57 S.C. 228 | S.C. | 1900
The opinion of the Court was delivered b7
The first paragraph of the complaint merely sets out the incorporation of the defendant, and that at the time hereinafter set up, it was acting as a common carrier of passengers for hire, &c. “2d. That on the 10th day of September, 1897, the defendant received the plaintiff into one of its passenger cars drawn by a steam locomotive engine, for the purpose of conveying her therein and upon said railroad as a passenger from Yemassee to Green Pond, both being on said railroad, for reward paid to the defendant by the plaintiff. 3d. That while she was such passenger on said railroad, near the station house and passenger platform at Green Pond, aforesaid, and while she was in the act of embarking from said passenger car, on the invitation and by the instruction of the conductor in charge of said train, the defendant, its agents and servants, so negligently, carelessly and recklessly conducted itself in that behalf, that the locomotive engine which had been attached to said train, and which had then been detached therefrom, was carelessly, negligently and recklessly and with great force,' and without notice to the plaintiff, caused to be run back and come in contact with said passenger coach, throwing the said plain
The answer admitted the first paragraph of the complaint but denied the remaining articles. The cause came on for trial before his Honor, Judge Townsend, and a jury, fall, 1899, term of the Court of Common Pleas for Colleton County, S. C. Verdict was for the plaintiff.
After judgment, defendant appeals on the following grounds: “First. Because his Honor erred in charging the jury: ‘They have said further, that if the complaint is for punitive damages, none other should be given; if it is for actual damages, none other should be given, as I illustrated in the case of the box of shoes.’ Second. Because his Honor erred in charging the jury as the law applicable to this case, the following extract from the case of Spellman against Railroad, 35 South Carolina, page 486: ‘We observe that the presiding Judge in charging the jury speaks of the necessity of the jury only giving actual damages, if they take one view of the case, and if they adopt another view of the same case, the jury must give exemplary damages. According to our view of the law, this is all wrong; for where a cause of action set up in the complaint is for exemplary damages, such exemplary damages and none other should be awarded; if the plaintiff fails by his proofs to establish such damages, the verdict should be for the defendant. Where the cause of action set up in the complaint is for actual damages, the
So far as the sixth ground of appeal is concerned, we may remark that we see very little ground for a criticism of the Judge’s charge as here pointed out, as the same affects the appellant. It seems to refer to actual damages; but as we
■ It is the judgment of this Court, that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed.