11 La. Ann. 292 | La. | 1856
This suit is brought to recover damages from the company for injuries occasioned the plaintiff by being thrown, as alleged, from the railroad cars.
It appears that the cars ran over a blind horse, and that the defendant, a passenger upon them, was either thrown or jumped from the cars, wherebjr he was seriously injured. None of the other passengers were harmed, all of them except one other having kept their seats.
The jury gave a verdict of nine thousand dollars in favor of the plaintiff, and •the defendant appealed.
There are two bills of exception in this ease which require our notice. The first is taken to the admisssion in evidence of the declarations of Payne, the Superintendent of the road, made in the presence of the witness Dunbar in a conversation with Hill after the injury. The substance of the statement of Payne was that the engineer had been guilty of the most gross carelessness, and that he had requested Mr. Gibbs, the Chief Engineer, to discharge him, and that he would discharge him as soon as he got control, and that he (the engineer
The testimony of Dunbar as to the declarations of Payne was on the ground jlhat:Payne could not bind the defendants by any remarks, because he could be summoned as a witness, and at the time of making his declarations he was not under oath, and the defendants had no opportunity of a cross-examination. objected to
It is evident that this testimony was calculated to exert a great influence upon the minds of the jury, it being the opinion of one of the officers of the company upon the cause of the accident. Aside from the liability of the loose conversations of the numerous agents of a large company to be misunderstood, it becomes important to knowhow far the declarations of such officers are binding and affect the company in regard to past transactions.
The declaration or admission of an agent is evidence against the principal only on the supposition that the agent repx-esents the principal. But the agent only represents his principal within the scope of the authority delegated. If the agent •is authorized to make a contract for the company, his declarations and admissions in regard to that contract are the acts of the company, and are admissible in evidence as forming a part of the res gesta; But so soon as the transaction is ended the agency in the affair terminates, and the agent has no longer authority to speak of it so as to bind the company.
It is the duty of the engineer to run the locomotive, and keep it in running order. It is not in the scope of his authority to make admissions for the company, or settle controversies on its behalf. So of the Superintendent: it is his duty, we suppose, to superintend, through proper agents, the running of the cars, the receipt and delivery of freight, the transportation of passengers, the expenses and receipts of the road and the keeping of the books. Any contract within the scope of the authority delegated, made by him, would hind the company, but he has no authority to bind it by any admission in regard to business not delegated to him, and which he is without authority to settle.
As the declaration of the engineer to the Superintendent, and fhe declaration of what the engineer said to the Superintendent was retailed by him to the plaintiff in the presencé of the witness after the affair had occurred, it is not important to decide whether the declarations of an agent at the time of the alleged commission of an act of malfeasance is or is not admissible in evidence against the principal.
It is clear that the Board of Directors alone had the power to make admissions in regard to the controversy which would bind the company, and that no ordinary agent of the company would possess the power, uniese expressly delegated. 2 Stark. Ev., 43; Greenleaf, 113,114; Story on Agency, 137.
The court, therefore,erred in permitting the declarations of Payne, in the conversation between him and the plaintiff, to go to the jury.
As the. real question presented by the pleadings is whether the negligence of the defendant’s agents occasioned the injury to the plaintiff, and as the term locomotive is sometimes used as a figurative expression for the train, and as the plaintiff himself had offered testimony tending to show in what manner the horse was run over by the locomotive and the cars, we think the defendat should have been permitted to interrogate the witness Octave Villette, and others, and to show the real manner in which the horse was brought in contact with the cars, and the injury occasioned.
If it appear that the injury would have equally happened with or without such guards to the locomotive or train, then the want thereof will not increase the responsibility of the company.
This ease must be remanded to the lower court for a new trial. We are the more willing to do so because we are not satisfied with the verdict. It appears to us to be much higher than the testimony as it stands will justify, even if the testimony of defendant’s witnesses be disregarded. In actions of this kind it is not within the province of the jury, although the negligence is clearly proven, to give vindictive damages, as is sometimes allowed in Cases of wilful or malicious injuries. It is true that in estimating the damages where a case is made out, the jury may consider the painful nature of the wound as well as the length of time the plaintiff has been kept from his employment, and the permanent character of the injury; but in assessing the damages the jury should give such reasonable sum as will really compensate the plaintiff, and no more. The company in such case is not to be punished for the negligence or carelessness of its agents as a crime.
It is, therefore, ordered, adjudged and decreed by the court, that the judgment of the lower court be avoided and reversed, and that this cause be remanded to the lower court for a new trial, with instructions to the court, in receiving and rejecting testimony to be governed by the views herein expressed, and in other respects to proceed according to law; and it is further ordered, that the plaintiff pay the costs of the appeal.