40 Ind. App. 428 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1907
Lead Opinion
The appellee sued appellant to recover damages alleged to have been sustained from injuries resulting to her from the effects of taking a poisonous drug alleged to have been negligently sold by the appellant as and for a harmless remedy. (general denial was filed to the complaint; a trial by jury, resulting in a-general verdict in favor of appellee, assessing her damages at $2,000, and with the general verdict the jury returned answers to interrogatories. The only error complained of was the action of the court below in overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial. The grounds of the motion urged in this court are: (1) Insufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict; (2) admitting in evidence certain testimony of witness Thomas Barnett; (3) giving, by the court, of instructions one, two, six, and seven, asked for by appellee; (4) the damages assessed are excessive.
' The complaint avers that the defendant was at the time of the transaction complained of the proprietor of a drug store in the city of New Albany, engaged in the sale of drugs at retail; that plaintiff’s mother, Dorcas Scott, directed Henry Wolfe to purchase for her a quantity of phosphate of soda; that phosphate of soda is a medicinal compound, harmless and beneficial in its effect when taken as a medicine, and which could be safely administered without medical advice in quantities as large as two teaspoonfuls at a single dose; that said Wolfe, pursuant to the request and direction so given him, went to the drug store of the defendant and-ordered ten
It is further averred that said Edward Mayes was negligent in the sale of said acetanilid to said Wolfe, in that he negligently and hastily picked up the receptacle in which said poisonous acetanilid was contained, and, without looking at the label or outside of said receptacle to ascertain what substance was in it, poured the entire contents of said receptacle into a paper upon the scales; that he negligently failed to look at said substance when weighing the same, to see whether it was or was not phosphate of soda, whereas, if he had examined said drug while he was weighing it he could have discovered that it was not phosphate of soda, but acetanilid; that he negligently wrapped up and delivered said acetanilid to said Wolfe without placing a mark or label thereon to indicate that the same was acetanilid; that the plaintiff, while at the home of her mother, and as a member of her family for the time being, desiring to take a purgative medicine, at the direction of her mother took two teaspoonfuls of said drug, believing it to be phosphate of soda, and that as a consequence she became very sick, was disabled for a long while, and suffered injury.
Two questions arise in considering the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict: (1) Did the appellant make a mistake, and sell and deliver to the witness Wolfe, the agent of Dorcas Scott, acetanilid for phosphate of soda, and did the appellee take the drug thus sold by appellant, and sustain injury thereby? (2) Was the appellant guilty of negligence in making the mistake? *
If the appellee or any of her witnesses had been asked regarding the contents of the basket, and she or they had refused to answer, or had answered evasively, the jury might well have assumed that there were other packages in the basket besides the one from which appellee took the dose, and that one of these contained phosphate of soda. The entire examination of the witnesses seems to have proceeded upon the assumption on the part of both parties that the package from which appellee took the dose was the identical package delivered by Wolfe to Ida Scott. In this state of the evidence there is no presumption, either one way or the other, as to other packages being in the basket, a&d the court cannot say that the circumstances proved did not justify the finding of the jury that the package from which appellee took the poisonous dose was the same package sold and delivered by appellant’s clerk to Wolfe. Was the appellant guilty of negligence in making the mistake? In the consideration of this question we can well consider also the complaint urged by appellant against the seventh instruction asked by the appellee and given by the court to the jury, to
Prom the consideration of all the cases on. the subject this general rule may be adduced: Where an accident happens resulting in the injury to a person or his property, and it is made to appear that all the instrumentalities causing the accident are under the exclusive control and management of the defendant, and the accident is such as ordinarily would not occur if due care was exercised by those who
This view is not inconsistent with the decision of the supreme court of Michigan in the ease of Brown v. Marshall (1882), 47 Mich. 576. In that case a mandatory instruction was given that entirely left out of consideration any explanation the druggist might give of the accident, consistent with the exercise of due care on his part. We do not hold that the druggist may not show that the mistake made by him was excusable, and that the circumstances were such that he could not be charged with a lack of due care. What we do hold is that the burden rests upon the druggist to explain his own mistake.
There are no- circumstances in this ease that will take it . out of the operation of the rule. Here no instruction withdrew from the consideration of the jury any evidence offered
Cause reversed, with instruction to the court below to grant a new trial.
Watson, P. J., not participating.
Dissenting Opinion
Dissenting Opinion.
I do not agree to the reversal of this judgment. The instruction which is held to be erroneous is in terms as follows: “If you find for the plaintiff, it will be your duty to assess the damages which, in your judgment, she ought to recover. The damages cannot exceed the sum of $15,000 demanded in the complaint. In fixing the amount of dam
If the statement that the question is “beyond controversy” is to be taken as meaning that the Supreme Court will not consider it, that the conclusion announced “is so whether it is so or not,” then it might as well be accepted without comment; but I choose to believe, for- the present, that the positiveness of the assertion is due to lack of information upon the subject, and that, being inadvertently made, it will not operate to prevent the application of correct legal principles to the facts presented. City of Delphi v. Lowery,
A review of these cases is interesting. Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Becker, supra, was a case in which a parent sought to recover damages on account of the death of his infant son, an instruction, by which the jury were directed to “assess such damages as they believe to be right,”-was held to be erroneous in permitting a recovery on account of the mental anguish of the parent. In Steel v. Kurtz, supra, the action was for damages on account of the death of a married woman, who left a husband, brothers, and sisters. The court treated the brothers and sisters as the “next of kin” for whose benefit the action was brought, and instructed that, no damages to them having been shown, the verdict should be for nominal damages only. The husband was ignored, and the court on appeal declared him to be the next of kin and reversed the judgment. Blake v. Midland R. Co., supra, decided by Lord Coleridge, “turns entirely upon the construction of the recent statute. 9 and 10 Vict.,
It thus appears that the doctrine said to be “beyond controversy” originated in a dictum, and is not supported by a single case ever cited to it by either the Supreme or Appellate Court. This condition leads to a search for some established legal principle upon which it can rest, and to this search nothing which has been written upon the subject offers any assistance. “The fact that a charge may be too general cannot be assigned for error unless the complaining party makes request for more specific instructions.” Hughes, Instructions to Juries, §7. See, also, 11 Ency. Pl. and Pr., 217, and note 5, citing seventy Indiana cases. ‘1 Evidence competent only for some specific purpose should be limited to that particular purpose by proper instructions, and a refusal so to instruct is error.” Hughes, Instructions to Juries, §109. “An instruction for one party containing terms or expressions which perhaps ought to be explained, cannot be complained of as error if the party complaining fails to request instructions explaining such terms or expressions.” Hughes, Instructions to Juries, §6. And see Treschman v. Treschman (1902), 28 Ind. App. 206; Baltimore, etc., R. Co. v. Conoyer (1898), 149 Ind. 524; Summit Coal Co. v. Shaw (1896), 16 Ind. App. 9; Hughes v. Parker (1897), 148 Ind. 692. In the somewhat noted criminal case of Hinshaw v. State (1897), 147 Ind. 334, 381, the rule was stated, in connection with facts analogous in principle to those here involved, as follows: “But they say the instruc
Lawsuits frequently involve more than one issue of fact. In the case at bar, one' matter to be determined was whether the defendant was liable, involving various matters of fact, and another was the amount of recovery, if any. Evidence relevant to any one part of the ease was admissible, and it was the duty of the jurors to find all facts from the evidence. They were told to determine the amount of plaintiff’s recovery, if any, from a consideration of all the evidence. There may have been cases in which judgments have heretofore been reversed because of a direction to the jury to find from the evidence and from all the evidence, but I have not been able to discover them. Instructions have been frequently questioned upon the ground that the jury were not restricted by.them to assessment of damages from the evidence. The case of Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Thrasher (1905), 35 Ind. App. 58, was reversed upon this ground, and is to some extent in harmony with Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Becker, supra, but was subsequently overruled. Indianapolis, etc., Traction Co. v. Henderson (1906), 39 Ind. App. 324. Such instructions are approved upon the ground that “it will not be presumed that a jury will find anything except from the evidence, or that they will even consider any
The complaint is required to contain “a statement of the facts constituting the cause of action, in plain and concise language, without repetition, and in such manner as to enable a person of common understanding to know what is intended. ” §341 Burns 1901, §338 R. S. 1881. An instruction in plain and concise language, enabling a person of common understanding to know what is intended, meets the reason of the law. “Jurors are presumed to be men of conscience and intelligence, honestly striving to do impartial justice.” McDonel v. State (1883), 90 Ind. 320, 327. See, also, Kennedy v. State (1886), 107 Ind. 144, 150, 57 Am. Rep. 99; Boyle v. State (1886), 105 Ind. 469, 481, 55 Am. Rep. 218. The presumption is añ applicable one. To hold that in an instruction, the subject-matter of which is the measure of damages to be assessed, a direction to consider all the evidence requires the consideration of evidence not connected with such subject-matter, is to reverse the presumption.
In Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Falvey (1886), 104 Ind. 409, 429, an instruction, after enumerating certain elements of damage, concluded as follows: “And the amount assessed should be such a sum as, in your judgment, will fully compensate her for the injuries, or any of them, thus sustained.” Of this the court said: ‘ ‘ One of the objections urged to this instruction is, that it does not require the jury to assess the damages from the evidence in the case. There is no force in this objection.- No juror of average intelligence could fail to understand that the court directed him to be guided by the evidence.” "What evidence? The evidence relevant to the subject of damages, of course. In the case of City of Indianapolis v. Scott (1880), 72 Ind. 196, 203, where the same objection was made to a similar instruction, the Supreme
I hereby dissent.