88 S.E. 864 | N.C. | 1916
The evidence tended to show that, on 17 July, 1914, plaintiff, a boy 17 years of age, was unloading ice, consigned to his employer, from a box car on defendant's side-track at Marion, N.C. having been directed to said car by the agents of defendant company. While so engaged, and without warning of any kind, an engine of the company was run with great violence against the car, shoving the same along the track for two or three car lengths, throwing the plaintiff over the wagon onto a pile of chestnut wood, causing serious and painful injuries, from which plaintiff still suffers. It could not be *647
seriously contended that defendant was not liable on the issue as to negligence, the proximate cause of plaintiff's hurt. There is no claim or testimony tending to show contributory negligence on part of plaintiff; but defendant insists that there was error committed to his prejudice on the issue as to damages, in that the court charged the jury they could estimate for the loss of mental powers as a result of plaintiff's injuries, when there were no facts in evidence which tended to show any such loss. It has been held in several of our decisions, Worley v.Logging Co.,
It is said that the word "or" is not always "disjunctive," but is not infrequently used to introduce matter that is explanatory or interpretative of what immediately precedes it, Blumenthal v. Berkshire, 96 N.W., pp. 17, 18; Dowers v. Allen, 22 Fed., 809, and, in the present instance, we think the latter clause should be construed and held to so modify and interpret the first that the charge, by correct intendment, signified that the jury could award compensation for the actual suffering of body and mind naturally attributable to the injury — a charge that has been approved in cases of this kind, and whether the witnesses speak directly to the mental suffering or not. Ferrebee v. R. R.,
In S. v. Exum,
No error.
Cited: Milling Co. v. Highway Com.,