is, perhaps, safe to say that no 12 men could ever be selected, however fair and unprejudiced they may be, who would, at first blush, name the same amount. It requires time for deliberation and the exercise of reason and judgment upon the part of each individual juror, and consultation with others upon the facts, to arrive at a satisfactory verdict.
In The City of Panama, 101 U. S. 453, 464, the court said:
“Damages in such a ease must depend very much upon the facts and circumstances proved at the trial. When the suit is brought by the party for personal injuries, there cannot be any fixed measure of compensation for the pain and anguish of body and mind, nor for the permanent injury to health and constitution; but the result must be left to turn mainly upon the good sense and deliberate judgment of the tribunal assigned by law to ascertain what is a just compensation for the injury inflicted.”
The jury in the present case must have understood the principles upon, which the damages were to be estimated and arrived at There was no attempt upon the part of counsel to either mislead or confuse the jury upon this question. The instructions of the court upon this point were plain, and unquestionably as favorable to the defendant a.s the law would warrant It is well settled that the plaintiff in. ¡mch an action is entitled to recover for such future suffering and disability as is manifestly the inevitable and necessary result of the injuries received. Railroad Co. v. Harmon, 117 U. S. 571, 584, 13 Sup. Ct. 557; Railroad Co. v. Stoner, 49 Fed. 209, 1 C. C. A. 231, 4 U. S. App. 109; Railway Co. v. Jones, 19 Fed. 343, 1 C. C. A. 282, 1 U. S. App. 115; Eddy v. Wallace, 19 Fed. 801, 1 C. C. A. 435. The amount of the verdict, large as it is, when considered in the light of fill the facts and circumstances of this case, is not so great as to convince the court that it must have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice. I am of opinion, from my observation at the time of the trial, as well as from an examination of the evidence, that the verdict was the result of the calm and unprejudiced judgment of 12 intelligent and fair-minded jurors, reached, after a careful deliberation of the facts,'upon the principles announced by the court, wholly uninfluenced by any other consideration, and that it is not inconsistent with the exercise of an honest, fair, and impartial judgment upon, the part of the jury, whose special province it was to determine the amount. The verdict of the jury will not be disturbed.
A review of the authorities cited by counsel would serve no useful purpose. It is enough to say that they have been carefully examined, and that the views herein expressed and the conclusion reached are fully supported and sustained by the following cases: Solen v. Railroad Co, supra; Morgan v. Southern Pac. Co., 95 Cal. 508, 30 Pac. 601; Railroad Co. v. Reese, 5 C. C. A. 510, 56 Fed. 289; The City of Panama, supra; Railroad Co. v. Thompson, 61 Miss. 585, 1 South. 840; Rockwell v. Railroad Co., 61 Barb. 438, 53 N. Y. 625; Gale v. Railroad Co., 13 Hun, 4, 76 N. Y. 594; Mitchell v. Railroad Co., 70 Hun, 387, 21 N. Y. Supp. 32; Solarz v. Railway Co. (Super. N. Y.) 29 N. Y. Supp. 1125; Railway Co. v. Porfert (Tex. Sup.) 10 S. W. 213. Motion for new trial denied.