72 S.E. 1059 | N.C. | 1911
The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court by MR. JUSTICE WALKER. This action was brought to recover damages for a trespass on land. The plaintiffs, husband and wife, alleged that the servants of the defendant entered upon the land of John May, where they were living, for the purpose of removing telegraph poles, and while so engaged in their employer's business, unlawfully and wrongfully violated the rights of the plaintiffs, as occupants of the land, by entering their home, and accompanied their act of trespass by menaces of violence and the use of profane and vulgar words, and by other conduct and acts, which were unprovoked and nothing less than inexcusable, if not (418) wanton. The defendants justify upon the ground that they had the right to enter in order to remove certain telegraph poles within the right of way of the North Carolina Railroad Company, or its lessee, the Southern Railway Company, and that John May, the owner of the land, licensed them to enter, and that if they did not enter lawfully by his permission, they had the lawful right to enter and remove the poles by reason of the permission of the railway company to the telegraph company to do so, the locus in quo being within the right of way of the railway company. *329
We will assume, for the sake of the discussion, that the defendant, by its servants, entered lawfully upon the land; and yet this did not excuse them for what was done after their entry was made. The servants of the defendant were about their master's business when they committed the act of trespass, and they apparently did it for the purpose of advancing his interests, while doing the work assigned to them by him, in the prosecution of that work and within the scope of their authority.
There were many exceptions taken to matters of evidence, and others were addressed to collateral questions, and all of them subsidiary to the main point.
1. Was the defendant, by its servants, guilty of a trespass upon the plaintiff's premises?
2. If so, were the plaintiffs entitled to recover punitive damages, in addition to those which are compensatory?
The defendant's lawful right of entry upon the land did not authorize it, or its servants, to do so in a violent and insulting manner, regardless of the rights of others. We do not think that we venture anything in asserting this to be a general statement of the law. There was evidence in the case to the following effect: That the servants of the defendant, during the day in question and while on the premises of John May engaged in the work already described, indulged in loud, profane, and boisterous language and sang lewd and vulgar songs, to the terror of thefeme plaintiff and others; that they yelled at the feme plaintiff and others in the house; that they invaded the house and at one time (419) seized a guitar which was there and played on it and sang ribald songs; that Stern, defendant's principal foreman in charge of said crews, went to the well near by and, facing the open door of the feme plaintiff's bedroom, yelled at her and sang lewd and vulgar songs in her immediate presence and hearing; and the noise and tumult, the profanity and vulgar songs of defendant's servants throughout the day, and while engaged in moving the poles in question, were so great, loud, and boisterous as to be heard by many people in the neighborhood; that in the morning, standing on the railroad tracks, John L. May, one of the plaintiffs, told Stern and May, the two foremen of defendant in charge of said crews, of the bad and precarious health of his wife and that she was in the house, and asked them not to go upon the property of his father; that Stern replied that he had orders from the defendant to set the poles on John May's land, and that he would set them there regardless of witness's or any other man's wife, and that he did not "give a damn." There was further evidence as to the injury suffered by thefeme plaintiff, resulting in a state of unconsciousness, followed by great suffering and permanently impaired health, and as to the damage suffered by the male plaintiff in consequence of the defendant's wrong. *330
The defendants entered, at first, lawfully, but afterwards abused their right of entry, while in the prosecution of their work, by acts and conduct which were plainly in violation of the rights of the plaintiffs, who were then in the lawful and peaceable possession of the premises. Conduct more reprehensible, under the circumstances, could not well be imagined. Thefeme plaintiff was in a delicate condition, and in consequence of the violent and insulting manner in which the defendants invaded her home and even her private apartments, her health was greatly impaired. Defendant answers that its servants did not know of her physical condition; but this is no excuse. Their tortious acts were the immediate, natural, and proximate cause of her injuries. So far as the liability of the defendant, for this wrong, is concerned, it is not necessary that it should have contemplated the particular injury which the wrongful act produced, but it is liable if the wrong was of such a character as to be injurious in its natural and proximate consequences.
It can make no difference, in the view of the law, whether it (420) hurts one part or another of the person who is injured. The law will not excuse a defendant if, in committing the wrongful act, he aimed at the foot to wound and killed by striking the head or the heart. His wrong is the same in law, and is actionable, though he may have missed his mark. He is, in such a case, presumed to have intended the natural and probable consequences of his act. Drum v. Miller,
But it seems to us that this case, in all of its essential features, is like that of Jackson v. Telegraph Co.,
We held in Kimberly v. Howland,
The Howland case also answers another position of the defendant, that the husband of the feme plaintiff cannot recover for the wrong done to his wife, and in these words: "It is contended that the husband (423) has sustained no injury, and as to him the motion to nonsuit should have been allowed. It seems to be well settled that where the injury to the wife is such that the husband receives a separate loss or damage, as where he is put to expense or is deprived of the society or services of his wife, he is entitled to recover therefor, and he may sue in his own name. 15 Am. and Eng. Enc. Law (2 Ed.), 861, and cases cited. In this case there is no evidence of an outlay of money in medical bills and other actual expenses, and the court so charged the jury and directed them to allow nothing on that account. His Honor correctly instructed the jury to allow nothing because of any mental *333 suffering upon the part of the husband. There was, however, evidence as to the loss of the services of the wife, and that the injury inflicted was of such a character as to deprive the husband of her society, services, aid, and comfort. The court further charged that if the injuries are permanent, the husband could also recover such sum as will be a fair compensation for the future diminished capacity to labor on the part of the wife. This instruction, we think, is correct and supported by authority. 6 Thompson's Negligence, secs. 7341, 7342. It is impossible to lay down a rule by which the value of her services and the loss of the wife's society can be exactly measured in dollars and cents. All the judge can do is to direct the jury to allow such reasonable sum as will fairly compensate the husband therefor under all the circumstances of the case." It may be added that, in this case, the defendant's servants trespassed upon the husband's property — his home. He had possession, and they entered after being forbidden to do so.
As to punitive damages, the rule is well settled that when the wrong is willful or wanton or done maliciously, or accompanied by acts of oppression, insult, or brutality, exemplary damages may be added by the jury to punish the offender, as an example to others and to vindicate justice. Hale on Damages, p. 209. The subject is fully considered in the recent case of Saunders v. Gilbert,
We have considered the case as if the defendant's right to enter upon the land as part of the right of way of the North Carolina Railroad Company, by its permission, was clear, though the concession was made only for the sake of argument. It had no right, by itself or its servants, to abuse the license or privilege by grossly violating the rights of others in peaceable possession of the land; and especially, it may be said, the defendant, by its servants, did not have the lawful right to enter the home of plaintiffs in the manner adopted by them. Their entry upon the premises had been forbidden and was opposed, though not forcibly, by the owner and occupants of the land. The acts complained of were committed in an effort to overcome this opposition, by overawing the plaintiffs, in order that defendant's servants might proceed unmolested in the prosecution of their master's business.
The other exceptions require no special consideration.
No error.
Cited: Arthur v. Henry, post, 440; Bucken v. R. R., post, 447; Flemingv. Knitting Mills,