43 W. Va. 484 | W. Va. | 1897
The Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad Company complains of a judgment for two hundred and fifty dollars rendered against it by the Circuit Court of Kanawha county at the suit of George W. Scott. The only witness personally introduced before the jury was the plaintiff, who testified: That on the 80th day of January, 1895, he purchased a round-trip ticket of the defendant, at Charleston, to Cincinnati and return, which is as follows: “Chesapeake & Ohio Railway Oo. (One first-class passage.) Cincinnati, 0., to Charleston, W. Va. Good returning only on trains Nos. 10 and 4, leaving Cincinnati at 7 :40 a. m. and 7 :00 p.
The defendant introduced the depositions of three witnesses, Bertie Dole, Mary Hall, and Mary Ingram, whose testimony is to the effect that plaintiff told them, or remarked in their hearing, that he liad missed the train on the 1st of February, 1895; also, the deposition of F. W. Lamberton, who says he was the conductor on the 7 :40 A. M. train on the morning of the 1st February, 1895, and
The depositions of these woman are hardly worth considering, for they testify that plaintiff said he missed the train the morning of the 1st, and that he went away the morning of the 2nd. This is, to some extent, corroborative of the plaintiff’s testimony; for he did miss the train the morning of the 1st, and testified that he left for home the morning of the 2nd. The impression is endeavored to be produced that he missed the train for the reason that he was too late. This is not clear from the depositions, but he admits that he did miss the train for this reason the morning of the 81st January. Depositions of a doubtful nature, depending merely on questions of memory, have very little weight before a jury, and rightly so; for the very object of jury trials is to have, among other essential things, personal inspection and observation of the witnesses, including their mode and manner of testifying, under the supervision of the court and the rigid cross-exami
The defendant insists that the damages allowed are excessive, while the plaintiff insists that the damages are merely compensatory, according to the rule established in the cases of Boster v. Railway Co., 36 W. Va. 318, (15 S. E. 158); Sheets v. Railroad Co., 39 W. Va. 475, (20 S. E.
Note by
I clo not wish to he understood, by concurring-in this judgment, as concurring- with so much of t-ho opinion as holds that punitive damages can be awarded'against a corporation, which is contrary to the decision of this Court in Ricketts v. Railroad Co. 33 W. Va. 433 (10 S. E. 801), and Downey v. Railroad Co., 28 W. Va.
Affirmed.