65 N.J.L. 421 | N.J. | 1900
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was a joint action by a husband and wife for injuries to the wife, and for loss of her services to the
The case is here on rule to show cause, and numerous reasons are alleged for making the rule absolute. A careful examination of. all the grounds fails to sustain any of them. The plaintiffs were riding in their carriage upon a public highway known as the Wolf Hill road, in the county of Monmouth, the carriage being drawn by a well-broken and gentle horse, which the husband was driving.
Wolf Hill road and Goose Neck road both cross the tracks of the defendant company within a few hundred feet of one another and they cross each other at a point about two hundred feet from the tracks. The railroad right of way and the two highways form a triangle of which the railroad is the base. In the highway, at the apex of the triangle, a mechanical contrivance for raising a red flag has been placed by the defendant. This flag when raised warns the drivers of approaching vehicles against the approach of a train upon the track. The flag is raised by a man in a flag-house by the use of a lever attached to a wire, which wire is also attached to the staff upon which the flag is, the wire passing in its course around certain wheels whereby the staff upon which the flag is is quickly raised upright by the use of the lever by the man in the flag-house.
There was no controversy in the ease about the mechanical construction, or that the staff and flag were within the lines of the public highway.
On the day of the accident the plaintiffs were coming along the Wolf Hill road approaching the point where it crossed the Goose Neck road on the way to cross the tracks of the defendant. They had seen a freight engine some two thousand feet away, standing or drilling, and after stopping and considering, concluded that they had time to pass over safely, and started to do so and when within about twenty-five feet of the place where the mechanical contrivance for raising the flag was, the man at the lever suddenly, with great rapidity,
A nonsuit was asked for and one of the reasons for a new trial is because it was refused. It was rightly refused. It was a question for the jury whether the maintaining of this mechanical contrivance in the highway, the common property of all the people, and the sudden raising of the flag without warning, and the frightening of the plaintiffs’ horse thereby, was a negligent act which was the proximate cause of the injury. McCann v. Consolidated Traction Co., 30 Vroom 481.
The rulings of the court on the admissions of evidence and its refusal to direct a verdict for the defendant were also without legal error.
The chief reliance for reversal in the case is upon the following statement of the trial judge in his charge, as one of the elements which might be taken into account by the jury in the ascertainment of the damages to be recovered by the wife, viz.:
“Damages are recoverable, if at all, as to her, for the pain and suffering she has sustained until now, and in your judgment will sustain, and for any result of the injury, if it is permanent, in the lessening of her ability to enjoy life, and if she was or would be in a position to earn money, then the diminishing of her earning power. A wife’s earnings ordinarily belong to her husband, and this is a married woman, and it is only on the remote possibility of her husband’s death that you will take into account any loss in her earning capacity.”
We are unable to discover any authority to sustain the trial court in leaving to the jury the right to consider the possible loss of earning power of the wife in case of the
While we disapprove of this part of the charge we nevertheless do not think that under the evidence and the whole charge in the ease it justifies the setting aside of the verdict and granting a new trial.
The verdict for the wife was not excessive—it was unusually reasonable and fair considering the character of her injuries. Nor were the damages allowed to the husband for his own injuries and the loss of services, present and prospective, of his wife, and his actual expenses, as proven, excessive. The verdict was a very reasonable one under the evidence.
There is nothing in the case, therefore, to show that the element of damages suggested by the court as a possible one for the jury to consider was given by them any importance in fixing the damages, and it does not appear to have been other than a harmless error for which the verdict should not be set aside. Whitaker, Receiver, v. Miller, 34 Vroom 587.
The rule to show cause must be discharged, with costs.