115 Ark. 483 | Ark. | 1914
J. T. Craft, as administrator of the estate of Tom Craft, deceased, sued the St. Louis, Iron Mountain & Southern Railway Company under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act for damages for personal injuries sustained by the decedent which resulted in his death.
On the 16th day of February, 1913, plaintiff’s decedent, while a brakeman in the employment of the defendant railway company, was negligently run over in the night time by a coal car. He lived for something over thirty minutes, and suffered great agony. At the time he was injured he was twenty-three years of age and made material contributions to the support of his father, J. T. •Craft. The jury found for the plaintiff in the sum of $11,000 as damages for decedent’s pain and suffering, and $1,000 as damages for contributions to his father. Judgment was entered upon the verdict and defendant has appealed from so much of the judgment of the circuit court as awarded to the plaintiff the sum of $11,000 for pain Und suffering.
We adhere to the decisions there given for the reasons stated in those opinions, and it would be useless to enter again into a discussion of the subject. Moreover, the defendant has only appealed from that part of the judgment which permitted a recovery for decedent’s pain and suffering, and is in no attitude to complain of an issue not raised by the appeal. No doubt any dissatisfaction that the defendant felt on account of the action in behalf of the next of kin was assuaged by the verdict of the jury, and, not having taken an appeal from that part of the judgment, it is now in no attitude to complain of it.
It is, however, earnestly insisted by counsel for the defendant that there is no evidence which would warrant a verdict against it for pain and suffering. We do not agree with them in that contention. The deceased was run over, in the night time, by a coal car of the defendant, and was found lying face downward between the rails. The car at the time it struck decedent was only going at a moderate rate of speed, and did not entirely pass over his body. Other employees of the defendant heard him cry out when the car struck him, and immediately went to where he was. The car had pinned his body down between the rails, and it was first necessary to raise it ■off his body. Decedent could not even then be removed from under the ear until it had been pushed forward several feet. All this required about fifteen minutes’ time and fifteen minutes more elapsed before the ambulance arrived and decedent was then sent to the hospital. At what time he died is not certain, but it is certain that he was alive when they started to the hospital, and that this was a period of thirty minutes after he had been struck by the car. His body was badly mangled and his intestines lacerated, and very much swollen. All of the witnesses say that he. was groaning during all the time they were trying to remove his body from under the car and until he was carried away in the ambulance. One of the witnesses stated that when he took hold of the decedent and tried to remove him from under the car, the decedent would move his arms, and also tried to move his body. His companions spoke to him, but he did not answer them.
It is next contended by counsel for the defendant that a verdict for $11,000 was excessive, and in this respect we think their contention is correct. In the case of Aluminum Company of North America v. Ramsey, 89 Ark. 522, we said: “It has been frequently said that it is difficult to find a measure of damages for pain, for the obvious reason that none would be an acceptable inducement to suffer it; but when it has occurred, the compensation as such must be considered upon a reasonable basis of estimate. Under our system of jurisprudence, the amount of damages must be left largely to the reasonable discretion of the jury. Again, we may say, it has been repeatedly held that they may not give any amount they please. ’ ’ Though there should be some similarity in the award of damages for like injuries, still there is no exact rule for the measurement of damages, and the facts of each case must be the basis on which the amount is predicated. If decedent suffered conscious pain (and we have already said that the jury were warranted in finding that he did), it is almost impossible to describe the terrible injuries which he sustained and the untold agony and suffering which he endured. We have never intended to fix by rule specific sums for different degrees and variations of anguish and suffering. Each case must be decided on its own merits with a due regard to the observance of reasonable uniformity, taking into consideration the peculiar facts in the case.
Therefore, the judgment will be reduced to $5,000, and for that amount will be affirmed.