74 Tex. 593 | Tex. | 1889
Appellee, who was plaintiff in the court below, alleged that he purchased from the local agent of defendant at Fort Worth, Texas, a ticket over its railroad from Fort Worth to Morgan, and was by such agent directed to board one of defendant’s freight
He charges that at a point one and a half miles from Fort Worth, and before reaching Morgan, the servants of defendant in charge of said train unlawfully and forcibly expelled him from the train at a place not a station, and in the night time, and left him to find his way back to Fort Worth as best he could, and that he being a stranger experienced great fatigue and distress in finding his way* back, and by reason thereof and the ejection from the train he suffered great pain of mind and body, to his damage two thousand dollars; that he lost the money paid for the ticket and was compelled to lie over at Fort Worth and was hindered from attending to his regular business, to his further damage one hundred dollars.
The plaintiff by his own testimony proved that he was at Fort Worth and his family was at Stephenville, to which place he was on his way pursuant to a call from his wife informing him that his baby was dangerously sick. He testified that finding that the delay in waiting for a passenger train would cause him to miss connections, he applied to the ticket agent at the union depot at Fort Worth and explained to him his anxiety to speedily get home and the cause of it, whereupon the ticket agent assured him he could take passage on a freight train that would arrive at a certain hour, and that it Avas expected to make the desired connections, and with that víbav sold him the ticket; that he accordingly, by direction of the agent selling the ticket, took passage on one of defendant’s freight trains, from Avhich he was shortly afterwards expelled in the manner charged in his petition by the servants of defendant, for the reason that the train that he was aboard did not carry passengers.
He charges that he informed the agents of defendant who expelled him from the train of the circumstance that Avas calling him home and producing his anxiety to avoid delay, and that the agent selling him the ticket had assured him that he could ride on that very train.
He proved that the train slowed up and he was put off without violence or personal injury someAvhere between a mile and a mile and a half from the depot at which he had taken the train; that it was raining and very dark on his way back to the depot and from there down town, and he got very wet and had a severe spell of sickness from it.
The next day he went to within twenty-eight miles of his home by rail and walked and rode on a Avagon the balance of the way, reaching home during the night following.
There was a jury and a verdict for plaintiff for five hundred dollars.
The defendant objected to the evidence with regard to the condition of the child of the plaintiff and to his having been caused great distress
The court refused to give this charge, but of its own motion instructed the jury “that in estimating such damage the defendant would not be liable for the mental suffering of the plaintiff on account of the sickness of his child.”
It is evident that plaintiff’s anxiety about the situation of his child and the mental distress that it produced existed before his negotiations for passage as well as during and after his expulsion from the train, and that the treatment received by him from defendant’s servants did not produce and could not in the nature of things increase or diminish it.
If under any circumstances the condition of the child, and plaintiff’s feelings growing out of that condition, 'could be proper to be laid before the jury, they could not be put in evidence without having been alleged in the pleadings. The bare and general allegation in the petition that plaintiff’s mere expulsion from the car caused him mental distress does mot admit of any proof to explain to the jury the fact or degree of that ■condition except the act of expulsion itself. When for the purpose of explaining the existence of mental distress, or of enhancing the amount of damages by enlarging its degree, it is intended to offer any evidence beyond the trespass or act of physical violence complained of, a proper predicate in the pleadings must be laid. Such mental distress as naturally .and usually results from a trespass upon the person may be estimated by the jury from their own knowledge and without other proof. Anything and every fact beyond that proper to be considered and estimated by the jury must be alleged or it can not be proved. There are cases in which it is not proper to reverse for the admission of improper evidence which the court has afterwards endeavored to obviate by a charge to the jury not to consider or estimate it. This will usually be confined to cases in which the objection to the evidence is not clear when it is allowed, and when also the result furnishes' reason to believe that the charge to the jury to disregard it has produced the desired effect. When the verdict can not be clearly accounted for and justified without a resort to the improper evidence, it may always be doubted whether the injurious effect has been removed.
As this cause will be reversed, in view of another trial we do not think it proper to make the application of this rule to the verdict before us further than to say that we are not satisfied that the charge sufficiently removed the evidence from the consideration of the jury.
The judgment is reversed and cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Delivered October 22, 1889.