The injuries complained of Avere attributed by the averments of the several counts of the complaint to the fright or shock of the plaintiff (the appellee here) caused by the wrongful conduct of the defendant in his operation of an automobile on a public highway. Just before the occurrence complained of, the plaintiff and her husband had alighted from a buggy, draAvn by a mule, in Avhieh they were traveling Avith their four children. The averments of several of the counts sIioav that the defendant’s conduct in causing the mule to run away Avith the buggy containing two of the plaintiff’s small children-so frightened and unnerved her that she fainted and SAVooned, was made sick and subjected to physical suffering, as AArell as to mental distress and annoyance. It is urged in the argument of the counsel for the appellant that the demurrers to the complaint and the several, counts thereof should have been sustained on the grounds suggesting their failure to show such an actual injury to the plaintiff’s person, reputation, or estate as to furnish a legal support for a claim of damages.
It is not to be doubted that the averments of the complaint show that the conduct of the defendant constituted a breach of duty owing to the plaintiff as a traveler on a public highway. Plainly it was a part of the purpose of the statutory regulations as to the speed of automobiles on public roads and as to their being stopped, upon signal, in certain situations (Code, §§ 6322-6326), to prevent the use of such machines as means of transportation on the public highway from unnecessarily interfering with the rights of other travelers to use such highways in other ways at the same time with safety and without avoidable alarms. The objection urged to the sufficiency of the complaint is based, not upon a claim that it fails to aver a breach by the defendant of a duty owing by him to the plaintiff, but upon the claim that it fails to show that the plaintiff sustained any such damage as is by law required to concur with the wrong complained of to give her a right of action. In this connection, reference is made to the rule prevailing in this state that damages for mental suffering alone, when unaccompanied by any injury to person, reputation, health, or estate, are not recoverable.—Blount v.
When a complaint shows- the concurrence of. the two things ordinarily regarded as sufficient to give .rise to a right of action, namely, a wrong or -breach of duty
Unless we are warranted in saying that we can take - judicial cognizance of it as a matter of common knowledge that real bodily harm cannot, without the intervention of some other independent proximate cause, result from frightening or putting one in terror, we may well refuse to assert it as a legal proposition that fright or terror may not be recognized as a proximate cause of a physical injury, because of not being convinced that the announcement of such a. proposition would not
We do not think that we would he at all justified in affirming that physical injury may not follow a shock caused alone by fright, though the incident occasioning the fright involved no contact with or touching of the person of the victim of the injury. And we know of no legal reason for denying ,>tliát any agenuy-is-Kthe proximate cause of a given' result when it is as a matter of fact; In view of the ruling made in the case of Engel v. Simmons,
If substantial injury can be traced to one’s fright. or shock occasioned by the wrongful conduct of another, it cannot be said that it is legally impossible for the connection between the wrong and the damages claimed on account of it to be as clearly demonstrated by evidence as if the injury had been attributed to the direct application of some exterior force; and the injury sustained may be as palpable as if a bodily blow had been in
In the case of Spade v. Lynn & Boston R. Co.,
The assertion of a rule of nonliability for real bodily harm wrongfully caused by terror or fright, if it is unaccompanied by any physical injury “from without,” or other recognized ground of legal liability, involves the assumption of the existence of a right or power in the courts to withhold redress for an injury caused by another’s wrong whenever the conclusion is warranted that similar claims may be simulated and possibly sustained by untrustworthy evidence of such a character as to be very difficult to combat. If courts had heretofore generally regarded themselves as vested with a power to deny the existence of a right of action on such considerations of policy, it is highly probable that our law pertaining to damages for personal injuries would be very different from what we find it to be today. Often when a claim of damages for such an injury has been based upon some novel or unfamiliar state of facts not heretofore recognized as giving rise to a right of action, the court must have been conscious that its recognition of a right to recover would probably be followed by the assertion by others of similar claims having little merit to support them and dependent for their maintenance upon unsatisfactory and perhaps fabricated evidence. But certainly
It is not deemed necessary to give further consideration to the reasons assigned by different courts to support the conclusion that redress for physical injury resulting from fright or mental shock tortiously caused may be denied in the absence of some other recognized ground for an award of damages. The result of our examination of the authorities on the question under consideration and of the reasons advanced to support the conflicting views of different courts is that we reach the conclusion that the complaint was not subject to demurrer because of its failure to show that the plaintiff sustained any physical injury otherwise than the result of fright or mental shock. We cite some of the rulings which we regard as furnishing support for this conclusion.—Watson v. Dilts,
A witness, though not shown to be an expert, may testify as to the speed of a moving vehicle.—Kansas City, Memphis & B. R. R. Co. v. Crocker,
It was not improper to permit the plaintiff to prove that her two little children were still in the buggy, from which she and her husband had just alighted, when the mule was caused to run away. This fact was part of the situation properly to be taken into account in considering the effect upon the plaintiff of such an occurrence.
The suggestion made in the argument, that the testimony as to the plaintiff’s fainting and becoming sick should have been excluded because such results were disassociated from any direct physical injury inflicted, is disposed of by what already has been said.
Complaint is made of the action of the court in excluding on motion a statement of the defendant’s witness Thirsk that the plaintiff was sitting on the ground. The defendant could not have been prejudiced by this ruling,
The evidence in behalf of the defendant was to the effect that the mule did not run away, and that nothing occurred to cause a hurt to any one about the buggy. The testimony of the plaintiff’s husband, as a witness in rebuttal, as to his being injured by the running away of the mule, had some tendency to rebut evidence offered by the defendant.
It is not suggested in the argument of the counsel that there was error in the refusal to give either of the written charges requested by the defendant except upon the' ground that it raised the question of the plaintiff’s right to recover for fright or mental suffering disassociated from actual injury otherwise caused. As, for reasons already stated, the contention of the appelllant in this regard cannot be sustained, error is not to be imputed, on the ground suggested, to the refusal to give either of the Written charges requested.
Affirmed.
