111 Cal. 668 | Cal. | 1896
The plaintiff, Annie L. Sloane, purchased a ticket April 8, 1894, from the agent of the defendant, at North Pomona, for passage from that place to San Diego, and on the same day took passage upon the regular passenger train of the defendant. Before reaching San Bernardino the conductor of the train took up her ticket, without giving her any check or other
It is contended by the appellant that, as the plaintiff left the car at East Riverside, in accordance with the previous directions of the conductor, and no personal violence was used or displayed toward her, her only right of action is for a breach of the defendant’s contract to carry her to San Diego, and that the extent of her recovery therefor is the price paid for the second ticket, and a reasonable compensation for the loss of ¡ime sustained by her. The plaintiff’s right of action against the defendant is not, however, limited to' the breach of its contract to carry her to San Diego, but includes full redress for the wrongs sustained by her by reason of the defendant’s violation of the obligations which it assumed in entering into such contract. If she was wrongfully prevented by the defendant from
In her testimony regarding her exclusion from the cars the plaintiff recounted the interview between her
Evidence was given at the trial'tending to show that Mrs. Sloane had been previously subject to insomnia, and also to nervous shocks and paroxysms, and that, owing to her physical condition, she was subject to a recurrence of these shocks or nervous disorder if placed under any great mental excitement, and that by reason of the excitement caused by her exclusion from the car there had been a recurrence of insomnia and of these paroxysms. The court instructed the jury that, if they found for the plaintiff, “in assessing damages, if it appears from the evidence that the plaintiff Annie L» tiloane was wrongfully deprived of her right to ride on defendant’s cars, and expelled therefrom in a manner, and under circumstances, calculated to inflict, and which did inflict, feelings of indignity and insult, the jury is authorized to consider, under the evidence, the injured feelings of the plaintiff, the indignity endured, her mental suffering, the humiliation and wounded pride which one in her condition of life and standing in the community would experience, together with any bodily liarm, or sxiffering occasioned, and to award such an amount for damages as will compensate her for such humiliation, suffering, and other detriment.” The jxxry were not specially instructed with reference to any
Counsel for the appellant has discussed in his brief ¿he want of liability on the part of the defendant for any damages for mental suffering, and has cited many authorities in support of the proposition that mere menial anxiety, unaccompanied with bodily injury or apprehended peril, does not afford a right of action. To tho extent that the term “mental suffering” is included in 1 lie above instruction, this proposition is inapplicable. The term, as there used, is to be construed with reference to the context in which it occurs. The " mental suffering” there named Is not the mental anguish or pain referred to in the above proposition cited by the appellant, but is the menial experience which is concomitant with the insult, indignity, and humiliation named in the instruction. It would he a contradiction of terms to hold that the individual whose pride had been humiliated, or whose dignity had been insulted, had no mental suffering in connection therewith, or that this humiliation and insult did not of themselves constitute mental suffering; that he could have redress for the injured pride, but not for the mental suffering
^The real question presented" by the objections and exception of the appellant is, whether tlio subsequent nervous disturbance of the plaintiff was a suffering of the body .or of the mind. The'.'interdependence of the mind and body is in many respects so close that it is impossible to distinguish their respective influence upon euen other. It must be conceded that a nervous'shock or paroxysm, or a disturbance of the nervous system, is distinct from mental anguish, and falls within the physiological, rather than the psychological, branch.of the human" organism. /It is a matter of general knowledge that an attack of sutMeh fright or an exposure to imminent peril has produced in individuals a complete change in their nervous system, and rendered one who was physically strong and vigorous weak and timid. Such a result must he regarded as an injury to the body rather than to the mind, even though the mind be at the same time injuriously affected. Whatever may be the influence by which the nervous system is affected, its action under that influence is entirely distinct from I tie mental process which is set in motion by the brain. Vhe nerves and nerve centers of the body aro a part of .the physical system, and are not only susceptible of ivsion from external causes, hut are also liable to be weakened and destroyed from “causes primarily acting upon the mind. If these nerves or the entire nervous system is thus affected, there is a physical injury thereby produced, and, if the primal cause of this injury is tortious, it is immaterial whether it is direct, as by a blow, or indirect through some action upon the min57\ This subject received, a very careful and elaborate consideration in the case of Bell v. Great Northern Ry. Co., L. R. 26 Ir. 428. Mrs. Bell was a passenger upon one of the defendant’s trains, and by reason of the defendant’s negligence in the management of its train
“ It is admitted that as the negligence caused fright, if the fright contemporaneously caused physical injury, the damage would not be too remote. The distinction insisted upon is one of time only. The proposition is that, although if an act of negligence produces such an effect upon particular structures of the body as at the moment to afford palpable evidence of physical injury, the relation of proximate cause and effect exists between such negligence and the injury, yet such relation cannot in law exist in the case of a similar act producing upon the same structures an effect which, at a subsequent time—say a week, a fortnight, or a month •—must result .without any intervening canse in the same physical injury. As well might it be said that a death caused by poison is not-to be attributed to the p,-r-*682 soil who administered it, because the mortal effect is not produced contemporaneously with its administration”; and at the close of his opinion Lord Chief Baron Palles says: “In conclusion, I am of the opinion that, as the relation between fright and injury to the uer.ye and brain structures of the body is a matter which depends entirely upon scientific and medical testimony, it is impossible for any court to lay down as a matter of law that if negligence cause fright, and such fright in its turn so affect such structures as to cause injury to health, such injury cannot be a consequence which, in the ordinary course of things, would flow from the negligence, unless such injury accompanied such negligence in point of time.”
This case is quoted at great length and with approval in the eighth edition of Mr. Sedgwick’s treatise on Damages, section 860. Mr. Seven, in the recent edition of his work on Negligence, volume 1, pages 77-81, also comments upon it with great approval. In Purcell v. St. Paul City Ry. Co., 48 Minn. 134, t-he defendant so negligently managed one of its cars that a collision with an approaching cable car seemed imminent, and was so nearly caused that the attendant confusion of ringing alarm bells, and of passengers rushing out, produced in the plaintiff, who was a passenger on the car, a sudden fright which threw her into convulsions, and, she being then pregnant, caused in her a miscarriage and subsequent illness. The court held that the defendant’s negligence was the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injury, and that it was liable therefor, even though the immediate result of the negligence was only fright, saying: “A mental shock or disturbance sometimes causes injury or illness of body, especially of the nervous system.” (See, also, Canning v. Williamstown, 1 Cush, 451; Seger v. Barkhampsted, 22 Conn. 290; Mann Boudoir Car Co. v. Dupre, 54 Fed. Rep. 646; Stutz v. Chicago etc. Ry. Co., 73 Wis. 147; 9 Am. St. Rep. 769; Razzov. Varni, 81 Cal. 289.) “It is a physical injury to the person to be thrown out of a wagon, or to be compelled
Tiie mental condition which superinduced the Iw lily harm in the foregoing cases ,'."v.s fright, but the character of the mental excitation by which the injury to the body is produced is immivterid. If it can be established that the bodily harm is the direct result of the condition, without any intervening cause, it must be held that the act which caused the condition set in motion the agencies by which the injury was produced, and is the proximate cause of such injury. Whether the indignity and humiliation suffered by Mrs. Sloane caused the nervous paroxysm, and the injury to her health from which she subsequently suffered, was a question of fact to be determined by the jury. There was evidence before them tending to establish such fact, and if they were satisfied from that evidence that these results were directly traceable to that cause, and that her expulsion from the car had produced in her such a disturbance of her nervous system as resulted in these paroxysms, they were authorized to include in their verdict whatever •> unge she had thus snslmuod.
Whether the defendant or its agents know of her susceptibility to nervous disturbance was immaterial. She had the same rights as any other person who might become a passenger on its road, and was entitled to as high degree of care on its part. It was not necessary that this injury should have been anticipated in order to entitle her to a recovery therefor. (Civ. Code, see. 3333.) If the facts under which she was excluded from the car would be an act of negligence on the part of the defendant as to any and all persons, whoever might sustain injury by such act would be entitled to recover to the full extent of his injury,' irrespective of his previous physical condition or susceptibility to harm. In Baltimore City R. R. Co. v. Kemp, 61 Md. 74, 619, 48 Am. Rep. 134, the plaintiff was injured upon a car of the defendant, and thereafter a cancer developed itself upon
The court properly left to the jury to determine whether Mrs. Sloane exercised reasonable prudence in undertaking the walk from. East Riverside to Colton, and, if so, that the injury sustained by her was a proper element of damage to be recovered. It could not say as matter of law, or instruct the jury, that under the evidence before them such walk was or was not necessary, or whether the route selected by her was the most feasible; nor would it have been justified in directing them not to allow compensation for any injury sustained by the walk, upon the ground that if she had waited a,few hours she could have gone upon the cars. (Malone v. Pittsburg etc. R. R., 152 Pa. St. 390.)
The refusal of the court to strike out certain portions of the complaint as irrelevant is not a ground for reversal of the judgment. The matter embraced therein was relevant to the plaintiffs’ right of recovery, and ' they were justified in setting forth in their complaint the several acts of the defendant which constituted the wrong for which they sought redress. The defendant
The demurrer to the complaint was properly overruled. The cause of action set forth -therein is neither ambiguous nor uncertain.. It clearly states a single ground of recovery, viz., the unlawful violation by tli defendant of the obligation it had assumed to carry Mr:. Sloane to San Diego; and although the damages cause to her by this violation of its obligation were made up of the injuries to her person, as well as the money paid by her as the consideration of this obligation, they all resulted from the wrong committed by the defendant. It was necessary that she should point out the particulars in which she had sustained injuries from the defendant—the humiliation, injuries to her health, etc.— in order that evidence thereof might be given at tlio trial,.and also that the defendant might be prepared to meet" such evidence; but it .was not necessary that she should designate the particular amount of damage which she had sustained by reason of the indignity that she had been compelled to undergo, distinct from the amount sustained from the injury to her- health. Those elements of damage were not capable of computation, nor would evidence of such amount have been admissible. This amount was to be determined by the jury in the exercise of an intelligent discretion.
Neither does the action of the court in striking out a portion of the defendant’s answer justifjr a reversal of the judgment. The denial of an allegation in the complaint for want of sufficient information and belief to enable the defendant to answer the same, justifies the court in disregarding or striking out such denial, if the matter is presumptively within the knowledge of the defendant; and although a corporation does not itself have any knowledge of the matters alleged, but is compelled
In the present case it moreover clearly appears that the defendant was not prejudiced by the action of the court. In a separate defense to the action, the defendant directly alleged many of the facts which, in the portion of the answer thus struck out, it had denied for want of information and belief, and although an admission in one defense is not available as against a denial in another, it is competent for the court to consider such admission, for the purpose of determining whether the answer containing the denial is sham or evasive. After the ruling of the court the defendant amended its answer by directly denying the matters alleged in one of the paragraphs which the court held had beeii insufficiently denied, and at the trial it stipulated to the truth of the matters that had been denied by it in another of the paragraphs which was stricken out. The defendant, was, therefore, not precluded from defending the action in any particular upon which it relied. After a cause has been tried upon its merits, a ruling, of the court, either in striking out, or in refusing to strike out, a portion of a pleading, will not justify a reversal of the judgment, if it appears that the party against whom the ruling was made has not been prejudiced thereby, and has been able to present to the court his entire cause of action or defense. Mere technical error, unaccompanied by injury, will be. disregarded. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 475.)
The court did not err in its instructions to the jury respecting the measure of care which a railroad company must exercise towards its passengers. (Rorer on Railroads, 951; Georgia R. R. v. Homer, 73 Ga. 251.) The passenger is not required to question the action of
We are of the opinion, however, that the damages allowed by the jury were excessive, and not justified by the evidence. They were properly told that they could not award the plaintiff, exemplary damages, but only such as would be a full and fair compensation to her for the injury and detriment she had suffered' as the proximate results of the defendant’s wrongful acts. The testimony tending to show that the conductor was rude and insulting in directing her to leave the train at East Riverside is quite meager, and consists more of her statement of its character than of the language used by him. The jury were instructed that, in estimating the amount of damages she could recover by reason of the humiliation in being excluded from the car, they were not at liberty to consider her peculiar nervous temperament, but to allow only such damages as would hhve resulted to a person of ordinary or usual temperament. So, too, the evidence concerning the effect of this expulsion from the car upon heiqnervous condition consists more of general statements than of details, and it does not appear that this effect was of more than brief duration. She does not claim to have sustained any direct physical injury by reason of the walk to Colton.- She testifies, as do also her husband and Dr. Averill, that, except for her nervous condition, she was in fair health, and that she was abundantly able to take a walk of two or three miles, and it is not suggested that the walk had any effect upon her nervous condition, or that she suffered any direct inconvenience therefrom after her return from San Diego. The walk itself was not attended with
The judgment and order denying a new trial are reversed, unless the plaintiffs shall, within thirty days after the filing of the remittitur in the superior court, file with the clerk, and give to the defendant, a stipulation remitting from the judgment the sum of one thousand dollars. If such stipulation be so filed and delivered» the superior court is directed to amend the judgment in conformity therewith, and thereupon the judgment and order shall stand affirmed.
Van Fleet, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.