24 Wash. 689 | Wash. | 1901
This is an action for damages brought by respondents against appellant in the superior court of King county. The respondents are husband and wife, and the appellant, at the time of the injuries complained of, owned and was operating a line of steamers between the
The assignments of error are as follows:
“(1) The court erred in refusing to grant a new trial on the ground that the verdict was excessive, or in not requiring plaintiffs to remit at least $1,000. (2) The court erred in charging the jury that the plaintiffs should recover for Mrs. Howell’s alleged suffering.”
The seventh and eighth paragraphs of the complaint are as follows:
“(7) That by reason of said injuries, the said plaintiff Anna Gerow Howells has been permanently injured, and did suffer and is constantly suffering from the effects of the said injuries, causing great pain and suffering, and these plaintiffs were compelled to pay a large sum of money for doctor’s bills and medicines, to-wit, the sum of $250, and whereby by reason of which this plaintiff Clifford Howells was compelled to and did incur large expense and outlay both of time and money in attending to and*692 nursing and caring for his said wife as aforesaid, whereby he was damaged in a large sum of money, to-wit, $1,475. “(8) That because of said injuries this plaintiff Clifford Howells was deprived of and lost the services of his said wife for a long period of time, to-wit, from the 11th day of September, 1897, to the 17th day of September, 1898, to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of $500.”
The complaint then concludes with a prayer as follows:
“Wherefore plaintiffs demand judgment against the defendant in the sum of $1,975, with interest and costs.”
In the record we find the fpllowing statement of a bill of particulars:
“Come now the plaintiffs, by their attorneys, Allen & Allen, and, by stipulation of the parties, furnish this bill of particulars as to the damages herein under paragraph 7: Medical attendance, $250; time in attending to, nursing, and caring for his said wife, $1,200; medicines and supplies, $75.”
This purports to have been signed by respondents’ attorneys, and, it is admitted, was delivered to counsel for appellant before the trial. By an inspection of the seventh paragraph of the complaint, above set out, it appears that the specific items of damage alleged aré for expenditures for doctor’s bills and medicines, and the additional item of expense and outlay both of time and money in nursing and caring for the wife by the husband. The aggregate claim of damage for these items is $1,475. The eighth paragraph of the complaint is limited to damages for loss to the husband of the services of his wife in the sum of $500. The aggregate of the claims for damage in the two paragraphs is $1,975, and the demand for judgment is for that amount. Thus, while it appears from the complaint that the wife endured pain and suffering, yet no claim for damages is laid upon that ground, and counsel for respondents announced in open court at the
“If you believe from a preponderance of the evidence in this case that the plaintiff Mrs. Howells received the injuries complained of through a failure of the defendant or its agents or its servants to take such precautions to maintain the hatchway or hole in question in a safe condition, as servants of steamboat companies generally exer*694 cise upon boats carrying passengers under circumstances entirely similar to those surrounding these parties when the fall occurred, then you will find for the plaintiff in one such gross sum, not exceeding $1,975, as will, in your opinion, from the evidence, justly compensate plaintiff for the suffering endured by Mrs. Howells. . . .”
It will thus be seen that the court squarely submitted to the jury the question of suffering, and left the jury to fix an amount of damage therefor. It is well understood that there is no criterion for fixing the amount of damages for mere pain and suffering, except the judgment of the jury trying the cause. It is an element of damage not susceptible of being estimated by direct proof. But other items of damage must be proven by competent and direct testimony. There was proof in this case directed to the items of damage covered by the complaint, upon which a verdict might have been founded. But it is impossible to know how much the jury included in the amount returned for suffering, which they were told by the court they should consider as an element of damage. We think this instruction of the court, under the complaint in this case, was material error. Respondents’ counsel insist that appellant is not in position to take advantage of this error, for the reason that evidence was introduced showing that the wife had endured pain and suffering, and that this evidence was not objected to by appellant’s counsel. We, however, agree with the theory of appellant’s counsel that said testimony was competent and unobjectionable in sup* port of the husband’s claim for his services in attending upon his wife, in that evidence of the suffering tended to show the necessity for the services.
Appellant further contends that the husband can only recover for .his services in attending his wife the value of the services of a competent nurse for the time the husband was so engaged, and that he cannot estimate his dam
For the reasons first assigned, however, we think the court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial. The judgment is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded, with instructions to the court below to grant the motion for a new trial.