18 F. 221 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Minnesota | 1883
(charging jury.) In the case which is now before you the plaintiff, Horatio Secord, seeks to recover from the defendant, the St. Paul, Minneapolis & Manitoba Railroad Company, damages for injuries alleged to have been received while he was a passenger upon the cars of the defendant company on or about the twenty-eighth of May, 1882. The damages claimed in the ease amount, I believe, to the sum of $10,000.
I have been asked to instruct you upon the question of the position that the plaintiff occupied towards the defendant when he was in the caboose at the time he received the injury. Now, the undisputed evidence in the case, and the admissions of the defendant, show that the plaintiff had gone upon the cars of the defendant company for the purpose of being transported over the line of its road to some given point upon that road, and that he had some merchandise, and some teams and farming implements, and other matters of merchandise, upon this train. He was directed, according to his testimony, to get upon this train as the proper one to proceed upon towards the place of his destination. The undisputed evidence shows at the time of the accident there was a caboose, as it is sometimes called, or car that was used upon these freight trains, when people are permitted to travel in them at all. If the plaintiff was on that car with the knowledge of the defendants, or any of its agents, for the purpose of being transported over the line of its road, and was properly there, he was in the position of a passenger, and occupied the position of a passenger; and it is immaterial whether or no he had a ticket, and whether or .no he had, at the time of the accident, paid his fare, ’ffitese thiugs would not defeat his being a passenger, because it is
If there is any negligence on the part of the railroad company, by reason of which a passenger is injured, then the passenger has a right to claim his damages that are caused thereby from the railroad company. On the other hand, if an accident happens from something that is not the fault of the railroad company, and something beyond its control, and no negligence can be attributed to them at all, in that case it would bo a pure accident, and, in the older language of the law, it might be attributed to the act of God, and the company would not be responsible.
Now then, gentlemen, what do you find the facts to be under the evidence in this case? Was this plaintiff a passenger upon the train ? If so, ho was entitled to be safely transported, and the duty lay upon the company to use all fair means in its power to carry him and transport him safely over the line of its road. There is no dis
A question has arisen, and has been made in the progress of this case, in regard to the consequences to the plaintiff of this accident, growing out of the question whether it is all attributable to the accident itself that happened upon-the railroad company’s line, or whether the injury to the plaintiff has been aggravated by any surgical or medical treatment received after the injury was inflicted upon him. The facts show that Dr. Murphy, a physician and surgeon employed by the company and under its pay, took charge of the case of this patient. I do not say immediately, for there was another physician, but we may drop him out of the question. The plaintiff in the first place came down to St. Paul, and was under the care and charge of Dr. Murphy. The evidence shows, and there is no dispute upon that, that Dr. Murphy was the surgeon of this defendant railroad company; and the proposition upon which I propose to instruct you is whether the company would be responsible for any damage or injury caused to the plaintiff, or any aggravation of the injury received through any neglect on the part of Dr. Murphy in the performance of his duty in the case. Upon that proposition the law is this; that this railroad company having assumed to furnish a physician — a surgeon — it has taken upon itself the duty and obligation of furnishing a competent surgeon, and not beyond that. If it assumes the responsibility of engaging a surgeon, and placing him in charge of parties that may be injured, and sending him to their aid, so that these parties may place themselves under the care of this physician or surgeon, then it is responsible thus far: that the person it selects must be a competent man; he must be reasonably fitted for the duties which he is called upon to perform. In other words, it will not do for the company to take up some incompetent man, who is not fit by education or experience to undertake the responsibilities of any case that may be placed in his'hand. If it does engage a physician and surgeon who is sufficiently experienced, that is all that can be expected of the railroad company, and is all of its liability.
It must be remembered that the company is not obliged to engage
Now, he may be an ordinarily competent man, and yet in the attendance upon any particular case that ho undertakes, he may be negligent. He may be negligent in that particular case, and neglect his duty therein, though he may generally bo ordinarily competent. If that be true, and you so find the facts to bo in this particular case, that when treating the plaintiff as a physician and surgeon Dr. Murphy was negligent in the performance of bis duty, — if you should find that from the evidence, — then you must determine whether Dr. Murphy was a competent man, and was a proper and responsible surgeon for the company to engage as such; and if you find that the company performed its duty in that regard, that is all'that could be required of it.
If, on the other hand, lie was an incompetent man, (I don’t understand, however, that that is claimed under the evidence in this case,) then there would bo a responsibility resting upon the company; but if he was competent, and then ho was negligent in what he did in that particular case, then he himself is-responsible for the damaga caused thereby. If be did not properly treat the plaintiff in this case, and failed to do Iris duty in this instance, and thereby the injury to the plaintiff has been increased, for the damage caused by this negligence, if any, Dr. Murphy is responsible himself; the liability would be upon him, and he would be liable to the plaintiff in damages, if you should find those were the facts. But the company would not be liable, because it had performed all the duty that is incumbent upon it when it selected a proper and competent man, and held him out for these parties to employ if they sa-w fit. Therefore, upon this
Now there is another proposition presented, and I am requested to charge you upon it, and that is as to any increased damage caused to the plaintiff by the negligence of the plaintiff himself, if any there is. You will understand that in charging upon these propositions I am not stating propositions of fact; the facts you are to pass your opinions upon; I am only expressing my views of the law to you. The duty is placed upon all parties situated as the plaintiff was, who receive an injury in that way, when they are being transported by a railroad company, — the duty is-placed upon them to exercise due care upon their part after receiving the injury. The same rule applies to them that applies to all ordinary cases. Now it is well settled in all ordinary cases that the duty and obligation is laid upon the party who receives the injury to see that the amount of damage is not increased by any negligenqe or want of care on his part. To use an illustration that comes to my mind: take the case, for instance, of a man who has an insurance policy upon his stock of goods, and a fire happens. He has a right to recover of the company for remuneration to the amount of his policy. But a duty is placed upon him to see that the damage is not increased in any way; in other words, he must do all that he can to protect his goods, and do all that he can to save them from injury. It would not do for him to abandon them because his stock of goods is insured, and because they are partly destroyed, simply say, “I have got an insurance that covers them,” and leave them to be burned. The duty is upon him to keep the damages down as low as possible. The same rule applies to all cases of the kind. If the plaintiff was injured, and he had a right to look to the company for damages that were caused to him, still he must use care in the matter of that injury. He must not be careless, and he must not do anything that will increase the injury to himself by his own fault and negligence; in other words, he must use due care. Therefore, if it be true that the plaintiff, by negligence on his part, did increase the amount of damage and injury he received, then for that additional damage he cannot hold the- company responsible, though they might be^ responsible'for the first accident, and for the injury directly caused by it. If it be true that the plaintiff, by undertaking
Tiie general rule, gentlemen of the jury, in regard to the rule of damages is this: If you find from the evidence that the plaintiff is entitled to damages, in the first place he is entitled to reasonable compensation for the pain and suffering he has undergone and endured, and still endures, in consequence of the injuries that are chargeable to the company, — the pain and suffering in the past, and the pain and suffering he is liable and likely to suffer in the future. Secondly, he is entitled to compensation for the loss of time that has been occasioned to him. If you find that lie was detained here in St. Paul so many weeks, and was unable to prosecute his usual affairs, and it created a money loss to him, an.actual pecuniary loss, he is entitled to compensation for that; ho is entitled to fair compen
I do not think there are any other general elements of damage which you can take into consideration. Frequently there are actual expenditures that have been made for the services of physicians and attendance^ and. if the plaintiff has proved any such he would have been entitled to recover that also. But there is no evidence that any such expenditures have been made, and this plaintiff has produced no evidence upon this subject, so you cannot allow this matter, be-, cause there is no evidence to show that the plaintiff has suffered any loss in that regard, or has made any expenditures therefor. In a general way, as I have already stated, the elements of damage which you are to take into consideration will be the pain he suffered, the loss of time, the injury to his health and bodily strength, including in the latter the effect it may have had upon the plaintiff’s ability to labor and carry on his business, both in the past and in the future.
Now, these are the elements you are to take into consideration, and you are to determine in this case the amount of injury that has been caused to the plaintiff by the fault of the company defendant.
As I said before, if you find that these damages have been increased or aggravated on account of or through the negligence of the physician, under the instructions I have given you, or by reason of the negligence of the plaintiff himself, the defendant in that case is not 'responsible for that increased injury. If you find that any portion of the damages to the plaintiff has been increased or aggravated by the negligence of the physician, or by the fault of the plaintiff himself, then the damages that have been shown to be occasioned to the plaintiff by the defendant in the first instance is all that the defendant would be responsible for.
You will determine in Ibe first place the amount of injury that the defendant is held responsible for, and, having determined that, you will estimate in your judgment what would be a fair amount to com» pensaie him for the injuries ho has received through the negligence of the defendant. That is all you will take into consideration, and you will give this case your careful attention in the consideration of these matters. The amount of the damages is not to be increased or diminished by reason of the fact that the defendant is a corporation. This case must stand upon its merits, irrespective of the position of the parties, and the defendant should stand in no unfair position before you, but is entitled to justice the same as if it were an individual.
You will take the case and give it the consideration which the importance of the case deserves, and render such a verdict as the evidence warrants, using your own sound judgment in determining this matter between the parties.
The jury rendered a verdict of $7,500 for the plaintiff, and the defendant moved to set aside the same on the ground that the damages were excessive.