94 Mo. 286 | Mo. | 1887
This is an action instituted by plaintiff to recover damages for the death of his minor son, Walter Parsons, who was in the employ of defendant as a brakeman, and whose death, it is alleged, was caused by the breaking of the defective timbers of a car in the train on which he was engaged.
The evidence on the part of the plaintiff tended to prove that said Walter was, at the time of his death, a minor, unmarried, aged about eighteen years and four
The defendant demurred to the evidence, and the ■demurrer having been overruled, the defendant offering no evideuce, the case was submitted to the jury under the instructions of the court, and a verdict returned for plaintiff for five thousand dollars. After an unsuccessful effort for a new trial and in arrest of judgment the defendant appealed, and seeks a reversal for alleged errors, considered, in their order, in the course of this opinion.
I. In order that the action of the court below in admitting evidence may be reviewed in the appellate
II. We find no error in the action of the circuit court overruling defendant’s demurrer to the evidence. It was the duty of the defendant to furnish to its employes cars reasonably safe and sufficient for the purposes for which they were to be used by such employes ; and in the absence of notice to the contrary, the deceased had the right to assume that the car which he mounted in the line of his duty, and on which he was attempting to set or tighten the brakes when it broke, was so safe and sufficient. There was no evidence tending to show that deceased had notice of any defect in the car; in fact, he was killed within two weeks after he left his father’s house to enter the service of the-defendant, and could have had no such experience as would have enabled himuto detect such a latent defect in the timbers of the car as the evidence tends to show existed; it was not his duty to do so, if he could. It was the duty of the defendant, not only in the first instance to furnish safe and sufficient cars to be used by their employes in their business, but to keep them so safe and sufficient, so far as it could be done by the exercise of reasonable care and diligence. This is an ever-present duty, and its neglect is a continuing neglect, running with the cars furnished.
III. It is urged as ground for reversal in this- case that the court erred in its instruction to the jury on the measure of damages, and that the damages- assessed are-grossly excessive; these will be- considered together. The instruction is as follows:
“If the jury find for the-plaintiff they may give-such damages as they should deem fair and just, not exceeding five thousand dollars, haying reference to- the-necessary injury resulting to the- plaintiff from such death, and also having regard to the mitigating or aggravating circumstances, if any,, attending such wrongful act, neglect, or default.”
The instruction is simply the language of the statute in the form of an instruction. R. S., 1879, sec. 2123. This statute, first enacted in 1855,. differs in two essential particulars from the English statute on the same, subject, usually cited as “Lord Campbell’s: act,”’and similar to the provisions of which are those of the statutes of many of the states of the union, and in so. far as it does differ, the decisions of the courts under those statutes fail to furnish a guide to the principle- upon which the damages are to be admeasured under our statute in many cases. The right of action for death caused by wrongful act, neglect, or default of another,, under those statutes, is given to the legal representative of the deceased for the benefit of the next of kin in the
The first important difference to be noted, so far as the principle to govern in this case is concerned, is, that, under those and similar statutes, the right of action, when it enures to the benefit of a parent for the death of a child, is not dependent on the minority of the child. If the parent has a right of action under • those statutes it might well be, said that such parent can recover damages for the value of the whole life of the child. Under our statute a right of action can only accrue to the father or mother of a minor, child. A parent may have two sons killed at one and the same time, the death of each caused by the same wrongful act of another; one aged twenty and the other twenty-two years/ For the death of the former he has a right of action and can recover damages for the necessary injury resulting to him from such death. For the death of the latter he has no right of action, and can recover nothing, although his life may have been in the past and promised to be in the future of almost inestimable pecuniary value to his parent, while the life of the former may never have been, and gives no promise ever tobe of any value to his parent. The life of the older may have been his parent’s stay, hope, and support; that of the younger the care and burden; yet the law gives damages in the latter case and none in the former. This distinction illuminates the meaning of the word “necessary” used in the statute, and. shows that the . damages in the case in
The law presumes the life of a minor child to be of value to his parent, because he is entitled to his services and is responsible for his support during minority. He is necessarily injured by a wrongful act resulting in the death of such minor child which thereby deprives him of the value of those. services and casts upon him the burden of legal liability for that support when deprived of the value of such services, enhanced by the additional expense of providing medicine, medical attention, and nursing during illness, and for funeral charges when he dies. To compensate him for this loss and this burden the law allows the parent of such minor substantial damages, and, they may bfe measured by the experience and judgment of the jury, enlightened only by a knowledge of the age, sex, and condition in life of the deceased, and the parent is not restricted to the recovery of merely nominal damages, because the value of the services of the child, or the amount of expenses incurred or paid for his support, and other necessaries during illness, or funeral expenses, be not proven. An intelligent jury, from common experience, may determine approximately, in any given case, what amount would compensate a parent for all pecuniary losses sustained by reason of the death of a minor child, but unless they are distinctly informed that such compensation is to be limited to the value of the child to its parent during the period of its minority, they , are liable, under a general instruction, such as was given in this case, to base their estimate upon all the probable or possible benefits that such parent might derive from the life of such child during the whole course of its probable existence, and thus
The jury in this case ought to have measured the. necessary injury to the plaintiff, hot by the value of his son’s life, but by the value of the life of his minor son. It is the life of the son’s minority, and not the life of the son, for which the parent is to be compensated. In the class of cases to which this belongs the field of inquiry is limited to a time certain, i. e., the majority of the minor ; but there is introduced into our statute an element of uncertainty not common to many statutes on this subject, in that provision, which authorizes the jury, having ascertained the damages with reference to the necessary injury resulting from the death to the surviving parties who may be entitled to sue, to also have regard to the “mitigating or aggravating circumstances attending the wrongful act, neglect, or default which caused the death.” At common law the damages for a tortious personal injury were compensatory to the party injured and under certain circumstances might be made exemplary, but his right of action did not survive, nor could his death be complained of as an injury, by any one. While the legislature might, they have not, provided for the survival of such actions ; but recognizing that dictate of justice which requires that-persons directly interested in the life of a person killed by another should receive from the wrongdoer compensation for the fatal injury; as also that established rule of public policy which permitted the party entitled to sue to also recover exemplary damages, when the act complained of was wilful or malicious, or characterized by cruelty, wantonness, or oppression, or was the result of such negligence as evinced a conscious disregard of the rights of others, embodied in the act in question, in those cases where the damages were not liquidated by the act, two elements of damage are to be considered by the jury: compensation to the injured survivor and punishment to
In that class of cases in which the jury would be warranted in giving exemplary damages by reason of the cireumstances of aggravation attending the act, the amount must necessarily be left, within the limit of the statute, to the fairness and sense of justice of the jury, discharging their duty, uninfluenced by prejudice or passion, and as to such damages no standard for their admeasurement can be given by the court. Even in such cases, however, the jury should not be left to grope their way "in the dark, and determine for themselves what facts or circumstances are such as should have the effect of aggravating the damages, but these- should be pointed out, if any such are proven in the Case, by proper instructions. Rains v. Railroad, 71 Mo. 165. Ini those cases where the facts and circumstances attending the act, neglect, or default are such as not to warrant aggravated damages, but in which compensation only can be given, it will frequently happen, however, that, no reasonably reliable standard can be laid down for the admeasurement of the damages, and much must be left to the judgment of the jury ; and in such cases, where that judgment has been exercised, it will not be disturbed unless the result is such as to shock the sense of justice of the judicial mind, and leave no doubt that the verdict was the result of prejudice or passion. But in that class of cases, where a reasonably safe standard is afforded by the circumstances of the case,- by which the compensation in damages can be measured, such standard should be given to the jury, not necessarily in terms by which the amount is to be exactly determined, with mathematical certainty, but the reasonable limits within which the calculations ought to be confined should be stated. And as it is undisputed that, as to all classes of cases under this act, no damages can be given
' To which of these classes does this case belong % It evidently does not belong to that class of cases in which the jury could be authorized to aggravate the damages, since the default or neglect of the defendant, which has been found to be the cause of the injury, was simply want of ordinary care which might have prevented it. Attending this, there was no circumstance, shown indicating wilfulness, malice, wantonness, recklessness, ot conscious negligence, or any wrong intent that could be-made the basis of a verdict for aggravated, exemplary, or punitory damages. The damages, then, in this case-should have been compensatory only.
Nor does it belong to that class of cases in which the damages, in the nature of things, must be largely conjectural, and for that reason not susceptible of approximate admeasurement, as, for-instance, when the husband is suing for the death of his wife, or the wife for the death of the husband, and the value of the daily ministrations of a whole life is to be estimated ; or when a child of tender years is suing for the death of a parent, the pecuniary value of whose parental care and nurture,, aside from maintenance, education, and support during: minority, is not susceptible of adequate measurement in dollars and cents ; nor yet to that class of cases where a parent is suing for the death of his child of tender years,. the value of, whose life to his parent during its minority is simply and purely matter of conjecture. This unfortunate youth, at the time of his death, lacked but thirty-two months of his majority ; that span of his life-being the period from which his father could derive the only pecuniary benefit, for the loss of which he could recover in this action, how much could it have been worth to him % About two. weeks before his death he had
This verdict is, then, grossly excessive and should have been set aside. The cause of it was doubtless, not that the jury were influenced'by either prejudice or passion, but that they were not sufficiently informed as to the proper standard by which the damages ought to
The judgment herein of the circuit court is, therefore, reversed and the cause remanded for new trial.