91 N.Y.S. 118 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1904
The defendant corporation maintains an electric lighting plant in the city of Middletown, furnishing lights under the incandescent system and the arc system. For the maintenance of incandescent lights the necessary voltage is only 110, while the arc wire carries 2,300 volts. The plaintiff’s intestate was killed by a shock of electricity received while he was endeavoring to put out some of the incandescent lights upon a chandelier in front of the bar in a cafe upon West Main street in the city of Middletown on the evening of January 22, 1902. There was evidence tending to show that the electric current which caused his death proceeded from one of the defendant’s arc wires which had come in contact with the wire intended for incandescent lighting only. There was also proof in the case warranting a finding by the jury that such contact was due to improper construction shortly before the accident, that is to say, the testimony indicated that the wire for incandescent lighting and the wire for arc lighting had been placed so close to one another as to be dangerous in the first instance, or as to be likely to become dangerous under weather conditions reasonably to be expected.
It is earnestly insisted that the deceased, • who was himself an electrician, was shown to have been guilty of contributory negligence ; but I think that this question also was properly left to the jury. It is true that he had seen the proprietor of the cafe attempt to turn out the lights on the chandelier, and had seen him draw back on account of the shock received. On the other hand, it is to be observed that the deceased must have noticed that this shock had not produced any serious effects; and it cannot be held as a matter of law that he was at fault for supposing that he could turn out the lights himself without risk of fatal injury.
It is conceded in the brief for' the appellant that the foregoing language of the court cured any error there might have been in the principal charge upon the subject of contributory negligence, if it were not for the emphasis laid on the word “ contributed.” I am unable to perceive how such emphasis could have injured the defendant, inasmuch as it is certainly true that any negligence on the part of the deceased was wholly immaterial, unless it tended to bring about the injury which gave rise to the action.
The verdict was $2,000. It is contended that this amount is excessive, because, under the circumstances, nominal damages only should have been awarded, and because the court erred in instructing the jury as to the measure of damages. The deceased was the son of the plaintiff, and at the time of his death was twenty-one years of age and was earning ten dollars a week. He lived with his father, who was a merchant in Middletown, sixty-five years of age at the time of the accident. The son was a young man of good habits, sober and industrious. He was unmarried, and the amount of the recovery in this action would go wholly to the father as the sole next of kin. In view of these facts, counsel for the defendant asked the court to charge that the plaintiff had failed to show any pecuniary damage, and, therefore, could not recover anything but nominal damages. This request was refused, and an exception was duly taken. The case of Ihl v. Forty-second Street, etc., R. R. Co.
In reference to the amount recoverable, if there was to be any recovery at all, the learned trial judge told the jury that the statute allowed only fair compensation for the pecuniary loss suffered, meaning thereby the loss of money or money’s worth, and he continued as follows: “Although the action is maintained by the plaintiff as administrator, he maintains it for his own benefit and his own benefit entirely. It is just a question of how much in all human probability the plaintiff would in the course of his life have received in the way of pecuniary benefit from his son if he had lived. Nobody can lift the curtain of the future and see what is behind it. Nobody knows whether this young man would have lived another year. If he had lived, you would have to consider whether he would have married and had a family of his own ; whether his duties and obligations in that direction would have been likely to consume any means that he might have acquired. You have got to consider that his father was in comfortable circumstances. The father’s .need to call upon his son at all should be considered, in view of the fact that he is himself a man of considerable means. The young man’s health might have failed, if he had lived, and the father himself might not have lived to a time when he would require any aid from his son. You can see that there are a thousand peradventures about it. You must consult your experience in human life. How is it generally between a father and a son ?' Here was a son twenty-one years old; the father is advanced in years. How much money, or money’s worth, do you think, on your oaths, this plaintiff,-this father, would have received from his son if he had lived ? That is the measure of all the recovery that you are entitled to give the plaintiff. You must discard all sympathy. If you do not, you will do injustice. You must confine yourselves absolutely to what, in your conservative judgment, it can fairly be said that this plaintiff would, in all human probability, have received in the way of money, or money’s worth, from his son if he had lived.”
Considering together all that the court said on the subject of damages, it does not seem to me that any error was committed or that the jury could have been misled. As was said by Finch, J., in Houghkirk v. President, etc., D. & H. C. Co. (92 N. Y. 219, 225), the damages to the next of kin by reason of the loss of a human life are necessarily indefinite, prospective and contingent. “ They cannot be proved with even an approach to accuracy, and yet they are to be estimated and awarded, for the statute has so commanded. But even in such case there is, and there must be, some basis in the proof for the estimate, and that was given here and always has been given. Human lives are not all of the same value to the survivors. The age and sex, the general health and intelligence of the person killed, the situation and condition of the survivors and their relation to the deceased; these elements furnish some basis for judgment. That it is slender and inadequate is true * * *; but it is all that is possible, and while that should be given * * *, more cannot be required.”
The case of Birkett v. Knickerbocker Ice Co. (110 N. Y. 504) is an additional decision to the effect that the authorities in this State would not justify a ruling that nominal damages only could be recovered in this class of cases; and as to the instruction that the assessment of damages in cases of this character must always be to
In addition to the general rule laid down in the authorities which have been cited, we may find a precedent closely resembling the case at bar in Bierbauer v. N. Y. C. & H. R. R. R. Co. (15 Hun, 559), in which the General Term of the third department refused to interfere with a verdict of $5,000, where the deceased was about twenty-one years old, and his father, about sixty-five years of age, was his next of kin, and alone entitled to compensation under the statute. It is true that Mr. Justice Bocees, who wrote the opinion, was in favor of a reduction of the verdict, but he was overruled in this respect by his associates.
I advise an affirmance of the judgment and order under review.
Judgment and order unanimously affirmed, with costs.