103 Wash. 521 | Wash. | 1918
Lead Opinion
— In November, 1913, an infant child was born to Mr. and Mrs. Kneass. Three days later the child died. Its body was sent to the Cremation Society of Washington to be cremated. At that time Mr. Kneass was informed that the charges for the cremation, with an urn or permanent receptacle for the ashes, would be $12. He was also informed that the ashes of the infant would be safely cared for until called for. Mr. Kneass paid the cremation society $12 for the cremation of the body, and three years later called for the ashes of the infant, which could not be found. Thereafter another call was made for the ashes and a further effort failed to find them. Later, and
“That, because and by reason of their love and affection for said child, and its remains, and because and by reason of all the acts of negligence and carelessness of said defendant company in losing or destroying, or permitting to be lost or destroyed, or converting to their own use and benefit, the said urn and the said ashes of the said infant daughter, Elizabeth Kneass, so that plaintiffs have no knowledge of the last resting place of the remains or ashes of said deceased child, they have suffered great distress of mind, worry and mental agony, and their rest and peace of mind has been almost wholly broken up and destroyed, in so much that the physical health and welfare of plaintiffs has been seriously impaired and threatened; all to the damage of the plaintiffs in the sum of five thousand dollars ($5,000).”
For answer the defendant admitted receiving the body of the infant child at the time alleged; admitted that it received $12 for the cremation thereof and for an urn; admitted that the ashes had been lost, but denied any act of negligence. On these issues the case was tried to the court and a jury. The jury returned a verdict of $200 in favor of the plaintiffs on the first
Appellant argues at length- that the trial court should have sustained its objection to any evidence under the second cause of action, because respondents have undertaken by the complaint to split one cause of action into two causes. ■ It will not be necessary, we think, to consider this point, because if two causes of action are stated and we should conclude that both should be stated as one, the result would be the same.
The main point made by the appellant is that there can be no recovery of damages arising from mental anguish or distress of mind as a result of negligence when not accompanied by physical injury. The appellant relies upon the case of Corcoran v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 80 Wash. 570, 142 Pac. 29, L. R. A. 1915B 552, where we held, in substance, that there could be no recovery on account of the nondelivery of a telegram which resulted in mental anguish where no physical injury or pecuniary loss resulted. The respondent relies upon O’Meara v. Russell, 90 Wash. 557, 156 Pac. 550, L. R. A. 1916E 743, and Wright v. Beardsley, 46 Wash. 16, 89 Pac. 172. In Corcoran v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., supra, we took occasion to review at length the authorities of this and other courts upon the question here presented; and, after a painstaking consideration of many authorities and much of the law upon this question, we there concluded that the
“The plaintiffs were allowed damages for mental suffering unaccompanied by physical injury, flowing from the wrongful and improper burial of their infant child by the defendant. This decision we regard as the extreme proper application of the rules of law allowing damages for mental suffering alone, and we are constrained not to extend the doctrine beyond the application of the particular facts there involved. The acts were regarded by the court as wilful, and the wrong consisted in the violation of the rights of the parents to have decent interment for their infant child. It was also a physical invasion of the plaintiff’s rights. ’ ’
It will be seen that the rule in the Wright case was based upon a wilful wrong and the physical invasion of the plaintiff’s rights. To apply that case to this would be to extend the rule in that case. The case of O’Meara v. Bussell, supra, was written after the decision in the Corcoran case. In the O’Meara case, the facts were that an explosion caused a stump to be thrown through the air and against the home of Mrs. O’Meara while she was standing in the door and saw the stump coming towards her; that, through fear and effort to protect herself and escape the threatened danger, she suffered injury to her person and to her nervous system. That was a case where physical injuries resulted to the plaintiff at the time, and we, in effect, held that the injury caused by the fright and shock was not psychological but was physical, and for that reason sustained a recovery. We are of the opinion that the O’Meara case is plainly distinguish
“have suffered great distress of mind, worry and mental agony, and their rest and peace of mind has been almost' wholly broken up and destroyed in so much that the physical health and welfare of plaintiffs has been seriously impaired and threatened; . . . ’ ’
It is apparent from this allegation that, whatever physical injury has resulted to the health of the respondents, has been from mental worry and agony and not from physical injury. In the O’Meara case, the mental anguish was the result of physical injury at the time. The respondents claim in their brief that there was wilful disregard of the respondents’ rights, but the only evidence in the record of any wilful disregard of the respondents’ rights is the fact that, after the appellant had made two or three unsuccessful efforts to find the ashes of the infant child, it told the respondents it would have nothing further to do with the matter. The record conclusively shows that, at most, the appellant was negligent in not keeping these ashes where they could be found at any time. No other negligence is alleged or claimed; so that it is apparent, both from the evidence and from the allegations of the complaint, that there was no wilful or wanton conduct on the part of the crematorium society in losing the ashes. The evidence tends to show at least that the loss was caused by reason of the length of time the ashes were kept — three years after cremation, and no call for them within that time — and that probably the label was lost from the urn and, for that reason, the ashes could not be identified. We are of the opinion that the rule announced in Corcoran v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., supra, is the rule properly applicable
We are satisfied, therefore, that the trial court should have refused the evidence offered under this cause of action, and should have granted judgment notwithstanding the verdict thereon.
That part of the order appealed from is therefore reversed.
Main, C. J., and Holcomb, J., concur.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring) — I am forced to the conclusion that this court has heretofore adopted two irreconcilable positions in actions seeking to recover damages for injuries alleged to have resulted in mental suffering. The case of Wright v. Beardsley, 46 Wash. 16, 89 Pac. 172, allowed recovery for mental suffering arising from the wrongful and improper burial of the plaintiff’s child; Corcoran v. Postal Telegraph-Cable Co., 80 Wash. 570, 142 Pac. 29, L. R. A. 1915B 552, denied recovery for, mental suffering arising from the wrongful and improper handling of a telegram notifying the plaintiffs of the death of their child. The Corcoran case does not, in terms, overrule the Wright case, but in effect it does so, although the opinion, in referring to the Wright case, attempts a distinction on the ground that the act there complained of was a physical invasion of the plaintiff’s rights. In the case of O’Meara v. Russell, 90 Wash. 557, 156 Pac. 550, L. R. A. 1916E 743, a recovery was allowed for injuries resulting from fright, the court attempting to distinguish that case from the Corcoran case on the ground that fright was accompanied by physical injuries resulting therefrom, the complaint in that case having alleged that “the plaintiff did suffer great men
Science teaches — and our common experience confirms it — that every severe mental disturbance, whether it takes the form of fright, or anger, or sorrow, or nostalgia, or any other violent emotional expression, has a concomitant physical result, the manifestation of the physical accompaniment being governed by the condition of the subject and by the intellectual control which he has of himself. The greater the will power which a subject may possess, the less will be the physical effect of the mental disturbance. If these statements are true, there is no such thing as acute mental pain and suffering without some physical effect, in many cases not subject to ocular proof, but present in all cases and only differing in' degree; and it follows that every allegation of mental pain and suffering impliedly includes the physical effect which accompanies it.
The Corcoran and O’Meara cases are, therefore, in conflict, as a matter of fact, though the distinction is sought to be made upon the ground that, in the O’Meara case, there was an allegation of physical pain and suffering, while there was no such allegation in the Corcoran case. If this is a true ground for distinction, then the case at bar falls directly within the O’Meara case; for, in the case at bar, the allegations of the effect of the defendant’s acts are set forth in the complaint as quoted in Judge Mount’s opinion, and I am unable to distinguish them from the allegations in the O’Meara case. In both cases it was alleged that physical injuries had been inflicted by, and as a result
In my opinion, the O’Meara case should have fallen within the rule of the Corcoran case, for the reason that the physical result of mental pain and suffering cannot be separated from the mental pain and suffering itself, and that it always accompanies mental pain and suffering to some extent; and the case at bar being “on all fours” with the O’Meara case, is correctly decided when it repudiates the doctrine of that case and follows the Corcoran decision. I concur in this result, but feel that the opinion should expressly recognize that the doctrine announced in the O’Meara case is improper, and expressly overrule that case, as it has actually been overruled.
Chadwick, J., concurs.