83 Ky. 129 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1885
DELIVERED THE OPINION OE THE COURT.
This is an action by appellee, personal representative, to recover damages for the destruction of the life of Charles Brooks, by the alleged willful neglect of appellant’s agents and servants; and judgment having, in accordance with the verdict of the jury, been rendered for $10,000, a reversal is asked upon-three grounds:
1st. That the verdict is not sustained by the evidence, and is contrary to law.
2d. The damages awarded by the jury are excessive, appearing to have been given under the influence of passion or prejudice.
3d. Tke court erred in giving the instruction asked for by appellee.
The train was stopped on the main track near the ■depot, and the engine, attached to some of the cars, was moved to the side-track, leading to the depot, for the purpose of leaving a car and taking another, •and also to obtain a supply of sand, the other portion of the train having been cut off and left on the main track. But after reaching the side-track the .engineer discovered that it was impossible for the -engine to push the number of cars he had attached, •on the wet rails, up the ascending grade, and was, ■consequently, compelled to return to the main track .and leave some of them. After the necessary transfer of cars was made and sand obtained from the ■depot, the train was again united, and left for Louis■ville; and some time afterwards Brooks was discovered lying near the main track, dead.
It was a dark, rainy night, and no witness saw the ■deceased killed; nor did those connected -with the train know it until informed by a telegram sent to the conductor, at • a station some distance from Lebanon. Whether his life was lost by the alleged willful neglect must, therefore, from necessity, be -determined by the attendant facts and circumstances proved. And it seems to us evident, that if it was so destroyed, it must have occurred while he was in the discharge of his duty as brakeman, coupling or .attempting to couple the two parts of the train,
It is placed beyond question that he was run over by the train. A broken lantern, evidently used by him, was found near the track; sixty feet or more-south of it was his body, which had been dragged across thirty-two cross-ties; and between the two, but nearest the lantern, was his hat.
At the place where the trail of his body on the cross-ties began was blood, and two witnesses saw indentations there, just inside the north rail — one,, as if made by a boot-heel wrenched in the ground,, and the other, an impression of a person’s knee.. And this was about where the train was first cut,, and where it was the duty of the deceased, as rear brakeman, to be, in order to couple the cars, if necessary for any one to do so. There is, however, evidence tending to show that the coupling-pin was. fixed in such way, by the conductor, as to drop into its place, coupling the cars, when they came-together, without human aid. And from that fact-the inference is attempted to be drawn, that there-being no necessity for the deceased to be there, he. was not between the cars for the purpose of coupling, but was there by his own ’negligence or for some different purpose. But the train was cut in two places on the main track, and it does not
In our opinion it can 'be reasonably inferred that the deceased was, at the time, not only at the place for the purpose of performing his hazardous duty of coupling the front to rear portion of the train, but was on the track between the two cars to be coupled, actually so engaged; and, as he had his lantern with him, the conductor, as well as the engineer, might have ascertained before backing the train, as it was their duty to do, whether he was at the place in the discharge of that duty or not.
From' the evidence, it appears that the engineer was, on that occasion, in. an ill-humor; that there was such unusual noise and confusion - while the train was there, as to awaken persons in the neighborhood of the depot and cause comment; one witness, experienced in operating trains, testifying that it was reckless switching; another, that he never before heard such jamming and banging of cars; .-and a third, that there was a great crash of cars coming together, two or three minutes before the train left. There is, however, evidence tending to show that it was impossible for the part of the train to which the engine was attached to strike the rear part -with such force as to knock it sixty feet, without breaking the cars. Nevertheless, it is ,-an undisputed fact that twelve or more loaded cars were either knocked or pushed back on wet rails, dp .an ascending grade, that distance or more; and
As the case is presented, the verdict is not, in our •opinion, so palpably against the weight of evidence ;as to authorize a reversal on that account.
But it- is contended for appellant, that, as the life of the deceased was destroyed by the negligence of ■the engineer of the train, if any one, no recovery ■can be had in this action; because, being employés in the same service, and neither being superior or ¡subordinate to the other in its performance, they must be regarded as, at the time, substantially •agents of ' each other; and, consequently, appellant, the common employer, can not be made legally •answerable for the death of one by the negligence ■of the other.
Waiving inquiry as to how far, if at all, the conductor, who had control of the train, is responsible, we will consider the question as raised by counsel.
Unquestionably,- when a person is employed in the service of another, he undertakes to risk- all the • -ordinary perils incident thereto; and, as between a number of persons employed in the same service, “there is an implied undertaking to risk all the .contingencies which the ordinary skill or care of «each other, in his line of service, could not avert. But this implied undertaking between the company .and its employes in the same class of service does-not exonerate the company from liability for dam••age resulting to one of such agents from extraordinary or gross negligence of another.” (L. &
The question before the court, in the case of L. C. & L. Railroad Co. v. Cavens’ Adm’r, 9 Bush, 559, referred to by counsel, was as to the liability of the company for the destruction of the life of an engineer on one of its trains, by a collision, occurring through .the negligence of the conductor of another train; and the precise question presented in this did not arise in that case. But we do not perceive any inconsistency between the rule by which that case-was decided and the one adopted and applied in the-previous cases referred to. In the Cavens case is. this language: “Is it not more reasonable to make-the company, whose duty it is to employ' careful and skilled agents for the conduct of its business, and when it alone controls such agents, liable for such neglect of duty, than to adjudge that a mere subordinate, who has no means of knowing the qualification of the agent for such position, or voice in his selection as such, and without means or power to resist or control his action, is without remedy, except as against the party committing the negligent act V ’
That question is pertinent in this case, and can, according to the uniform ruling by this court, be-answered but one way.
2d. No limit to the amount of damages which may be recovered in cases of this kind is definitely fixed by law; nor, under the Civil Code, can the-court trying the case grant a new trial, nor this-court reverse, upon the ground of excessive damages, unless it appear they were given by the jury under the influence of passion or prejudice; and. there being no evidence the jury were so influenced in this case, except the large amount of' damages-awarded, the single inquiry is, whether that fact alone authorizes us to disturb the verdict.
Doubtless it might be reasonably inferred, when the damages are palpably excessive, extravagant and unusual, that the jury was influenced in awarding them by passion or prejudice; and, in such case, it would be the duty of the court to interpose. But having considered and compared with this the cases heretofore considered by this court, involving the same question, we can not say the verdict in this-case is relatively excessive or extraordinary; and,,
3d. The instruction of which appellant complains is as follows: “The court instructs the jury, that if they believe, from the evidence, that the life of ■Chas. Brooks was lost or destroyed by the willful neglect of defendant’s servants or agents, engaged in running or managing the train, they should find for the plaintiff such punitive damages as they think proper, not exceeding the amount claimed in the petition.”
The objection made .to this instruction is, that the •court, upon the hypothesis stated, instead of leaving to the discretion of the jury tp find or not to find for the plaintiff punitive damages, peremptorily instructed them to so find, allowing discretion only as to the amount.
Whether this instruction is liable to the objection made, depends upon the meaning intended by the Legislature to be given to section 3, chapter 57, General Statutes, already quoted.
It is, however, contended for appellee that the ■ section is mandatory, and in unambiguous terms ■requires the court to instruct the jury to give punitive damages in every case of loss or destruction of life by willful negligence, without regard to the conduct of the deceased, the relation of the parties,- or the circumstances under which it may occur. Of •course, if this be so, there is nothing left for court • or jury but to obey the law as it is written.
The right to sue for punitive damages, in such cases, is not inevitably followed by a recovery.
The first, the Legislature has the power to give, ■exists alone in virtue of the statute, and, clearly, ■can not be called in question. But a recovery, to a .great extent, and the amount of recovery altogether, ■depends upon the merits of each case, as passed upon .and determined by the jury, and can not be constitutionally controlled by legislative will. And, as a •consequence, while such an instruction as the one in ■question is calculated to unduly and unfairly influ■ence the jury to increase the damages beyond what they would give if left a discretion, and required to .act on their own responsibility, they still may not, being under no compulsion to do so, find more than mere nominal punitive damages, even if the construction of the section contended for be adopted.
It is, therefore, at least a reasonable inference that the Legislature intended simply to give the right to ¡sue for punitive damages, which it had the power to do, leaving the assessment, which is practically beyond legislative control, to be made according to the familiar common law rule adopted and applied in actions for personal injuries by the courts of this State since its organization, which requires the court to instruct the jury to give compensatory damages, .and, also, in their discretion, punitive damages, where the injury is the result of willful negligence, malice or oppression.
In that case the court said: “It is contended that the term punitive damages excludes the idea of damages for compensation; and, consequently, if any recovery can be had under the act, it must be for punitive damages alohe, and nothing can be allowed, for compensation. This, however, is a mistaken view of the meaning of the statute in authorizing the recovery of punitive damages against the offending party. The damages are allowed as compensation for the loss sustained, but the jury are permitted to give exemplary damages on account of the nature of the injury.”
By an act approved January 12, 1866, which is similar to section 6, chapter 1, General Statutes, it is provided that the widow and minor child, or either, of a person killed by the careless, wanton or malicious use of fire-arms, or other deadly weapon, not in self-defense, may have an action. against the person who committed the killing for reparation of the injury; and in such action the jury may give vindictive damages.
By section 1, chapter 31, Revised Statutes, identical with section 1, chapter 32, General Statutes, it is provided that the widow and minor child of a person killed in a duel, or either of them, may have an. action against the surviving principal, the seconds,.
The General Statutes is intended to be a harmonious system of laws, operating justly and equally; .and it is the duty of the courts to give such construction to the different parts of the system as will effectuate that object, when it can be done without •doing violence to the language used and defeating the manifest intention of the Legislature, which may, and in our opinion ought to be done in this • case.
But if the construction ajipellee’s counsel contends for be proper, we have a system so incongruous and .anomalous, that while in an action for the destruction of life willfully, as is always the case in a duel, or even maliciously, as provided against in section 6, chapter 1, punitive or exemplary damages may or may not, in the discretion of the jury, be .given. In actions like this, where death results from willful neglect, which is merely quasi criminal, the court is required to arbitrarily instruct and the jury to find punitive damages, though the servant or .agent, who is not sued, be guilty, and the employer, .against whom the damages are assessed, be entirely without fault.
Such a construction, in our opinion, was not intended by the Legislature, nor is it required by the language used.
It is obvious how the amount of damages might
It is sufficient that the verdict of the jury has; been rendered under an instruction that should not have been given, and which was calculated to prejudice the rights of appellant.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed, and cause' remanded for further proceedings consistent with, this opinion.