Randle v. Birmingham Railway, Light & Power Co.

53 So. 918 | Ala. | 1910

McCLELLAN, J.

Previous appeals of this case will be found in 149 Ala. 539, 43 South. 355, and 158 Ala. 532, 48 South. 114. This appeal is prosecuted by the plaintiff, from a judgment in his favor for $500 damages. Under the direct authority of Donovan v. S. & N. R. R. Co., 79 Ala. 429, and Carrington v. L. & N. R. R. Co., 88 Ala. 472, 6 South. 910, “we wall not consider as revisable error any ruling of the primary court bearing merely on the naked question of the.defendant’s liability, and not affecting the amount of the damages recovered, however erroneous it may be in fact, because, if error, such ruling is error without injury to the plaintiff.” The damages recoverable in this action fall under the influence of the homicide act (Code *3191896, § 27; Code 1907, 2486), and are, hence, punitive only. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Street, 164 Ala. 155, 51 South. 306; R. & D. R. R. Co. v. Freeman, 97 Ala. 289, 11 South. 800, among others.

It appears, affirmatively, from the bill of exceptions that all counts save that designated Z were withdrawn by plaintiff, and that that count was the only one submitted to the jury. Count Z is predicated upon negligence after the discovery of intestate’s peril, the vital averment therein being that the “negligence consisted in this: The servants or agents aforesaid, after becoming aware of the perilous position of plaintiff’s intestate upon the track of the defendant in front of a moving car, negligently failed to use all means at their command to avoid injuring said intestate when by the use of said means said injury would have been avoided.” A's to the relation of intestate to the way in which he was killed, the bill of exceptions recites: “In their argument to the court- and jury, after the evidence had closed, plaintiff’s counsel admitted that Bandle was a trespasser on defendant’s track.” The report of the appeal will contain the charges upon which the assignments of error are predicated.

The application of the rule of the Caorington and Donovan cases, supra, eliminates from consideration charges (we number) 2, 5, 6, 7, and 9, given at defendant’s instance, which, as we interpret them, treated alone the naked question of substantive liability vel non, and -did not affect the inquiry as respected the measure or amount of the damages.

If we correctly resolve the argument of counsel for appellant, leading to the exemption of these charges from the influence of the doctrine of the Camngton and Donovan Cases, supra, it is premised upon the fact that the damages recoverable under the homicide act. while *320only punitive, depend for amount upon the measure of culpability attending the act causing the death; and that that measure of culpability must itself depend upon the elements, nature, and scope of the obligation to do under conditions given, that which, in legal parlance, we generally nominate as duty. The conclusion is that the intent of the statute is that the measure of the punishment, viz., the amount of damages imposed, should consist with the degree of culpability affecting the act, resulting in death, and that in proportion as the duty to avert the tragedy is more exacting, or higher, the'measure of punishment will pari passu enhance; and, hence, a charge that minimizes the duty correlatively and proportionately affects the damages recoverable, and, in consequence, does not alone touch the mere naked question of liability vel non, resolved by the jury on the trial below, in plaintiff’s favor.

As the argument indicates, the charges do not refer, even inferentially, to the measure of the recoverable damage for the wrong alleged. Two of them (5 and 6) treat of the presumption an operative has the right to indulge, within legally defined limits, that one, apparently adult, walking on a. railway, will take account of the approach of a train or motor, and remove himself from the range of injury thereby. The other (7) hypothesizes the' exemption of the operative from the imputation of negligence, if he “.in good faith merely erred in his judgment as to whether Randle was ignorant of the approach of the car, and waited until it was too late to avert the accident before taking measures to prevent the accident.” This charge then concludes to a finding for defendant, provided after discovery of Randle’s peril the operative used all preventive means at command to avert injury. Those numbered 2 and 9 *321are not, in principle, as here important, materially different from charge 7.

The verdict comprehended and denied, in its finding, any advantage to defendant from the propositions of the charges, whether they were abstractly sound or were correctly phrased or not; but, on the contrary, the verdict concluded to liability, and hence in plaintiff’s favor. These charges deal alone with the conditions to liability, viz., with what constitutes negligence under the facts hypothesized. In none of them was the degree of culpability, adverted to in R. & D. R. R. Co. v. Freeman supra, and in L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Tegner, 125 Ala. 599, 28 South. 510, treated; and it is the degree of culpability upon which the jury determine the quantum of the damages to he awarded as punishment. That the propositions stated in the charges immediately tended to affect the liability of the defendant in this cause, and in that general sense tended to affect the damages recoverable is of course evident. But the finding of the jury in plaintiff’s favor neutralized that effect, though erroneously, it may be assumed (see L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Young, 153 Ala. 232, 45 South. 238, 16 L. R. A. [N. S. 301), invited to express a contrary conclusion.

The charges (we number) 1, 3, and 4 present instructions touching the recoverable damages. They also will appear in the report of the appeal.

There are several criticisms in brief of charge numbered 1. Each of these will be noticed. The first clause of it restrained the jury from awarding damages based upon the “pecuniary value of the life of Randle.” The damages recoverable in this action were punitive only for the wrong — not actual or compensatory. The pecuniary value of a life is essentially suggestive, and that only, when speaking of damages for life lost, of a recovery based upon compensation. The charge in the *322particular under review, is not, we think, capable of being interpreted as affirming that the loss of Randle’s life was not to be considered by the jury in determining the amount of damages to he awarded. It, in this connection, expressed the law in this character of action, viz., that the pecuniary value of the life taken could not be an element of recoverable damages. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Tegner, 125 Ala. 599, 28 South. 510. The omission of the charge to contain definite directions and limitations for the assessment of punitive damages, rendered it misleading, but not reversible error, and for that reason the charge might have been refused, as was expressly ruled in Coleman v. Pepper, 159 Ala. 310, 314, 49 South. 310. In that instance, the court declined to reverse the trial court for granting a new trial because of the misleading tendency of the charge considered, assuming that the trial court was better advantaged to determine the effect of the misleading tendency than was this court. It will he noted that Burgess’ case, 119 Ala. 555, 564, 25 South. 251, 72 Am. St. Rep. 943, cited in Coleman v. Pepper, is not in accord with the ruling made in Coleman v. Pepper. Indeed, in the particular here pertinent, the ruling in the Burgess Case is opposed to that made in Coleman v. Pepper. Notwithstanding, we are not now disposed to depart from the ruling in this regard, of Coleman v. Pepper, preferring to remit the party against whose rights the charge may be taken to conclude to explanatory instructions. — Daniel v. Bradford, 132 Ala. 262, 31 South. 455; A. G. S. R. R. Co. v. Jones, 71 Ala. 487; 2 May. Dig. pp. 573-575.

There is no merit in the criticism that the charge was suggestive that a small recovery was proper in this instance or that the court so thought. It was the duty of the jury findiug the defendant liable to award an *323amount in damages sufficient to punish for the wrong done. No more damages than that should be awarded in such cases. That is the criterion under the homicide act. The charge did not invade the jury’s province. It conditioned the quantum of damages, by way of punishment, upon the finding by the jury that a small award would meet the demand of sufficient punishment, and, if they so believed, a large award should not be made.

The last criticism of this charge is, in our opinion, well taken, though not, as will later appear, with the result that a reversal will enter. It complains of the limitation upon the measure of the damages to be assessed, as hypothesized, by the restriction of the basis therefor, to the “acts of the motorman.”

Our homicide act was enacted in 1872 (Acts 1871-72, p. 83.) As then phrased it declared liability where death was caused by the “wrongful act or omission of another.” It became section 2641 of the Code of 1876, and the wrongful cause of the death was described as in the original act. In the Code of 1886, § 2589, the statute, in the particular under consideration, was altered so as to read: “For the wrongful act, omission, or negligence,” etc. The Codes of 1896 and 1907 adopted the phrase as written in the Code of 1886.

It thus appears that the original enactment predicated liability upon wrongful act or omission, and that later, in 1886, the Legislature conceived the idea that even act or omission might not comprehend all the wrongful causes of death to which it was the legislative intent to apply the remedy given by the homicide act. But aside from the intended effect of the interpolation of the descriptive term negligence — -an effect doubtless superinduced by the express broadening of the statute to include servants, etc., not appearing in *324the original enactment nor in the codification of 1876, in this particular — it is apparent’that- the Legislature, originally and throughout subsequent adoptions of the statute, contemplated distinct, separate references in the employment of the two terms, viz., act and omission. Obviously, it was conceived that a wrongful act and a wrongful omission would be and were distinct, different causes of death, within the homicide act. Negligence may result from omission in respect of duty. — Grant v. Moseley, 29 Ala. 302. But act and omission token different conceptions. Act denotes the affirmative. Omission denotes the negative. Act is the expression of will, purpose. Omission is inaction. Act carries the idea of performance. Omission carries the idea of a refraining from action. Webster’s New International Dictionary defines act, primarily as “that which is done or doing; the exercise of power, or the effect of which power exerted is the cause; a performance; a deed.” That work thus defines omission: “Act of omitting; state of being omitted; neglect or failure to do something; that which * * * is left undone.”

It will he readily seen that the distinction taken by the Legislature, in the construction and readoption of the homicide act, was and is fully justified by the meaning, commonly accepted, of the terms act and omission. And this is true notwithstanding the employment in the homicide act of the term negligence in the disjunctive. That negligence may, upon occasion, be the synonym of wrongful omission cannot detract from the evident distinction,- taken and contemplated, in the employment of the terms act and omission.

The Rhode Island court, through Durfee, C. J., in Bradbury v. Furlong, 13 R. I. 15, 43 Am. Rep. 1, recognized the distinction in construing the homicide act of that state, and ruled, as correctly foreshadowed in *325the headuote, that a “statute giving a cause of action for death ‘inflicted by the wrongful act of another,’ does' not embrace the case of mere passive neglect or omission of duty.” In the opinion it is pertinently said that “an injury resulting from a mere omission to act would not ordinarily be described as an injury inflicted by a wrongful act.” The decision is in point; and we think it is sound.

While the terms act and omission are so distinctly employed in the homicide act in defining the scope of the right and remedy thereby created, it does not follow that instructions to the jury, wherein the character of damages, viz., punitive, to be imposed, if liability was found, was the chief idea expressed in the instruction, referring alone to the act of the alleged derelict operative as the basis for the punishment sought by the plaintiff to be imposed, were affirmatively erroneous, and were not possessed, merely, of misleading tendencies. The insistence is that such an instruction limited the right to recover, or restricted the basis of culpability on the part of the operative, to the single means of death to icrongful act; whereas the homicide act defines those means as “Avrongful act, omission, or negligence,” and the settled construction of the statute grades the quantum of the punishment upon the degree of culpability of the derelict person. The purpose of the homicide act is to fix the punishment for the result of the “wrongful act, omission, or negligence,” viz., the death. Taking its terms literally, the homicide act defines the means of the homicide, for which the right and remedy is created, as being act, omission, or negligence. If the charges in question had assumed to define the sole cause, viz., by wrongful act, of the death of Bandle, and from that premise had undertaken to conclude against a recovery for his death unless that sole cause *326was the sole means of his death, then obviously the charges would have erroneously limited the right to recover, and would have been error to reverse. Such was not, as we have indicated, the certain effect of the instructions. In the particular under review, the word act was reasonably referable to the result wrought by the wrongful means. The a ct, as used in the instructions, may have been reasonably interpreted to refer to the consequence — the ultimate effect — of the motorman’s dereliction, viz., the death of Randle. If the term act, as employed in the instructions, was reasonably susceptible of the interpretation that it referred to the result, and not to the cause of that effect, viz., Randle’s death, then it was merely, at most, misleading in its tendencies. Being so, it might well have been refused; but to give it was not reversible error. The plaintiff should have requested explanatory instructions, removing the possible impression that only for the motorman’s act — not for his omission — could the punishment be imposed upon the defendant.

There is no prejudicial error shown, so the judgment must be affirmed.

Affirmed.

Simpson, Mayfield, and Sayre, JJ., concur.