35 S.E.2d 475 | W. Va. | 1945
This writ of error was granted to a judgment for $5,000 in favor of Theresa Monteleone against Co-Operative Transit Company by the Circuit Court of Ohio County in an action of trespass on the case brought to recover damages for a personal injury allegedly suffered by the plaintiff on the evening of September 23, 1942. As we view the assignments of error the controlling question is of first impression in this jurisdiction and is whether there can be a recovery for post traumatic psychoneurosis caused by nervous shock not caused by impact due to the failure of the defendant to exercise required care. Before that question is reached, however, it will be necessary to discuss the application of the doctrine of resipsa loquitur to the practically uncontroverted questions of fact disclosed by this record, the defendant contending that it has met the duty imposed by that doctrine, and the court having given plaintiff's Instruction No. 1 based thereon. *342
The defendant operates an electric street car line in and around the City of Wheeling. At the time of the accident the plaintiff, her husband and six sons and daughters lived in Warwood, a section of Wheeling on the Ohio River to the north. On the evening in question she, her daughter Josephine and her son Frank, aged seventeen, together with a neighbor, Mrs. Di Stefano, and her child, had gotten into Frank's 1928 Studebaker sedan and started south on Warwood Avenue on their way to a moving picture theatre. Frank was driving, Mrs. Monteleone sitting at his right with her daughter Josephine immediately behind her on the back seat, with Mrs. Di Stefano on the left rear seat just beyond her thirteen year old daughter Marie. They were driving at a speed estimated at twenty-five miles an hour. As they passed what seems to be a bend in Warwood Avenue at Seventh Street they noticed several hundred feet ahead of them what they described as a flash about the height of the trolley wire.
At this point the street car line on Warwood Avenue is double tracked in the middle of the street with overhead trolley wire above each track. Cars were parked on the right or west so that in following the south bound traffic lane Frank's Car "straddled" the west or right rail of the double track.
As they were passing Seventh Street Frank noticed a street car in the neighborhood of one hundred yards ahead of them while near Fifth Street, also going south. Immediately below Fourth Street a man wearing a white shirt came from between two parked cars on the right and attempted to flag them by waiving his arms. Frank thought that he was undertaking to "thumb a ride" and, having a full car, he swerved to the left in order to pass and having done so he pulled back into his former position. Immediately thereafter the Monteleone car struck a trolley wire that had fallen due to a break at the cross support connection immediately ahead. The wire struck the car between the right headlight and the right front fender and its occupants testify that they immediately *343 saw vivid flashes or flames. Frank threw on his foot-brake and opened the door to his left. Apparently this threw his mother forward but not with enough violence to injure her. Noticing that the car had not freed the wire Frank released the brake, closed the door and decided to pass the end of the wire before stopping. Apparently the end of the wire caught momentarily on the cross support of the headlight so that the pull at the wire's connection with the cross support immediately back of the car caused it to break almost simultaneously with the freeing of the end of the wire from the headlight. At any rate, as the car went forward the end of the wire was released from what had caught it, so that it struck and shattered the car's right front windshield, it being of plain glass. Mrs. Monteleone says that she was covered with glass splinters and that her face was slightly cut, the cut being about the size of a pimple. Frank pulled to the right, stopped at the curb and the occupants of the car got out and brushed off the splintered and powdered glass. The entire occurrence had taken but a few seconds.
The street car had stopped just below the point where Frank had pulled to the curb, and the motorman had taken a wooden implement made for the purpose and was fastening the live wire to a post at a height that would not endanger pedestrians nor motorists. He asked Frank whether anybody in his car had been injured and Frank told him no but that his car had been slightly damaged. Frank then went back to the automobile in which his mother and the others were then seated, they went to the moving picture show and returned home between ten and eleven o'clock.
On behalf of the defendant it was shown that the trolley wire had been inspected in June by an experienced workman traveling on a scaffold car constructed for that purpose and had been found in satisfactorily safe condition including the "splicer" where the break had occurred. On behalf of the plaintiff it was shown by two witnesses that the trolley wire had broken and *344 come to the ground at about the same place in the previous spring. The Company introduced by its inspector in charge its record of such matters and sought to prove thereby that no such break had occurred, the inspector stating positively that if so his records would certainly show it.
The Company's showing of care went into considerable detail and it contends now that it met the rule laid down by the maxim of res ipsa loquitur (the thing itself speaks). The Company also contends that in Instruction No. 3 given for the plaintiff the court erroneously told the jury that the defendant was charged with the highest degree of care.
There is a great deal of confusion in the decided cases touching the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur and there are two very well defined viewpoints. One is that the doctrine shifts the burden of proof and is not a rule of evidence but of substantive law; the other that it affects only the question of going forward with the evidence, and that if the defendant makes available to the court all of the information in its control touching the source of injury and places upon the stand the persons acting for it in charge of the instrumentality that caused the injury, then, if with its own evidence added, the plaintiff has been unable to prove a breach of duty his case fails. There is no doubt but that West Virginia has long been committed to the latter application of the doctrine. However, here we are of the opinion that the defendant's proof fell far short of establishing the exercise of proper care of an instrumentality with the known danger of electricity. The parting of the wire below Fifth Street was at the exact point that the wire had parted before and been mended. The trolley pole on the street car ahead of the automobile in which plaintiff was riding had thrown the trolley wire, and probably caught the next cross support, pulled it in the direction the car was moving, so that when released by the pole passing under, the "back lash" thereby caused resulted in the trolley wire breaking at a "splicer" where it had already been *345 mended, the splicer being a metal sleeve or tube large enough to almost encircle the trolley wire at each end of the sleeve and hold it firmly, evidently being provided with teeth that hold the trolley wire by being imbedded in the soft copper. Naturally the trolley wire became weakened to the extent that the teeth were imbedded, although that extent is not shown. The greatest number of wire drops occurred at these splicers. It is testified by two witnesses for plaintiff that the trolley wire had broken at approximately the same location in the previous spring, although the records of the company that its witnesses stated would have an entry for necessary repair work, did not so show. The defendant's overhead line maintenance superintendent at the time of the accident testified that when the trolley wire became worn to fifty per cent of its original size it was regarded as unsafe while one of its linemen who had examined the line in question shortly before September, 1943, stated that, "It wasn't quite hardly one-half worn down". We are doubtful under this state of the evidence that the trial court would have been justified in holding that as a matter of law the defendant had failed to meet the doctrine of res ipsaloquitur, and yet we are quite convinced that it would not have been justified in instructing the jury that defendant, as a matter of law, had shown proper care. We believe that the trial judge correctly submitted the question of negligence to the jury.
The principal question presented by the assignments of error is whether the plaintiff has been able to establish damages which were the proximate result of the accident caused by the defendant's lack of proper care. Undoubtedly all of the verdict of $5,000, with the possible exception of a negligible amount that may have been based upon what the plaintiff spoke of as a cut on her cheek about the size of a pimple caused by shattered glass from the windshield, was intended as compensation for a mental and emotional disturbance that she says she suffered due to the accident. *346
Mrs. Monteleone testified that beginning ten days or two weeks after the accident she suffered frequent attacks of violent headaches causing pain that felt like spikes had been driven into her skull and that she often thought the telephone rang or children called her when there was no happening of the sort. Members of her family state that she so impressed them. She underwent several medical examinations and the testimony of her physicians is that her symptoms were subjective entirely, and that they did not discover surgical or physical trouble of any sort.
Dr. Wanner, the psychiatrist who testified on behalf of the plaintiff, first saw her ten and one-half months after the accident. He said that in his opinion plaintiff had suffered a post-traumatic psychoneurosis. Asked whether that condition had been caused by the accident, he stated that the plaintiff is a high-strung, emotional woman whose medical history over the past ten or twelve years had been quite serious and that she had been subjected to one major and one minor operation. With that disposition and history Dr. Wanner stated that he believed that the accident had precipitated the causes of her condition at the time of trial, and that the fact that since the accident two of her sons had gone into the armed service of the United States was probably a contributing factor. Dr. Wanner did not consider the slight cut that plaintiff below had suffered in reaching his conclusion. Dr. Wingerter, a psychiatrist employed by the defendant to observe the plaintiff during the trial, testified that in his opinion based upon a lack of physical nervousness and the presence of mental composure and alertness exhibited by the plaintiff while under his observation, she was not psychoneurotic. With that conflict, the verdict for the purposes of this review resolve that question in favor of the plaintiff.
From the conflict of authority created by the decided cases in this country dealing with mental and emotional disturbances caused by the wrong of another, there appear to be but three fairly well settled principles allowing *347 recovery: First, those mental disturbances that accompany or follow an actual physical injury caused by impact upon the occurrence of the tort; second, where there is no impact and no physical injury at the time, but a physical injury afterwards results as the causal effect of a nervous shock which in turn was the proximate result of the defendant's wrong; and third, where there was no impact and no physical injury caused by the defendant's wrong, but an emotional or mental disturbance is shown to have been the result of the defendant's intentional or wanton wrongful act. In any of the foregoing classifications we believe that the plain weight of authority sustains a recovery. There are also a few cases sustaining recovery for mental and emotional injury alone caused by the defendant's simple negligence. We believe it would serve no useful purpose at this time to discuss in detail the rather embryonic theories of the decided cases other than to comment upon the fact that their major principles, conflicting as they now are, illustrate a phase of the perpetual evolution of the common law in its effort to keep abreast of development and progress. The following citations used as reference material we believe to be sufficient: 52 Am. Jur. 388, et seq; 23 A.L.R. 361; 44 A.L.R. 428; 56 A.L.R. 657; 98 A.L.R. 402; and other annotations referred to there.
Plaintiff below does not contend that she suffered a physical injury resulting after the accident from a nervous shock received at that time. Neither does she contend that the defendant's alleged negligence was wanton. The weight of the testimony is plainly to the contrary on both positions. She does contend that her case falls within the first category, that is, that she is suffering from a nervous and emotional shock received contemporaneously with a physical impact caused by the defendant's wrongful act and that the testimony shows that the shattered windshield made a cut upon her face about the size of a pimple. No doctor saw the cut.
We realize fully that there are a number of cases which sustain the theory that a wrongful impact, however *348
slight, is sufficient to sustain a recovery for mental pain and suffering however severe, leaving it to the jury to apply the principle of cause and effect under the facts shown, no matter how attenuated. Porter v. Delaware, L. W. R. Co.,
Massachusetts apparently adheres to what may be called the common law rule of some time ago to the effect that a bodily injury no matter how slight does support a recovery for mental injuries no matter how great, but that it is a necessary element. Justice Holmes, speaking for the Court inHomans v. Boston Elevated Railway,
In a case involving facts similar to those disclosed by this record, the Connecticut Supreme Court reversed a judgment favoring the defendant in Orlo v. Connecticut Company,
Although in West Virginia the question with all of its intricacies is one of first impression, this Court has by way of obiter indicated views upon which we think we should comment. In Davis v. Telegraph Co.,
There is ample authority sustaining recoveries for miscarriages under similar circumstances and, indeed, they are likely the pioneer cases sustaining the theory that a nervous shock without impact followed by harmful physical disturbances may be the basis of a recovery. This Court is committed to that doctrine but we think it clearly inapplicable here. TheDavis case was decided before the theory that a person has "a legal right to *352 mental tranquility" had been developed to the extent that it now has.
Being of the opinion that the lack of causal sequence between the slight cut to plaintiff's cheek suffered as a result of the impact and the extremely serious mental disorder without physical injury to which she testified she was subjected, clearly appears, and consequently that the defendant's motion for a directed verdict should have been sustained, the judgment of the Circuit Court of Ohio County is reversed, the verdict set aside and the defendant awarded a new trial.
The other assignments of error become inconsequential, but under the circumstances we think deserve notice.
The plaintiff's instruction, given by the court, that told the jury that the defendant was required to use the highest degree of care we think did not overstate its legal duty. True, it is not an insurer and public service requirements must be considered. The term "highest degree of care" is rather abstract, yet the courts in general have stressed the high degree of duty required in using and transmitting electricity. See Snyder v. Wheeling Electrical Co.,
The defendant contended that there were several items included in the testimony concerning actual outlay for drugs and other articles purchased by the plaintiff that should not have been permitted to go to the jury. The court did instruct the jury to ignore certain testimony of that kind that had been admitted over the defendant's objection, and since there were no special interrogatories it is not practicable for this Court to undertake to say what items were included and what items were excluded in the amount of the verdict, the declaration not having sought a recovery for special damages.
As to the verdict's excessiveness we are under the impression that on the plaintiff's theory of mental and emotional injury due to the defendant's negligence, if *353 the jury was impressed, as it must have been else there would have been no verdict, of the genuineness of the plaintiff's difficulty and claim, the sum of $5,000 is well within bounds.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Ohio County is reversed, the verdict set aside, and a new trial awarded.
Reversed.