Giblin v. McIntyre

2 Utah 384 | Utah | 1880

Schaeffek, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is an action brought by the respondent against the appellant to recover damages for an injury done by the defendant below to the person of respondent, by the careless and negligent discharge of a pistol loaded with gunpowder and *386leaden balls. The manner of tbe shooting, and the circumstances under which it occurred, as detailed by the testimony, manifest such a reckless disregard for the life and personal safety of those within the reach of his weapon as to justify the legal inference that the act complained of was an unlawful and willful attempt to take the life of the respondent. A trial was had in the court below, and a verdict and judgment was obtained by the respondent against the appellant for two thousand five hundred dollars and costs of suit. The defendant brought the case to this court by appeal, and assigns for error:

First — The court'erred in overruling defendant’s objection to the admission in evidence of the bullets said to have been picked up in Baxter’s saloon.

There was no error in receiving the bullets in evidence. They were proper evidence to go to the jury, and we think they would and probably did aid the jury in determining the controverted question as to whose pistol was the instrument by which the serious injury was inflicted.

Second — The main error, and in fact the only one relied on by the -appellant’s attorney in the argument of this case, is based upon the following instruction given by the court to the jury, to-wit: If the jury find for the plaintiff, they may, in computing the damages, take into consideration the expenses of his cure, and a fair compensation for the physical and mental suffering caused by the injury, and also compensation for any permanent reduction of the plaintiff’s power to earn money in the future.”

The special point in this instruction upon which the appellant charges error, is, as he alleges, that it instructs the jury to ‘consider the mental suffering caused to the plaintiff by the inj ury as a distinct and independent item in the computation of the measure of damages to be awarded to the plaintiff in case the jury find for him. This, we think, is a misapprehension of the meaning and force of this instruction. It is an attempt to separate the terms physical and mental where they *387were naturally and necessarily united. The instruction, as given, does not instruct the jury to consider mental suffering caused by the injury as a distinct item for which damages should be assessed, but it authorized the jury to take into consideration the suffering, both physical and mental, which were the immediate and necessary result of the injury in determining the amount of compensation which the plaintiff should recover in case the jury found for the plaintiff. The law is well settled that in an action like this, the plaintiff may recover for bodily suffering, and in connection therewith for such preceding and contemporaneous mental suffering as was directly caused by the injury. Sher. & Eedf. on Neg. 662-663, § 606: Seger v. Burkhamsted, 22 Conn. 298; Masters v. Warren, 27 Conn. 293; Canning v. Williamstown, 1 Cush. 452; Mason v. The Inhab. of Ellsworth, 32 Me. 271; Ill. Cent. R. R. Co. v. Barron, 5 Wall. 90; Sedgw. Measure of Dam. 648, note 2.

The third and only remaining assignment of error, that the verdict is against the law as given by the court on the question of contributive negligence, we think is untenable. There is no evidence tending to show that the plaintiff contributed, either by act or omission, to the injury, and there is evidence which shows that he was not in fault, and did not contribute to the injury.

We have not, from a careful inspection of the whole record, discovered any such error as should reverse the judgment herein. It is, therefore, affirmed, with costs.

EjieRson and Bobeman, J. J., concurred.
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