215 F. 687 | 4th Cir. | 1914
W. T. Holbrook, a bridge carpenter, was killed in January, 1913, on one of defendant’s railroad bridges by a passenger train, known as No. 15. The plaintiff, his widow, as administratrix of his estate, suing for the benefit of herself and his five infant children under the act o-f Congress of 1908 as amended in 1910, recovered judgment for damages in the District Court for the Western
"1c Is well settled that, Instead of preparing separate bills for each separate matter, all the alleged errors of a trial may be incorporated into one bill of exceptions.”
"(Hero insert all the evidence, beginning with the words ‘And the plaintiff,' on page 8, and concluding with the end of the testimony for both plaintiff and defendant on page 531.)”
By inadvertence the typewritten copy of the evidence, having this paging indicated, was not actually inserted, but was separately filed. Do attack is made on the correctness of the copy, and it appears in the printed record as the evidence covered by the certificate of the District Judge; but it is said nevertheless not to be identified. It would be applying technicality beyond all reason to hold that testimony identified by the paging, unquestioned as a matter of fact, and relating on its face to the cause, was not the testimony which the District Judge meant to certify. The facts leave the case entirely outside of the principle, laid down in 2 Foster on Fed. Prac. (5th Ed.) 1594, and a number of cases, that documents or other evidence referred to in the bill will be excluded from consideration if not properly identified.
When Holbrook was killed he, in company with five other men under the directions of the Foreman Carbaugh, was putting down guard rails on the west-bound track of a double-tracked bridge 228 feet long.
“Foremen or otters in charge of employés working on or about the tracks must instruct their men to be alert, watchful, and to keep out of danger; and will take all reasonáble precautions to see that all men working under their immediate supervision receive warnings of approaching trains in time to reach a place of safety.
“When working on tracks in places where approaching trains cannot readily be seen because of permanent obstructions to the view, or temporary obstructions, such, for instance, as fog, storms, snow or engines or cars, extra precautions must be taken to warn the men of approaching trains.
“As an extra precaution, when necessary to place a watchman at some distance from the men at work on the tracks, or in such location that his signals may not be understood, additional watchmen should be placed so that the signals can be passed to the men at work and return signals obtained. In case return signals are not received, and understood, the watchman must signal the train to stop.” .
Carbaugh, the foreman, took no other precautions than to stand on the east-bound track and call “railroad” or “clear up” on observing the approach of a train. In this situation west-bound passenger train 15 passed, with signals that another section was to follow. Several hours afterwards east-bound freight train 92, carrying about 40 cars, came through the tunnel pulling smoke over the bridge. Before all the cars had cleared the bridge, the second section of west-bound passenger train 15 approached from the curve on the east side on the track where Holbrook was working, and killed him. Carbaugh’s range of vision on the track towards this train was not more than 300 or 400 feet, which would be run by a train going 30 miles an hour in not exceeding 10 seconds. When the foreman made the call for train 92, Holbrook and the witness Walters were engaged in framing a new guard rail on the west-bound track, and between that call and the approach of train 15, it was necessary for Holbrook and Walters to take the timbers off the track and get to a place of safety on the girders or floor beams beyond the track. No witness saw Holbrook when he was struck, and there is some conflict in the evidence as to his situation when train 15 was about to reach his position, but the conflict is not material. Taken together, the evidence leaves no doubt that Holbrook was struck either while he was in the act of removing a piece of timber from the track or immediately after removing it and before he reached a place of safety.
This short statement of the admitted conditions and the precautions taken by Carbaugh is enough to show clearly that there was good ground for the jury to infer that the precautions were not such as. due care required, and that in anticipation of the danger to which the workmen would be subjected from the contingency of two trains approaching the bridge at the same time from opposite directions, Car
“However, the court instructs you that where the persons suffering injury are the dependent widow and infant children of a deceased husband and father, the pecuniary injury suffered would be much greater than where the beneficiaries were all adults or dependents who were mere next, of kin, so that the relation existing between deceased and the infant beneficiaries prior to his death is a factor in fixing the amount of the merely pecuniary damages.”
In construing the statute of 1885 applicable to the District of Columbia, the Supreme Court of the United States said as to the measure of damages:
“Under such a statute, it is entirely proper that the jury should take into consideration the age of the deceased, his health, strength, capacity to earn money, and family. The injury done to a family consisting of a widow and helpless young children, who depended for support entirely upon the labor of a husband and father whose death was caused by the wrongful act of others, is much greater than would be done to any ‘next of kin’ able to maintain themselves, and who have never depended, and had no right to depend, upon the labor or exertions of the deceased for their maintenance.” Baltimore & P. R. Co. v. Mackey, 157 U. S. 72, 15 Sup. Ct 491, 39 L. Ed. 624.
In the course of full discussion of the subject in Michigan, etc., R. Co. v. Vreeland, 227 U. S. 59, 33 Sup. Ct. 192, 57 L. Ed. 417, the court, after emphasizing the rule that the recovery must be limited to pecuniary loss from the death, continues:
“The rule for the measurement of damages must differ according to the relation between the parties plaintiff and the decedent, ‘according as the action is brought for the benefit of the husband, wife, minor child, or parent of minor child, for the loss of services or support to which the beneficiary was legally entitled, or is brought for the benefit of a person whose damages consist only in the loss of a prospective benefit to which ho was not legally entitled.’ Tiffany, Death by Wrongful Act, §§ 158, 160, 361, 162.”
Difference in the value of prospective support, and intellectual, moral and physical training to be expected from a father or mother, and from any other benefactor, inheres in the nature of social relations. While no compensation can be given for the loss of love, yet in estimating the pecuniary value of expected maintenance and training, the fact
But not only this reasonable Expectation of greater voluntary service, but the legal obligation of a husband and father to support his wife and children makes his life of greater pecuniary value to them than the life of any other upon whom they might be dependent. In view of the> general principle applied to the undisputed evidence in this case that the deceased was a capable and industrious workman, devoted to his family and assiduous in the discharge of his domestic obligations, it cannot be said that there was error of law in the instruction that the pecuniary injury to a wife and infant children from the death of the husband and father would be much greater than from the death of any other relative upon whom they might be dependent.
Affirmed.