This suit was instituted by appellee to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by him through the negligence of appellant at Hearne, Tex., on October 8, 1908; the gravamen of the’ complaint being that while he was, with appellant’s permission, sleeping in a caboose provided by it for that use, and standing on the caboose track at night, the appellant’s employés, not working with appellee, but being members of a different crew, negligently ran another caboose in on said track, by reason of which the injuries complained of were inflicted. Appellant’s defenses, so far as relied on, were general denial, assumed risk, and contributory negligence, in that appellee failed to be operated on for double hernia produced by the collision, and that he “walked out of said caboose No. 9 in which he was sleeping, and stepped off of the platform of said caboose onto the ground, and in so doing suffered whatever injuries he sustained at the time.” Appellee, in reply, denied that he stepped off.' of the platform, and alleged that, if such was the fact, appellant’s negligence “caused plaintiff to be surrounded at the time by such circumstances as appeared to him to threaten the destruction of his life, or serious injury to his person, so that, if he acted as alleged by defendant, he did so as the result of fright or want of presence of mind occasioned by circumstances of excitement, confusion, and danger brought about by the negligent acts and conduct of defendant, as alleged by plaintiff against it.” The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellee for 830,000, and judgment was entered for that amount, from which judgment appeal has been perfected.
Findings of Fact.
At the time of the injury, appellee was employed by appellant as a brakeman at $100 per month. He was 28 years old, strong and in good health. He had arrived at Hearne, the end of his run, and had gone to sleep in a bunk in caboose No. 9, standing on the caboose track. Trainmen were permitted, but not required, to sleep in cabooses. It was known to appellant’s employés who switched the caboose in, that it was customary for trainmen to sleep in cabooses. Caboose No. 1 was a few feet in the rear of No. 9, and a car loaded with lumber was a few feet in front. At about 4 o’clock a., m. a freight train arrived, and its caboose No. 24 was “kicked” in on the caboose track on a downgrade some 200 or 300 feet from the standing cabooses. A brakeman was on No. 24, but neither of the brakes would work, and it ran with great violence against No. 1, which, in turn, struck No. 9 and shoved it with great violence against the car of lumber. A number of the crew were thrown out of their bunks. Appellee was thrown from his bunk which was near the door next to the lumber car by the first impact, and was hurled through said door by the rebound occasioned by striking the lumber car, and fell to the ground. He was able to and did come back into the caboose. 1-Iis face was bruised and bleeding, and he had great difficulty in breathing. He was taken to his home at Ennis, and walked to a buggy, and was driven home. He was treated at Ennis by appellant’s local surgeon for several weeks, when he was taken to appellant’s hospital at Houston, where he remained for six weeks. He then went to the Baptist Sanitarium at Houston, where he remained for a month and a half, after which his wife rented a private house in Houston, to which she took him, and where he remained up to the time of the trial. From the time he went to the Baptist Sanitarium up to and including the time of the trial he was attended by Dr. Wagner. He was confined to his bed from the time of his injury to the time of this trial, a period of about 15 months.
There is practically no contradiction in the evidence as to the facts above stated. There is also no contradiction in the evidence as to the appellee’s being paralyzed in his lower limbs from the time of his arrival in Houston up to and including the time of the trial. “The doctors disagree” as to the nature of this paralysis. This will be discussed under an assignment raising this issue.
During the progress of the trial one Frank Myatt gave W. D. Luker, one of the jurors, a drink of whisky in the presence of one Frank Hammond. Hammond was employed iby Lovejoy & Ewing, attorneys for appellee, upon a monthly salary, to assist them in personal injury suits, his duties being similar to those of a claim agent for a railway company in investigating the evidence. Myatt never saw appellee until the day he was brought to Franklin to attend the trial of this case, but he was a friend of Hammond’s; they having been schoolmates. Myatt had come to Franklin in the interest of his brother, who was charged with murder, and whose trial was expected to be had at a subsequent day of that term. Franklin was a local option town, and Myatt had brought whisky with him. He assisted Hammond and others in carrying appellee to the courtroom on a cot, appellee being paralyzed and unable to walk or sit up. When appellee’s attorneys were looking over the jury list, Myatt told them that Luker was a good man. Ap-pellee’s attorneys were not acquainted at Franklin. Myatt had known Luker for 25 years. The hotel being crowded, Hammond consented at the landlord’s request for Myatt to room with him. Myatt put a bottle of whisky in Hammond’s hand grip, and invited Luker to go with him into a vacant store and take a drink. Hammond was in the store at the time, having gone in there *731 to urinate. Myatt was unable to open tbe valise, and Hammond, being requested to do so, opened it for him. Luker and Myatt each took a drink, but Hammond did not. Nothing was said about the case. Hammond did not know at the time that Luker was on the jury, but subsequently, seeing him on the jury, informed appellee’s attorney of the occurrence.
Conclusions of Law.
1. Appellant set up in its motion for new trial the alleged misconduct of the juror Luker in taking a drink of whisky. The court heard the testimony on this issue, and overruled said motion. In addition to the facts above set out, Luker testified that he was not in any manner influenced by such action. The testimony further showed that, when the jury retired, they first voted as to whether appellee’s injuries were real or simulated. All voted that they were real. They next voted as to the liability of appellant, and all voted that appellant was liable. They next voted as to the amount that should be allowed appellee. Eight voted for $50,000, two for $30,000. One M. W. Maris for $25,-000 and Luker for $5,000. He, however, confided to Maris that he thought $30,000 was the right amount, and that he had voted for $5,000 to bait the jurors whom he thought were too high on amount.
2. The issue of contributory negligence was decided by the j,ury against appellant’s contention, and the evidence supports the finding. The limitation in the court’s charge as to the negligence of appellee in jumping from the car, if he did so, was proper under the pleadings and the evidence.
On the- other hand, Dr. Red, appellant’s surgeon, and Dr. Armstrong, who examined appellee at appellant’s request, say that ap-pellee’s paralysis is not real paralysis, but that he is suffering from traumatic hysteria. They explain that they do not mean by this that he is malingering, but that he is paralyzed because he thinks tüat he is paralyzed, and that if he would cease so to think he would get well. Dr. Red_said: “My judgment is that he has an actual ease of hysterical paralysis, and that simulating is not done in his case.” They applied hot spoons and stuck pins in him. But, though they rely upon Charcot as authority, they do not appear to have applied the hypnotic test, nor to have tried suggestive therapeutics as practiced by that eminent scientist, and by the school at Nancy, and by Serenek-Notzing and other eminent phsyco-therapeutists. Dr. Armstrong said: “In Mr. Gray’s case there is no injury to either the cord or the nerve leading from the cord, but only the mental view that the limbs are dead, and therefore that he cannot use them. * * # He cannot walk because he believes in his mind that he cannot.” It may be true that “there are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamed of in our philosophy,” though the dreams of philosophy seem to have been pretty comprehensive. It may also be true that science “knows so many things that are not so.” If the jury were compelled to pass upon these conflicting theories, they were as competent to do so as we are, or perhaps as any one else is, in the present state of science; but it was not absolutely necessary that they should have done so. The law aims to be practical. There is no pretense that appellee has voluntarily brought about the state of mind which appellant’s physicians say has resulted in his present condition, nor that he can voluntarily change his mental attitude in this respect. They say that his paralysis is the result of traumatic hysteria, occasioned by the injuries which he is shown to have received by reason of the negligence of appellant. Dr. Armstrong says: “It is as real to the patient, as long as it lasts, as paralysis resulting from organic trouble.” How long will it last? Dr. Armstrong said: “I cannot tell this jury whether that man will ever be able to get off of his bed.” Dr. Red said: “It might be that his hysterical paralysis may be permanent.” If so, this clash of scientific theories is a matter of no practical importance to the appellee. Paraphrasing the language of the blind man who was healed, he might well say: “Whether my trouble is organic or functional, I know not. Only this I know, that whereas I was strong and healthy, now I am a wreck, unable to provide for myself or family, and suffer great physical agony.” If the trouble is purely mental, the question ■might well be asked the eminent physicians who testified for appellant: “Canst thou minister to a mind diseased?” Their practical answer is that they cannot, for Dr. Red, at least, had appellee under his charge for six weeks in appellant’s hospital, with no indications of improvement. Dr. Armstrong does not suggest any remedy, except that the payment of such a sum of money as *733 to relieve Ms mind of worry for tlie welfare of Ms family, migM lead to Ms recovery. If this be true, the Jury have given this prescription, and, as the appellant caused the sickness, it would seem but fair that it should furnish the medicine. At any rate, the evidence in behalf of appellee is amply sufficient to sustain the yerdict, and we do not feel justified in setting aside their verdict, however persuasive the evidence on the other side may be.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
