188 S.E. 625 | N.C. | 1936
Civil action for willful trespass to the person. *809
Plaintiff purchased a dress and a hat from the corporate defendant in the summer of 1933, to be paid for on the installment plan. The account originally amounted to $13.98 or $14.98, but had been reduced by some payments.
On 5 July, 1934, S. M. Russell, collecting agent of the corporate defendant, went to the home of the plaintiff, who was living with her parents at the time, and asked if she had anything to pay on her account. Plaintiff replied that she did not, as she was then not able to work, being in her seventh month of pregnancy, but that she would pay as soon as she could. Russell, without getting out of his automobile, which was about fifteen feet from the plaintiff, is alleged to have retorted: "By G____, you are like all the rest of the damn deadbeats. You wouldn't pay when you could. . . . If you are so damn low you won't pay, I guess when I get the sheriff and bring him down here you will pay then."
Plaintiff testifies: "He said he was going right then and send the sheriff after me, and scared me to death. He said, By G____, he was going to bring the sheriff down there and arrest me, said guess I'd pay then. . . . He called me a deadbeat. . . . He repeated it three or four times, and, as he drove off, that is what he said. . . . He didn't get out of the car, he just hollered at me."
About two weeks prior to this, plaintiff's father had ordered the defendant Russell, who was then trying to collect on the account, to leave the premises because of plaintiff's condition, and Russell's profanity and apparent anger. On the occasion in question, the plaintiff, her mother, and sister were the only persons in the house. "There were no men folks at home."
Continuing, plaintiff says: "Then I took sick in about two hours after he left, real sick. . . . I had been feeling good up to that time. . . . From that time on, I was in pain, and on the following Wednesday night my child was prematurely born. It was dead."
Dr. G. W. Black testifies that in his opinion the fright occasioned by the conduct of the defendant Russell could have produced the premature birth of plaintiff's child.
There was denial of the plaintiff's testimony by the defendant Russell; and Dr. Nance, who attended the plaintiff at the birth of her child on 12 July, 1934, testifies: "I have an opinion satisfactory to myself. . . . The baby appeared to be fully developed. . . . Birth apparently not premature. . . . It was a breach presentation. . . . Death due to contraction of cervix around baby's neck. . . . Nothing to indicate a miscarriage."
The jury answered the issue of liability in favor of the plaintiff, and assessed her damages at $1,000. From judgment thereon, the defendants appeal, assigning errors. *810
After stating the case: At the outstart of the argument in this Court, the defendants interposed a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. This must be overruled. The case is controlled by the principles announced in Freemanv. Acceptance Corporation,
The gravamen of plaintiff's cause of action is trespass to the person.Duncan v. Stalcup,
The leading case on the subject is Hill v. Kimball,
In holding that the plaintiffs could recover, the Court said: "That a physical personal injury may be produced through a strong emotion of the mind there can be no doubt. The fact that it is more difficult to produce such an inquiry through the operation of the mind than by direct physical means affords no sufficient ground for refusing compensation, in an action at law, when the injury is intentionally or negligently inflicted. It may be more difficult to prove the connection between the alleged cause and the injury, but if it be proved, and the injury be the proximate result of the cause, we cannot say that a recovery should not be had. Probably an action will not lie when there is no injury except the suffering of the fright itself, but such is not the present case. Here, *811 according to the allegations in the petition, the defendant has produced a bodily injury by means of that emotion, and it is for that injury that the recovery is sought."
Likewise, in Engle v. Simmons,
In commenting on the fact that physical violence to the person was not necessary to make out the case, the Court said: "The plaintiff here was in her home, and had a right to the peaceful and undisturbed enjoyment of the same, and any unlawful entry or invasion thereof, which produced physical injury to her, whether by direct personal violence or through nervous excitement the proximate result of the wrongful acts of the defendant, was a wrong for which she is entitled to recover."
Again, in Purcell v. R. R.,
The doctrine of Hill v. Kimball, supra, has not been universally followed. Nelson v. Crawford, supra; 17 C. J., 834. The rationale of the North Carolina decisions, however, places this State in line with it. In addition to the cases cited above, see Blow v. Joyner,
Animadverting on the situation and distinguishing the cases in Bouillonv. Gas Light Co.,
It is true, the basis of the action in most of the cases has been forcible trespass, and it is contended that in the case at bar no forcible trespass has been shown, hence no liability exists. Without conceding the correctness of the syllogism as applied to the instant case, it is observed that much of the confusion on the subject seems to have come from worshipping at the shrine of words and formulas, rather than applying correct principles to the facts in hand. Gulf, etc., Ry. Co. v. Hayter,
"As a general rule, damages for mere fright are not recoverable; but they may be recovered where there is some physical injury attending the cause of the fright, or, in the absence of physical injury, where the fright is of such character as to produce some physical or mental impairment *813
directly and naturally resulting from the wrongful act" — Sutton, J., in Candler v. Smith,
If it be actionable willfully or negligently to frighten a team by blowing a whistle, Stewart v. Lumber Co., supra, or by beating a drum,Loubz v. Hafner, supra, thereby causing a run-away and consequent damage, it is not perceived upon what logical basis of distinction the present action can be dismissed as in case of nonsuit. Arthur v. Henry, supra.
While it would seem the jury might well have answered the issues in favor of the defendant, especially in view of Dr. Nance's testimony, still there is evidence to the contrary, and the matter was for the twelve.
No reversible error having been made to appear, the verdict and judgment will be upheld.
No error.