.These cases were consolidated for trial before this court without a jury. The plaintiffs are citizens of the State of Delaware and the defendant is a corporation of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The amount in controversy in each case exceeds $3,000 exclusive of interest and costs.
During the early evening of May 20, 1955, four young men, William N. Daniels, Noah Kenneth Collins, Leland Kenneth 'Phillips and Marvin Jester were cruising aimlessly around Milford, Delaware in Daniels’ 1952 Oldsmobile. At or about 8:00 p. m. these four young men asked Jehu Evans to join them.
The five rode around Milford until somewhere between 8:15 p. m. and 8:45 p. m.
Outside of Milton, about two miles from Route 14,
The unidentified vehicle proceeded to the intersection of the Broadkill Beach-Milton road and Route 14, coming to a complete stop before turning south on Route 14.
The two cars entered Nassau at or about 10:00 p. m. and approached an intersection formed by the tracks of the Pennsylvania Railroad and Route 14. Stopped on the other side of the track with the headlights of his vehicle burning was one Alexander Vann.
At the time of the accident Evans was on the back seat directly’behind Daniels, the driver. To the right of Evans on the back seat in the center was Jester, and on Jester’s right, Collins. On the front seat beside Daniels was Phillips.
Nassau crossing had claimed at least its sixth accident in less than three years
At the time of his death, Marvin Jester was earning a net “take-home” pay of $50 a week, of which he spent $8 for the support of their child, Marvin Jester, Jr., and $20 for the support of Margaret Jester, his wife.
The amount of money, invested on May 20, 1955, at 4% interest— which the court finds to be a reasonable rate — and drawn upon to the extent of $1 per week continually throughout the joint life expectancy of Marvin Jester and Margaret Jester, and exhausting all interest and all the principal of the said sum at the end of that joint expectancy, would be $1,084. On that basis the present value of the expectancy of her own support which she lost by reason of her husband’s death is $21,680.
Plaintiff and her deceased husband had an infant child, Marvin Jester, Jr., who had been born on March 17, 1955,
Jehu Evans sustained severe shock, fracture of the right frontal bone of the skull
In an effort to have Jehu Evans cured of his injuries, he and his parents, who are also plaintiffs, have heretofore necessarily incurred reasonable medical, nursing and hospital expenses, which up to the date of the trial were as follows:
*19 Beebe Hospital $ 755.9542
Delaware Hospital 1,767.6543
Milford Hospital 60.0044
Nurses 3,062.6245
Lewes Ambulance 5.0046
Dr. Dickey and Dr. Marvil 10.0047
Dr. Heckler 15.0048
Dr. Grossman 50.0049
Dr. Lamotte 10.0050
Beebe Clinic, Inc. 150.0051
Dr. Livio Olmedo 350.0052
Dr. Mick 15.0053
Miscellaneous drugs supplied and equipment 93.0754
Dr. Stambaugh 35.0055
Dr. Olmedo 25.0056
Beebe Clinic 3.0057
Beebe Clinic 50.0058
Beebe Clinic 150.0059
Beebe Hospital 488.5060
Milford Hospital 34.0061
Telephone bills 20.9962
Total $7,150.78
Aside from the above bills as rendered and paid, two of the doctors gratuitously reduced their charges in the further amounts listed below, this being done because of the financial circumstances of these plaintiffs, and the bills being reasonable in amount before such downward adjustment:
Dr. James Beebe, Jr. $ 350.0063
Dr. Livio Olmedo 400.0064
$ 750.00
The parents of Jehu Evans, who are also plaintiffs, rendered necessary nursing services, without submitting any bills to their son for the same, which services were reasonably worth the following amounts:
$27.00 per day65 for three months, until Jehu regained bowel control66 and could begin to feed himself $2,440.00
For 50 further weeks (to trial) at $70.00 per week67 3,500.00
Total $5,940.00
At the time of his injury, Jehu Evans was employed by Victor Lynn Lines, Inc., at an average salary
Jehu Evans, in the course of his hospitalization and treatment to date, has undergone great pain and suffering, He had to have an emergency tracheotomy to' keep him from strangling.
Leland Kenneth Phillips suffered bruises on his chest, eyes and elbow,
Plaintiff was required to spend the following sums, which are found to be reasonable, for treatment of his injuries:
Beebe Clinic $ 29.0077
Beebe Hospital 49.7578
Total $ 78.75
The plaintiff further lost work from the date of the accident until June 28, 1955, being five weeks of work at an average weekly wage of $59.65, or a total loss of earnings of $298.35.
Noah Kenneth Collins was injured by the fracture of the left frontal bone of his skull, extending into the sinus, by fracture of the left maxilla, concussion of the brain,
and will ultimately lose two teeth.
Plaintiff incurred the following expenses, which the court finds to be reasonable, for medical treatment,. nursing and hospitalization in an effort to be cured of his injuries;
*21 Beebe Clinic 120.0088
Beebe Hospital 233.2589
Dr. Dickey 10.0090
Dr. Beebe’s “mark down” of his bill 130.0091
Necessary future operation on deviated septum 300.0092
Total $ 793.2593
Plaintiff, besides past pain and suffering, has suffered a “twitching”
. Plaintiff further was forced to lose employment and/or to work at a less lucrative job,
Nassau crossing was extremely hazardous to motor vehicle traffic. The volume of automobile traffic on Delaware Route 14 was relatively heavy.
Delaware Route 14 was straight and level on the approach to the intersecting track.
There was no visual protection or warning at the crossing other than the signs.
While the record is burdened with references to the drinking of beer
Conclusions of Law
1. Nassau crossing is extremely hazardous. The hazardous condition is caused by: the large volume of automotive traffic using the highway, the irregular scheduling of defendant’s trains, the angle at which track and road meet, the inability of train and vehicle to see each other because of obstructions to vision until close to the point where track and road intersect, and the archaic lighting system on defendant’s freight train resulting in night running in virtual camouflage negating the benefit of any visibility remaining after clearance of the obstructions.
3. The degree of care required of the Railroad to warn travelers on the highway of the approaching train, varies with the danger presented by the crossing.
4. The warnings given were not commensurate with the degree of risk involved.
5. The failure to give adequate warning constituted a violation of the duty owed by the Railroad to motor vehicle traffic.
6. Violation of the duty owed by the Railroad was a proximate cause of the collision between the Daniels automobile and defendant’s train.
7. Defendant is not absolved from liability flowing from its violation of the duty owed to plaintiffs by reason of the general rule that a person who drives into the side of a train standing or moving over a grade crossing, cannot recover from the Railroad for injuries received.
8. The contributory negligence of Daniels, the driver, and not a party in this case, resulting from drinking or speeding is not a bar to recovery by the plaintiffs. There is nothing in the record to indicate Daniels was intoxicated. Nor was such a claim seriously pursued. While there is evidence Daniels was exceeding the speed limit and the court so found, his speed was not so excessive so as to impute his negligence to plaintiffs. The duty of a passenger was set forth in Poynter v. Townsend, 1924, 3 W.W.Harr., Del., 51,
*24 “ * * * the passenger is required to exercise due care and caution as well as the driver. However, the passenger is not held to the care that is required of the operator. The passenger has the right to rely, to a great extent, on the prudence, care, and skillfulness of the operator. * * * If the passenger sees the danger in time to avoid the accident, it is his duty to warn the operator. Or, if the passenger is in such position in the car that he must have seen the danger if he had used his sense of sight, as an ordinarily prudent passenger in such-position would have done, and the accident happens because of the passenger’s failure to see and warn the operator of the danger he must have seen, he would be guilty of contributory negligence. But we instruct you that a passenger is not required to do anything more than an ordinarily prudent person in a similar position and relation, who is not the operator, would have done in a like situation.”
Any doubt as to whether the passengers fulfilled their duty is set to rest when it is remembered Kenneth Phillips both discovered and shouted a warning at about the same instant Daniels perceived the locomotive closing off his path of travel.
9. Daniels’ contributory negligence was not the sole proximate cause of the collision.
10. Since the defendant, Railroad, failed to fulfill a duty owed to plaintiffs and violation of that duty was a proximate cause of plaintiffs’ injuries, it is concluded the Railroad was negligent.
11. Defendant has contested whether the widow may recover an amount of money which she will have to advance to rear an infant child, who, if the husband had not been killed would' have been supported by the husband and father.
•10 Delaware Code § 3704(b) provides: ' “(b) Whenever death is occasioned by unlawful violence or negligence, and no suit is brought by the party injured to recover damages during his or her life, the widow or widower of any such deceased person, or, if there is no widow or widower, the personal representatives, may maintain an action for and recover damages for the death and loss thus occasioned.”
By reason of being the natural guard.ian and by reason of 13 Delaware Code . § 702, the legal duty to support the minor child shifted from the father to the mother plaintiff, if she is living and ’able, upon the death of the father.
The question presented is whether the shift of the duty to support ■the child upon the father’s death is recoverable as a damage “for the death and loss thus occasioned” within the meaning of 10 Delaware Code § 3704(b). The question is one of first impression in the State of Delaware. The duty of this court is to hold in the same manner as it believes the Delaware Court would rule in answer to the same question.
A sense of fair play and justice virtually dictates a mother, by having to assume, if able, the burden of the legal obligation to support the child of the deceased father, has suffered a loss for which the tort-feasor should be responsible. Contrary to the Wrongful Death Statutes of many other States, the Delaware Statute, a part of the statutory law since 1866, limits recovery to, the widow or widower for the loss occasioned. While the widow is forced to assume the .burden of support, the loss to the child by reason of the wrongful death is that the child can no longer look to the father for support. Insofar as support of the child is concerned, it would superficially appear the child and not the widow has suffered the loss. Based on this tight reasoning, the loss of support by the child would not be a proper element of damages for the widow’s recovery. The court declines to follow this harsh result in a case of first impression. It must be' remembered 10 Delaware Code § 3704 (b] has been . interpreted as providing,
Where the tort-feasor’s negligence imposes upon the wife the burden of rearing an infant without financial aid from the husband, the wife has. suffered a pecuniary loss as real and as vital as being deprived' of her own support. “[The wife] should receive an award which would permit her to enjoy the same economic position she would have been in had her husband not been killed.”
The widow’s loss is measured by that “portion of the gross earnings or income the plaintiff would probably have received from the deceased, as his wife, if he- had lived.”
In holding the shift of duty to support the child upon the death of the father is a part of the loss occasioned by the father’s death, the court is aware of Wood v. Philadelphia B. & W. R. Co.,
12. Where one has the right to recover expenditures incurred for nursing services necessitated by a personal injury resulting from another’s negligence, has the one injured or his parents the right to recover the reasonable value of such services when furnished gratuitously
The Delaware Courts, in speaking of damages generally ’ and not in the context of gratuitous services would seemingly follow the rule that damages cannot be recovered unless there is an actual legál liability for the charge incurred.
“If you find a verdict for the plaintiff it should be for such an amount as would reasonably compensate her for the injuries sustained, including her pain and suffering, for any disability that has resulted from her injuries, and also for any expenditures, or charge incurred by her, and for which she made herself liable for medicine or medical attendance required on account of the injuries received in said accident.”
In Kane v. Reed
“The amount of the judgment must be determined from the injuries which the plaintiff sustained as a result of the accident, including her pain and suffering, and the amount which she was required to spend to have her injuries properly treated and cared for * *
While this language indicates Delaware might follow that decisional law which precludes recovery because plaintiffs have suffered no pecuniary loss, it must be remembered the Girardo and Kane cases did not involve the question of recovery for the value of services gratuitously rendered. Consequently, the language found in those cases cannot be determinative of this question. The majority and generally accepted rule where gratuitous services are rendered to a child is that the value of such services is a compensative item of damage.
It is concluded gratuitous nursing services rendered by a parent to a child are proper items of damage.
13. A claim for future institutional care of Jehu Evans is denied because of its speculative nature and because there is nothing in the Record to indicate the value of such services.
14. A question has arisen as to whether the parent or the patient may recover for amounts of money by which surgeons have reduced their bills because of the financial straits of those undertaking to pay the bill. The same considerations applicable to the problem of whether gratuitous nursing service is a proper element of compensatory damages are present.
The Restatement of Torts, § 924, Comment f, provides in part:
“The value of medical services made necessary by the tort can ordinarily be recovered although they have created no liability or expense to the injured person, as where a physician donates his services. Where a gift is intended to be made to the injured person its benefits should not inure to the tortfeasor * * * >>
While there is authority to the contrary
15. Telephone toll charges for calls made to a hospital to ascertain the condition of a patient is not an item of compensatory damages, since these calls were at most made to satisfy the minds of the parent and had no reasonable relation to the son’s injury.
17. Judgment should be entered in favor of Margaret Jester against defendant in the sum of $26,584, for the loss occasioned by the wrongful death of her husband, together with costs.
18. Defendant is liable to plaintiff, Jehu Evans, for all the injuries he suffered by reason of the collision on May 20, 1955, including all his temporary and whatever may prove to be permanent injuries, the reasonable value of past medical expenses, gratuitous nursing services, pain and suffering — past, present and future, past and future loss of wages.
19. Any claim for future institutional or nursing care is not included as an element of damages because the claim as presented in the Record is too speculative and because there is nothing in the Record upon which such a claim could be valued.
20. The defendant is liable to plaintiff, Jehu Evans, in the amount of $110,-137.79, and judgment should be entered in favor of plaintiff, Jehu Evans, against defendant for said sum, together with costs.
21. Defendant is liable to plaintiff, Leland Kenneth Phillips, for all the injuries he suffered by reason of the collision on May 20, 1955, including all temporary and whatever may prove to be permanent injuries, the reasonable value of medical services, pain and suffering, and loss of wages.
22. Defendant is liable to plaintiff, Leland Kenneth Phillips, in the amount of $877.10, and judgment should be entered in favor of plaintiff, Leland Kenneth Phillips against defendant, for said sum, together with costs.
23. Defendant is liable to plaintiff, Noah Kenneth Collins for all the injuries he suffered by reason of the collision on May 20, 1955, including all temporary and whatever may prove to be permanent injuries, the reasonable value of medical services, pain and suffering— past, present and future, and loss of wages.
24. Defendant is liable to plaintiff, Noah Kenneth Collins in the amount of $7,844.48, and judgment should be entered in favor of plaintiff, Noah Kenneth Collins, against defendant, for said sum, together with costs.
An order in accordance herewith may be submitted.
Notes
. R. 274, 326, 327.
. R. 306, 353, 366.
. E. 262-263, 276-277.
. E. 366-367.
. E. 279.
. E. 279, 307.
. E. 279, 307, 370-371.
. E. 280.
. E. 280.
. E. 597.
. E. 264.
. E. 266.
. E. 558, 559, 623. The train was going about 6 miles per hour.
. E. 266, 267, 268, 285, 286, 298.
. E. 269, 359.
. E. 660.
. E. 269, 310.
. E. 269, 359-360.
. E. 281, 361, 496, 543, 561, 572-574, 628.
. E. 384, 385, 489, 625, 653, 663.
. E. 472-476, 498-499, 625, 627-628, 642-646, 653, 667-668.
. E. 259-260, 302.
. E. 228-229 Arthur Labe.
E. 235-236 William S. Morris.
E. 240-243 Thomas Erwin Schlegal.
E. 249-250 Medford S. King.'
E. 313-314 Thomas J. Sweeney, Jr.
E. 258 Gay’s Administrator v. Pennsylvania E. E., 2 Cir., 1952,
. E. 147.
. E. 147.
. E. 456.
. E. 140-142. PX 47.
. PX 55.
. E. 147.
. E. 139.
. PX 48.
. PX 55.
. E. 9.
. E. 17.
. E. 69.
. E. 32.
. E. 45, 51.
. E. 48.
. E. 43, 51.
. E. 47, 51, 84.
. E. 87.
. PX1.
. R. 130; PX 2.
. PX 3.
. PX 4.
. PX 5.
. PX 6.
. PX 7.
. PX 8.
. PX 9.
. PX10.
. PX 11.
. PX 12; PX 45.
. PX 46.
. PX 13.
. Px 14.
. PX 15.
. PX 16.
. PX 17.
. PX 18.
. PX 19.
. R. 136.
. R. 83.
. R. 54.
. R. 84.
. R. 115-118, 120.
. R. 125.
. R. 391.
. R. 391.
. 1956, 10 Terry, Del, 596, 599-600,
. R. 49-51, 52.
. PX 55.
. R. 13.
. R. 39.
. R. 106-110.
. R. 108.
. PX 24.
. PX 25.
. R. 363.
. R. 94.
. R. 91.
. R. 95.
. R. 95.
. R. 320.
. R. 95.
. R. 103.
. R. 103, 104.
. R. 101; PX 21.
. PX 22.
. PX 44; R. 99.
. R. 101.
. R. 105.
. Not included in this total is nursing by mother since there is nothing in the record to show reasonable value of this service.
. ' R. 32Ó.
. R. 320, 321.
. R. 318.
. R. 550-551. The average daily volume of traffic for the year of the accident and the years preceding was:
1950 ■ 2410 cars
1951 2845 “
1952 3078 “
1953 3360 “
1954 3506- “
1955 3700 “
The month of May was average or slightly above average, R. 167, 168, 169, 414. .
On the other hand, the Railroad had no particular set' schedule or time for 'Crossing at Nassau, R. 398-399, 556. The crossing at Delaware Route 14 was generally traversed twice at night, anywhere between three nights and six idghts per week at a regular hour, R. 398.
. Plaintiffs’ Interrogatory No. 35 and Answer thereto.
. R. 186, 189, 191, 202-204, 210-211, 340, - 351.
. Prom a point 176 feet north of the track on the highway, one can see 86 feet of trackage to the west of the highway and vice versa, R. 516-517.
Prom a point 74 feet north of the track on the highway, one can see 164.5 feet of trackage to the west of the highway and vice versa, R. 517.
Prom a point 22 feet north of the track on the highway, one has practically unlimited vision of trackage, R. 517-518.
Similarly, visibility from the locomotive was equally bad if not worse. The only observer to the north, the direction from which the five were coming, would be the one sitting in the fireman’s seat, R. 400. At Nassau crossing, when the front of the locomotive was at the near edge of the paved portion of the road, a person sitting in the fireman’s seat could only see approximately 150 feet to 200 feet north, R. 403-404. When the front part of the engine reached the center of the road, one in the fireman’s position in the locomotive could definitely see north to New Road which was 157 feet from the track, R. 404r-405. Not until the front of the locomotiv.e completely covered both lanes of Route 14 could the fireman see north 200 to 300 yards, Ri 405. .
. R. 4Í6, 471,'497.
. The locomotive contained a headlight, front and rear, R. 561. Only the front headlight was burning, R. 583, 623. However, because the track crossed the road at a 58° 30' angle, the light would not reflect into the eyes of the driver of an automobile approaching from the north and consequently was not seen by the occupants of the Daniels car, R. 361, although seen by Alexander Vann, approaching from the opposite direction, R. 603.
The locomotive also contained walkaway lights, R. 561, instrument lights, R. 561, and hoodlights, R. 587, all of which were illuminated, R. 623, but which were not visible to automobile traffic, R. 586-587, 634, 635.
In addition, the locomotive contained small numeral lights on each side which are used to identify the engine at night, R. 570, 584. The numeral plates are 20 inches by 6% inches, lighted by two 75 volt, 50 watt lamps which illuminate the engine numerals being 5 inch high white numbers on a black background. Plaintiffs’ Interrogatory No. 30 and Answer thereto.
Finally, the train contained cab lights and marker lights which were not burning, R. 561, 583, 587.
. R. 200.
. “Reduce speed”, “Speed limit 35”, “Nassau”, a circular highway approach warning sign for railroads and a highway marker painted on the surface of the highway, DX 11.
. DX 11.
. R. 532, 537, 541, 557, 559, 563, 597, 603, 607, 622, 664.
. R. 270, 281, 360.
. R. 284, 373.
. R. 270, 285, 360, 376.
. R. 288, 312, 331-332, 360, 376.
. R. 223.
. R. 222-223, 226-227.
. R. 261, 273, 274, 277, 285, 303, 304, 305, 306, 325-326, 338, 353, 355, 356, 368, 418, 451.
. R. 264, 268, 282, 283, 284, 309, 3ll-312, 328, 355, 357, 379, 380, 436, 437, 483, 484, 503, 504, 602, 629.
. B. 418.
. The court does not rule upon the admissibility of prior accidents as evidence tending to show an inherently dangerous crossing. The court considered the testimony of prior accidents only in connection with the issue of notice to the defendant. The court did not consider testimony of “near accidents” for any purpose whatsoever.
. Leedom v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 1942, 3 Terry, Del, 186, 29 A.2d 171; Lofland’s Brickyard Crossing Cases, 1914, 5 Boyce, Del., 150,
. Id.
. Leedom v. Pennsylvania R. Co., supra.
. Gay v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 2 Cir., 1952,
. Turcol v. Jenkins, 1956, 10 Terry, Del., 596,
. Lynch v. Lynch, 1937, 9 W.W.Harr., Del., 1,
. 1910, 1 Boyce, Del., 336,
. The services were gratuitous. R. 125:
“They (the parents) have not rendered the boy any bill and they never will.”
. See Annotation:
. 1914, 5 Boyce, Del., 25,
. 1954, 9 Terry, Del., 266,
. Annotation: 128 A.L.K. 686 at 701.
. Hudson v. Lazarus, 1954,
. Rigby v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., La.App.1933,
