188 Mo. 581 | Mo. | 1905
This is an appeal by tbe defendant from a judgment of tbe circuit court of St. Charles county in favor of the plaintiff for tbe sum of $15,000, in an action for damages for personal injuries caused by a'collision of two of defendant’s cars, on one of wbicb be was a passenger, in wbicb tbe only error assigned is th,at tbe verdict of tbe jury upon wbicb tbe judgment was rendered is grossly excessive.
Plaintiff was injured on tbe 28th of July, 1901, and tbe trial was on December 10, 1902. It appears from tbe evidence that at tbe time of tbe collision tbe plaintiff was about eighteen years and six months old; that be was a barber by trade; that be was working for three dollars a week, bis board and washing; that directly after bis injury be was taken to a hospital and remained there under surgical treatment for eleven months. The hospital charges were $5 a week, and tbe charges for surgical and medical service were $500. Dr. Lutz, the physician who attended him in tbe hospital and who was introduced by tbe plaintiff, testified as follows as to tbe character and extent of bis injuries:
• “Q. Doctor, did you ever have occasion to treat tbe plaintiff, John Stolze? A. Yes, sir; I treated him for fractures of both legs.
“Q. Describe to tbe jury tbe fractures you found on bis legs? A. Well, be bad on the right leg an open compound fracture, and on tbe left leg be suffered from a compound comminuted fracture; that means that tbe bone was broken into several pieces on tbe left leg.
“Q. Do you remember whether tbe bones of tbe right leg came out? A. No; they did not, but there was an opening through tbe skin, wbicb constituted a compound or open fracture, but on tbe left leg tbe bones protruded through tbe skin.
“Q. But I mean since, in tbe healing process, have bones come out of both legs? A. Well, I wouldn’t like to say positively about tbe right leg, but a part of tbe bone died on tbe left leg and came out since.
- “A. He suffered a very considerablé amount of pain, as is ordinary in cases of fracture of that character ; suffered very considerable pain, for which it was necessary to administer anodynes, more particularly in the shape of morphine.
‘ ‘ Q. How long did these teen or agonizing pains continue? A. For several months.
“Q. Doctor, as a result of these injuries, how is his left limb affected as to its length? A. It’s shorter, I judge, say, an inch and a quarter, perhaps a little more; it’s fully that much shorter. ...
“Q. Is there any use or flexibility of the ankle? A. The ankle is, as we call it, anchylosed, which means stiffened and almost immobile; it can hardly be moved.
. “Q. He says his wound was open within a week; what do you attribute that fact to? A. That some part of the bone is still being cast off — still inflamed, and is being thrown out by nature.,
“Q. Will there ever be a time when he can use that foot, in your opinion? A. I think so; I think it will continue to improve. -
“Q. What do you say about his recovering the entire use of it?
“The Court: Speaking of the left leg?
“Mr. Taylor: Yes, sir; the left leg.
“A. The entire use of it, as compared with the limb if it had not been injured; of course, his leg will never be better than it was before it was hurt, but I imagine that, with the course of time, the function, the use of the limb for practical purposes, will be restored; I don’t wish that to mean that it will ever be like it would have been had it never been hurt. . . .
“Q. This anchylosis, will that continue? A. I think, as a result of use, experience, it will improve, but I don’t think it will ever be as supple and movable as a normal limb; I think the nature of the wound pre
On cross-examination the doctor testified, in substance, that the leg would improve so that he could walk on it without cane or crutches, but that it would be weaker than a normal leg and sensitive to changes in atmospheric conditions, and that he would never be able to jump or run actively on it.
Ur. Stumberg, called for the defendant, testified as follows:
“Q. State to the jury'how you came to examine the leg? A. The young man came into the office of Ur. Mudd and myself, and Mr. Taylor came with him, and they asked me to examine the leg; Ur. Mudd came in and we examined the leg.
‘ ‘ Q. Now from your examination of that leg, what would you say in regard to this young man regaining the use of that leg? A. Well, I found in the case a compound fracture in the right leg, which has entirely recovered, that’s good cure; the left leg was — he had sustained a compound and comminuted fracture with the bones protruding, and the recovery in such a case is very slow; some of the bones I guess have come out; there is still a slight opening; the process of healing, however, has so far proceeded that the union now is formed.
‘ ‘ Q. What do you say in regard to that young man regaining the use of the leg so he can walk on it? A. Well, there is some shortening butthe use willbe pretty fair; he will be able to support his body on it and the shortening is not so great.
“Q. In what time will he be able to walk on it? A. I think in a year or so, perhaps in less; the full use of the leg will not be regained, however, for maybe longer than that, maybe two years.’
“„Q. In what time do you think that young man will regain full use of his leg for all practical purposes, to walk on and use the leg in a useful manner?
On cross-examination:
“Q. Didn’t you, when you examined the boy, tell him you didn’t think he would be able to use his foot for about four years or five? A. I might have said four years; I want to he perfectly fair, and it’s hard to tell exactly; nature will sometimes in a young and healthy man do wonders in two years, and sometimes it might take a little longer.
“Q. When you say it will he restored to use, you mean by that he can.make use of it to bear his weight on it and walk some? A. Yes, sir.
‘ ‘ Q. He will never be able to run or jump actively with that foot as long as he lives? A. No, sir; it will never be as good as it was before.”
Dr. Mudd, also called for the defendant, testified as follows:
“Q. Did you have occasion to examine the limb of this young man Stolze, the leg? A. I saw his leg; yes, sir.
‘ ‘ Q. What would you say in regard to that young man regaining the use of that leg for all practical purposes? A. Well, I would judge that he would in time, in the course of a few years, would gain sufficient strength for practical purposes.
“Q. To walk on ? A. To walk on; yes, sir; I think there will always be a slight limp, a shortening there that will cause a limp, but that will even improve; the pelvis will adjust itself so as to do away with the shortening-to a great extent.
“Q. Doctor, the ankle of this young man’s leg wasn’t injured, I mean the ankle joint? A. I don’t think the fracture, as we could discover it, involved the joint.
“Q. The leg was broken up here? A. Up above the joint.
“Q. Would the disuse of that joint bring about the stiffening? A. Tes, sir, to a certain extent it would.
“Q. By the use of the ankle after the bone had thoroughly healed will the ankle regain its normal functions? A. That will improve; yes, sir; it will improve.”
Cross-examination by Mr. Taylor:
“Q. This leg is still discharging broken bone according to the testimony? A. Tes.
“Q. Could you tell from any observation you made when that will cease the discharge of the bone? A. It would be very hard to tell exactly when it will cease, but judging from the external parts there’s but small portions remaining to tje discharged; there could not be any large surface there, it would show a greater opening. ”
Redirect examination by Mr. Bruere:
“Q. Doctor, the foot of this young man will never be deformed any way, will it? A. I hardly think so.
“Q. The foot itself wasn’t injured, was it? A. No, sir; the foot wasn’t injured at all.”
The plaintiff testified that he started to work at his trade when he was fourteen years old; that he can walk a step or two on his left leg; that it hurts when he steps on it; that it is nearly two. inches shorter than the other leg; that the ankle is stiff; that some bone came out of the right leg and that it is bent; that he suffered intensely for three or four months, when the pain got easier; that he suffers pain in both legs in cloudy and damp weather; that he never was sick in his' life; is healthy and weighs 174 pounds; can use his
At the request of the plaintiff the court instructed the jury as follows:
' “If the jury find for the plaintiff they should assess his damages at such sum as they believe from the evidence will be a fair compensation to him:
“1st. For any pain of body or mind which the jury may believe from the evidence he has sustained or will hereafter sustain by reason of his injuries and directly caused thereby;
“2d. For any loss of th§ earnings of his labor which the jury may believe from the evidence the plaintiff has sustained or will hereafter sustain by reason of his said injuries and directly caused thereby;
“3d. For any expenses necessarily incurred for medical or surgical attention and nursing, which the jury may believe from the evidence the plaintiff has incurred or will hereafter incur by reason of said injuries and directly caused thereby.” •
Under the third paragraph of the instruction, the jury might well have assessed the plaintiff’s damages at $735; $235 for hospital expenses, and $500 for surgical and medical service. Under the second, the assessment could not have well exceeded $2,160, or $40 a month for four years and a half, that period including one year and a half from the date of the accident to the date of the trial and three years thereafter; by which time, as the evidence tends strongly to prove, he would have been so restored as to be able to return regularly to work at his trade. So that, making the most liberal calculation in favor of the plaintiff, the jury could not well have allowed him more than $3,000 under these two paragraphs of the instruction, and the remaining $12,000 of the verdict must have been given under the first paragraph. After analyzing this evidence and again examining the long line of precedents on this subject, many of which are cited