91 Tenn. 56 | Tenn. | 1891
The defendant in error sued and obtained a verdict for $5,000 damages of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad Company for the negligent killing of her husband. Pending motion for a new trial, $2,000 of this amount was remitted, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff for $3,000. The railroad company appealed.
Several errors are assigned, the first being that there was no evidence of negligence. The accident occurred on a hand-car running from a point north of Hampton Station, in Montgomery County, to a point south of said station, where the hands using the car were to resume work after dinner,
This, of itself, made out a case of negligence. If the foreman allowed the boxes to be so placed as to strike a platform on the road and bring about this injury, it devolved upon the company to show that it was unavoidable, or not the result of negligence; but, in addition to this, it is proven that the foreman said at the time of the accident that he saw the dump box had slipped or was slipping, but did not think it would strike the platform, thus letting the men, without warning, take the risk of a danger he foresaw and speculated about. The argument for the company is that the proof fails to show that the foreman could have prevented the box slipping, or that it
The car having struck, or dump-box thereon having struck, the platfoi’m, this was a circumstance showing negligence (as the overturned coach in Stokes v. Salstonstall, 13 Peters, 181), and made out, a 'prima facie, case, which it devolved- upon defendant to meet. This it not only did not do, but predicates its reliance for reversal on weakness of plaintiff’s additional affirmative evidence of' negligence. It was the duty of the foreman representing the company to see that it was so placed that it would not strike the platform naturally; and when it did strike, it then devolved upon the company to show that this was not the result of any negligence. The onus was not upon the plaintiff to show why it struck, after having shown that it did strike. The reason, if there were any proper one therefor, should have been shown by the defendant, to remove the presumption of negligence arising from the fact of collision. The 'case referred to in 13 Peters has been often followed in this State.
The remaining error to be noticed in the number assigned is that on the qualification of a proposition submitted by defendant to the Court as instruction to the jury.
Though the plaintiff’s intestate died about a month after the injury, and there was evidence to sustain the theory that his death was the direct result thereof, there was evidence tending
In this condition of the evidence the Court was asked to charge as follows: “If you find that the company was negligent, and deceased was injured by such negligence, then, did the injury cause his death or did he'die of some disease? If he died of the injury — and by that is meant the injury produced the death, or produced a disease which resulted in death, or so weakened the powers of deceased as rendered him unable to resist a disease of which he might otherwise have recovered, or with which he, might have lived an indefinite time — then plaintiff should recover. But if deceased already had a fatal disease, from which there was no hope of recovery, and his death was inevitable from that disease in a short time, and the injury was slight and of such a character as to simply aggravate the disease, and he died of the disease and not of the injury, then plaintiff cannot recover at all, for this is a suit for the' death of deceased.”
The Court gave this instruction to, the jury, with this addition: “ This is the law, but if the death was hastened or occurred sooner by reason of the injury than it otherwise would, then the injury was the cause of the- death.”
It is objected that the addition of the Court to the request submitted is not the law; and a case to the contrary in terms, if not in effect, as to
The Supreme Court of Missouri, on appeal, held that the giving of the first and refusal of second instruction quoted was error.
Under the facts of that case, with , the' brief and summary propositions standing as they do, the ease may be right — it is not necessary to determine that question — but the charge we have here is not the same. It presents in the proposition 'submitted .by the Circuit Judge all the qualifications which make the use of the term “hastened” objectionable in the Missouri -case. He had already said that “ if the injury was
A man might be suffering from an incurable disease, or a mortal wound, with only two days to live when a negligent wrong-doer inflicted upon him an injury which in his condition of debility took his life or developed agencies which destroyed him in one day, and yet the latter wrong be in a legal sense the cause of his death, though it only hastened that which on the next day would have inevitably happened.
"We think the proposition submitted by counsel, and qualified by the wise and judicious view of the Court, an admirable statement of the true rule on this very delicate question. The Supreme Court of Missouri said it found .no precedent lor the decision made in the Jackson case, and there are, confessedly, few reported cases that touch upon the question. Those supposed to present an an
It is sufficient for the purpose of this opinion to say that, treating it from the stand-point of an original proposition, we are entirely content with the view of it embodied in the instruction submitted, as qualified by the Court upon the facts of this case. That qualification upon the proposition put, removed here in fact, and will remove hereafter in precedent, all danger that this case will be authority or treated as authority for holding that any slight aggravation of a disease is a “ cause of death within the meaning of the statute.” The Circuit Judge had already charged upon the propriety of reducing damages according to the expectation of life, and had justly exercised his judgment and discretion in requiring a remission, if the judgment was to stand, there being no grossly negligent or wanton conduct in bringing about the injury.
We are satisfied with the judgment, and it is affirmed with cost.