173 Mo. 75 | Mo. | 1903
This is an action for damages for personal injuries sustained by the plaintiff, while a passenger on one of the defendant’s cars, near Ramona Park, in St. Louis county, on September 7, 1900, in consequence of a collision between the car upon which plaintiff was riding as such passenger, and .the Kinloch Palace Oar, on which the president of the defendant was riding. The negligence charged in the petition is that the defendant ‘‘ did, by the servants in charge of said car and its servants in charge of another of the cars, so carelessly manage and control said cars as to cause and suffer the same to collide. ’ ’ The answer is a general denial.
The evidence shows that the plaintiff and his wife boarded one of defendant’s cars at Kinloch Park, in St. Louis county, on the evening of September 7, 1900, to be transported to the city of St. Louis; that he paid the fare for both; that his wife was seated, but owing to the crowded condition of the car the plaintiff was compelled to stand, vNich he did at about the fifth seat from the front of the car; that the ear proceeded towards the eity and when it got near Ramona Park, and while it was running at a very rapid rate, varying, according to the witnesses, from twenty to thirty-five miles an hour, it collided with the president’s private car, the Kinloch, in consequence of the two cars running in opposite directions on the same track at the same time. The collision occurred on a curve in the track, by which, and the underbrush and small trees that were growing near the track, the view of the motormen on the two cars was obstructed, so that neither saw the other in time to stop
I.
Prima Pacie Case:
The defendant contends that the plaintiff failed to make out a prima facie case and that the court erred in not ordering a nonsuit. The contention in this regard is, that instead of pleading general negligence of the carrier, under which a prima facie case would be made out by simply establishing the relation of a carrier and passenger and the collision, the plaintiff predicated a right to recover upon the negligence of the defendant’s servants in charge of the two cars, and then wholly failed to show that these servants were guilty of any negligence whatever, and the defendant claims that the exact point was decided in Feary v. Railroad, 162 Mo. 75.
The rule of law is correctly stated in that case to be that if, instead of pleading generally the relation of car-rier and passenger and the injury, and thus making out a prima facie case, the plaintiff limits his right to re- • cover to a specific act of negligence, he must prove such specific negligence, and is not entitled to- the- benefit of the general rule.
The rule thus laid down is 'undoubtedly correct, but it does not have the effect claimed for it upon this case. In the Feary case the plaintiff limited tbe negligence to the act of the motorman allowing the lever to slip out of his hands, thereby causing the car to run down the in
But the case at bar is by no means similar or analogous. The petition in this case charges that the collision occurred in consequence of the negligence of the, defendant’s servants in charge of the cars. In a restricted sense that might mean only the motorman and conductor, because they are the only servants on the car. But in a more comprehensive sense it might mean any servant of the defendant who was in any way directly charged with the running of the cars'. And as was held in Rinard v. Railroad, 164 Mo. l. c. 287-8, a train dispatcher is directly charged with the running of the car, although he may not be on the car or near the place of accident; and his negligence in allowing two trains to run in opposite directions, on the same track, at the same time, was the negligence of the company, and was as much the direct cause of the collision as would be the negligence of the engineers on the two trains. Here no particular servant is specified. It is true it is limited to the servants in charge of the cars. But a collision could not be caused by a servant who was not connected with the running of the cars. A servant otherwise engaged might cause an accident, as by negligently throwing a switch or removing or leaving an obstruction upon a rail, but no servant could cause a collision unless he was in some manner connected with the actual management of the movements of the cars.
Certain it is that the collision was caused by the negligence of some one or more of the defendant’s servants who were in charge of the cars, in one capacity or another, and directly connected with their movements. It follows that the petition is as broad as is necessary to support a recovery in this case, and that as it was not incumbent upon the plaintiff to charge the specific negligence of any particular servant, so it was not necessary for the plaintiff to show which servant so in charge •of the cars was negligent, for the defendant was liable for the negligence of all such servants.
II.
Damages.
The defendant strenuously insists that the damages assessed are excessive, and cites many cases wherein
The injuries, as shown by the plaintiff’s evidence, are that his testicles were injured so that one of them would drop down from four to six inches; and he is compelled to wear a suspensory to keep them up; the abdominal wall was ruptured, causing his intestines to come out and drop into the scrotum, and in consequence he is compelled to wear a truss; his hip joint is injured, so that he is lame and suffers pain; his kidneys and bladder were injured, so that he could not pass his urine for twenty-four hours, and there was blood in the urine; and one of the most distinguished physicians in St. Louis testified that he examined him a month before the trial and that there was “very evidently injury to the spinal cord, and that it would probably be progressive and end in locomotor ataxia.”
The defendant expresses doubt as to the truth of the evidence of the plaintiff’s witnesses in this regard,, and points to the fact that the plaintiff himself testified that he was only confined to his bed for fifteen days; that four weeks after he was able to leave his bed he 'went to work in the city fire department as a day watchman, and in a short time he resumed his former position as a fireman in the fire department, which he says is a position that required great agility and physical strength.
The defendant also produced a most distinguished surgeon in St. Louis, who testified that he examined the plaintiff a few moments before taking the witness stand, and found that he had varicocele, that is, one testicle hangs lower than the other, but that ten per cent of the entire male population are afflicted in the same way; that nobody knows what causes it, but it is frequently or generally congenital; that the plaintiff was wearing a truss, but there was no occasion for him to do so; that he
The result of the matter is this: the defendant’s-contention that the plaintiff could not do the work of a fireman if he had suffered an injury to the spinal cord is disproved by the testimony of its own medical expert; the positive, direct and unequivocal testimony of the plaintiff’s attending physician as to the nature and extent of his injuries when he attended him for Several weeks after the injury, is contradicted by the equally positive, direct and unequivocal testimony of the defendant’s medical expert, who examined him during the course of the trial; and the testimony of the plaintiff ’& eminent surgeon (who examined the plaintiff a month before the trial) as to- the evident injury to the spinal cord and its probably disastrous consequences, is contradicted by the defendant’s eminent surgeon, who says there is nothing the matter with his spine except that he has a porous plaster on it.
Manifestly they can not all be right in their diagnosis. That all of these distinguished and justly eminent physicians and surgeons are perfectly honest and sincere in what they say, there is absolutely no room to doubt. But it only serves to demonstrate that no human
As such eminent specialists differ so widely as to the injuries complained of, and as to their probable duration and permanency, it could not reasonably be expected that an appellate court could or would attempt to say which is right. The law commits the solution •of such problems to the jury, subject, of course, to review and correction by the courts in cases of manifest and flagrant abuse of privileges, discretion and duty on the part of the jury, which, however, is clearly not present in this case.
Of course there can never be any exact rule laid down by the courts for measuring damages for personal injuries. Accident insurance companies have a graduated scale of compensation for personal injuries, but that must necessarily be purely an arbitrary rule. Primarily the law leaves the question to the honesty and common sense of the jury. But because experience has shown that all juries do not assess the same amount for the same kind of injuries, the courts have been compelled to interfere occasionally. The criterion adopted, in appellate courts, is that the amount awarded shocks the judicial sense of right and justice. And even this is not an exact rule, for what might shock one judge, might seem wholly inadequate compensation to another judge. This, however, is the result of human infirmity, and the fact that only finite minds are available to solve these problems of nature and administer human justice.
The amount assessed in this case is large. But if the plaintiff’s injuries are of the character, nature and probable duration that his witnesses state, that amount is not at all shocking to the judicial sense of right and justice. In fact it is not more than a proper compensation for the impairment of his manhood, his health and
III.
The point that the amendment to the Constitution allowing nine jurors to return a verdict was never legally adopted and therefore is not the law, and that the court erred in instructing the jury that nine of the jurors could return a verdict, was settled by the decision of this court in Gabbert v. Railroad, 171 Mo. 84.
These conclusions make it unnecessary to refer to other minor points urged by the defendant, as they depend upon and are covered by the principles here announced.
The judgment of the circuit .court is affirmed.