43 Pa. Super. 344 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1910
Opinion by
The plaintiff described the accident as follows: "I was coming up in an Eleventh street car, after the performance; we were sitting in a seat running lengthwise; at Market street, I remember that a car coming down crashed into our car; I was just putting my money in my pocketbook when it crashed into us; I remember the crash, and that I was on the point of getting up, and that is all I remember; I remember the glass crashing; afterwards, when I came to, I was in the Jefferson Hospital.” It should be noticed that she was sitting on the right-hand side of the car going north and that the Market street car was going east; therefore, the latter did not strike the side of the car on which she was sitting. Beyond the statement that the Market street car crashed into the car in which ,she was riding, the force of the collision is not shown. Later, in her examination in chief, she having testified that she had no marks or bruises on her body, her coun
The remaining question to be considered is, whether she could recover damages on account of fright alone or the consequences of it. This is not an open question in Pennsylvania. In Huston v. Freemansburg Borough, 212 Pa. 548, it appeared that the defendant in excavating a hole in the street exploded some dynamite, and it was claimed that the shock of the explosion so affected the plaintiff’s husband, who was recovering from typhoid fever, that he died within two weeks. On appeal from the refusal to take off a compulsory nonsuit the court, through Chief Justice Mitchell, said: “The learned judge below not admitting, but conceding for the purpose of his view, that there was evidence of negligence and of proximate cause, sufficient to carry the case to the jury, nevertheless refused to take off the nonsuit. We do not concede either point, and this case might be affirmed on either. But we have had the case reargued before the full court, to settle finally the main question that there can be no recovery of damages from fright or other merely mental suffering unconnected with physical injury.” The
The learned judge of the common pleas entered judgment for the defendant non obstante veredicto upon the authority of Huston v. Freemansburg Borough. He could not have done otherwise under the evidence without coming in direct conflict with the rule there emphatically stated.
Since the foregoing opinion was written, the opinion of the Supreme Court in Morris v. Lackawanna and Wyoming Valley Railroad Co., not yet reported, has come to our notice. There the rule was applied in an action by a passenger against a common carrier.
The judgment is affirmed.