106 S.E. 567 | N.C. | 1921
The feme plaintiff was a passenger on the train of the defendant railroad company, 19 August, 1919, traveling from Wilmington, N.C. to Bolton, N.C. She was very old and feeble and so informed the conductor, requesting him, at the time, to assist her in alighting from the train and to have a box for the purpose, which was not done. A boy who was standing near the train when it stopped at the station offered to go for a box, which was near by, but the conductor refused to let him do so, and threatened to "carry her on if she could not get off," and was rude and rough to her, using insulting language. She sat on the floor of the platform and slid or bumped down the steps after the conductor had said, "Are you coming off or not?" to which she replied, "Well, if I have to get off without any help and expose myself and hurt myself I will have to do so." She added, "He could not have talked meaner to me." She further testified that it was too far from the ground for her to step from the car, and she was severely injured in attempting to do so; that she had been ruptured and "her ruptures were torn loose"; that she nearly fainted and had to lie down for ten days and suffered great pain. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff, assessing the compensatory damages at $400 and the punitive damages at $100. Judgment thereon, and the defendant appealed. The two instructions requested by the defendant were sufficiently covered by the charge. The real question was whether the jury believed the plaintiff or the conductor, and they believed the former. It was the duty of the defendant's conductor to render her such assistance for alighting from the car as was reasonably necessary in her weak physical condition. She was very old and had been ruptured. The conductor was notified that she needed help; he was put on his guard, but says he forgot it. The plaintiff was entitled to proper assistance as she was aged and feeble or infirm, which, if not apparent to the conductor, was made known to him by the son of the plaintiff, and by her before she alighted. Morarity v. DurhamTraction Co.,
The ruling of the judge as to punitive damages was correct in every particular. There was evidence tending to show inexcusable conduct on the part of the conductor and such treatment of this old and feeble woman as justified the imposition of punitive damages, which may be allowed when there is an element of fraud, malice, such a degree of negligence as indicates reckless indifference to consequences, oppression, insult, rudeness, mere caprice, willfulness or some other element of aggravation in the act or omission causing the injury. Holmes v. R. R.
The objection to evidence is general, whereas some of it at least is competent. The exception, therefore, cannot be sustained. The objection should, in such a case, be specific and designate that part of the evidence supposed to be incompetent. S. v. Ledford,
The charge of the court submitted the case to the jury pointedly and fully, and properly refused a nonsuit and the peremptory instruction requested by the defendant. The verdict, as we have said, may be wrong, but we have to accept it as right, unless there was some error in law for which it should be set aside, and we have found none which justifies a reversal.
No error.