28 N.Y.S. 861 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1894
But two questions are to the court by this appeal. The first relates to the amendment of the complaint during the trial, and the other to the amount of damages.
Upon the trial the complaint was amended, by the. permission of the court, by the insertion of these words: “And that her husband and son sustained pecuniary damages, by reason of her death, in the sum of $5,000.” The amendment neither introduced any new cause of action, nor changed the old one. It was therefore such a one as might be made upon the trial; and, although the counsel for the defendant expressed surprise, yet no delay was requested, and we find no error in the allowance of the amendment.
The verdict was for $5,000, in favor of the plaintiff; and upon its rendition the counsel for the defendant moved to set it aside, as excessive. That motion was denied, and there was an exception, and that presents a very serious and embarrassing question. There is no standard, and no measure, for the verdict, in this class of cases. There is a limitation of its size, but the only guide for the jury in making it, in case of death, is the provision of the statute which authorizes the action, that the damages to be recovered shall be “a fair and just compensation for the pecuniary injuries resulting from the decedent’s death to the person or persons for whose benefit the action is brought” Code Civ. Proc. § 1904. What is a just and fair compensation for the pecuniary injury in a given case can be determined by no rule, because each case presents a different state of facts, either in the character, capacity, and condition of the deceased, or in the age, sex, circumstances, and condition of the next of kin, and all those elements are to be considered as a basis for the allowance of damages. Lockwood v. Railroad Co., 98 N. Y. 526. Appellate courts usually hesitate about interfering with verdicts of juries, and failure to interfere is doubtless many times the product of such hesitation. In this class of cases, as we have already seen, the elements furnished to the jurors enable them to do no more than make an estimate of the damages; and such estimates are problematical, at best. It was the design of the legislature, in the enactment of this law, to furnish a remedy unknown to the common or civil law. The theory of the statute is that the next of kin have a pecuniary interest in the life of the person killed, and the value of that interest is the amount of the pecuniary injury for which the statute provides compensation. It treats human life in a pecuniary aspect, and permits compensation for the same at its