27 Neb. 788 | Neb. | 1889
This action was brought in the district court of Gage county by the defendants in error against the plaintiifs in error to recover damages for loss of means of support caused by the death, from the use of intoxicating liquors, of John E. Smith, the husband of Lydia E. Smith, and the father of Leroy Smith and Nellie Smith, minor children of said Smith and wife. On the trial of the cause a verdict for the sum of $2,000 was rendered, and a motion for a new trial having been overruled, judgment was entered on the verdict.
There are fourteen assignments of error, but four of which are referred to in the brief of the plaintiifs in error, and these will be considered in their order.
1. It is claimed that the court erred in receiving any evidence in support of the petition because the object of the bill or act is not clearly expressed in the title and that the subject-matter of sections 15, 16, and 18 are not contained or referred to in the title of the bill. In Pleuler v. State, 11 Neb., 547, the question of the authority to license was considered by this court and the act sustained, and that decision has been adhered to ever since. The title of the act approved February 28, 1881, is as follows: “An act to regulate the license and sale of malt, spirituous, and vinous liquors, and to repeal chapter 53 of the code of criminal procedure of the General Statutes of 1873 entitled 'License and sale of liquors/ and to repeal an act entitled 'An act to amend section 575 of chapter 58 of the criminal code/ approved February 9, 1875, and to repeal an act entitled 'An act to regulate the issuance of licenses for the sale of malt, vinous, and spirituous liquors in the state of Nebraska/ approved February 25, 1875.”
The second objection is that the court erred in receiving the testimony of certain physicians, as experts, to testify as to the cause of death. There is testimony in the record tending to show that John E. Smith had been sober for several days before his death, and there is also testimony tending to show that for several days prior to that time he had been under the influence of intoxicating liquors furnished by the defendants below. The immediate cause of his death appears to have been morphine administered by himself in two glasses of beer, in the saloons of the plaintiffs in error. The question arose, therefore, whether the case was one of deliberate suicide, or was caused by the use of intoxicating liquors. One of the experts, Dr. D. A. Waldon, after stating that he had been a practicing physician and surgeon for twenty-six years, was asked the following question:
Q. Supposing a man, thirty years of age, had been drinking hard for two weeks’ time, and had been irregular about his meals and his going to bed during that time, what would be his natural mental and physical condition ?
A. I should think a man’s mental condition would be very much impaired by a debauch of that character.
Q,. Doctor, would a man in that condition be more liable to commit suicide than a man who had for the past two weeks been regular in his habits, and had not been drinking to excess ?
A. He most surely would.
Q. Why, doctor?
A. From the fact of the weakened and debilitated state of his mind. It is usually the case that men when they commit suicide do it after a debauch of that kind and character.
Q,. Did you ever know, in your experience, or do you know, of any person committing suicide when not intoxicated or under the influence of liquor ?
A. I don’t believe I ever knew a person to commit suicide unless they were drinking persons; not to come under my observation.
Q. Do you pretend to say, as a physician, that such a a case has never been ?
A. No, sir; I would not say that.
Q,. And that a person would not commit suicide at anytime, except they were under the influence of liquor ?
A. Well, sir; it is a question whether they would or not; I don’t believe they would.
Q,. Do you say to the jury they would not?
A. I don’t believe they would.
The testimony of the other experts is substantially to the same effect. This testimony, in our view, was properly received for the purpose of showing the probable effect of the long continued intoxication of Smith — if the jury should believe the testimony tending to show such continued intoxication — in causing a loathing of life and hence suicide. If the suicide was deliberately committed by Smith while not under the influence of intoxicating drinks, the defendants below would not be liable; while if such suicide was caused by the use of intoxicating liquors furnished by the defendants below, they would be. There was no error, therefore, in admitting the testimony.
Objection is made to the refusal of the court to permit certain witnesses to testify that on the afternoon and in the evening of the day on which Smith took poison and killed himself each separately charged him with having embezzled large sums of money due to Fillmore and Poffenbarger, in whose employment Smith had been for a year prior thereto. It is claimed that such testimony would have shown a cause for the suicide and hence was
The fourth assignment is as to the modification by the court of instructions Nos. 2 and 3, asked on behalf of the defendants below. It is impossible in this connection to review the instructions at length, but they seem to be adapted to the evidence, and the modification of the instructions complained of appears to have been made to make them conform to the proof. There is no error in the record and the judgment is affirmed.
Judgment affirmed.