4 Ind. 471 | Ind. | 1853
Trespass on the case by the defendant in error against the plaintiffs in error, for injuries resulting from the negligence, &c., of the plaintiffs’ servants. The cause was, by change of venue, taken from the Circuit Court of Shelby county to the Johnson Circuit Court. Plea, not guilty. Verdict for the plaintiff below. Motion for a new trial overruled, and judgment on the verdict.
Yarious instructions were moved by the defendants below, but overruled by the Court. These will not be further noticed, as by the charge given all the questions in the cause are raised.
The Court instructed the jury, inter alia, as follows: “It is not disputed but that the plaintiff’s wagon was, by leave of the defendants, standing on the railroad switch at the depot at Shelbyville, in the act of receiving freight, subject to removal upon the coming in of the cars ; nor that these cars, on coming in, ran into the wagon and seriously injured it. In this state of the case it was incumbent on the defendants, by some agent or officer, to notify the plaintiff of the approach of the cars, verbally or by some known signal, in time to enable him to remove his wagon by using reasonable diligence and alacrity. If the de
This charge, so far as it relates to the loss of the trip and the loss of the use of the wagon while it was being repaired, is alleged to be erroneous. These items of loss are set forth in the declaration, and are, in our opinion, sustained by the evidence. The charge states, hypothetically, that the injury done to the wagon resulted from the negligence of the plaintiffs’ servants. If this was the case, “ the law will not nicely attempt to limit the amount of reparation.” The compensation should be for the entire damage resulting from such negligence. It is true, remote, uncertain or speculative damages will not be allowed. Nor was the jury, in this case, instructed to give damages of that character. The items of damage referred to, were, no doubt, the immediate consequence of the breaking of the wagon. And it seems to us that the jury, under the evidence in the cause, could have no difficulty in estimating, readily and with precision, what the defendant would have made by the trip in which he was engaged, and what the value of the use of the wagon would have been to him while it was undergoing repair. These damages were not speculative, like the loss of profits, &c.
In the New Haven Steamboat Company v. Vanderbilt, 10 Conn. R. 420, it was decided, in an action to recover damages for injuries done to the plaintiff’s steamboat, Belle, by the defendant’s steamboat, New Haven, “that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, as damages, a reasonable sum for the injuries which the boat had sustained by the conduct complained of, and a reasonable sum for her detention while she was undergoing repair.”
A late decision in the Supreme Court of the United States appears to support the view we have taken. An action was brought by the owners of the steamboat Major Barbour against the owners of the Paul Jones, another
We think the instructions given in the case before us, are unexceptionable.
The judgment is affirmed, with G per cent, damages and costs.