61 Mo. App. 586 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
—The plaintiff, a girl fourteen years old, was, in August, 1891, residing with her parents near a flag station on defendant’s road, called Doran Switch, some ten miles west of Warrensburg, Missouri. In her petition she complains:
“That on the afternoon of the first day of August, 1891, she became and was a passenger upon one of the defendant’s passenger trains on the line of its railroad, as aforesaid, from the town of Warrensburg, in the county of Johnson, to Doran Switch, in said county,*590 and paid to the officer and agent of said company all the charges required of her for such passage. That notwithstanding the premises the defendant wrongfully, wantonly and without any just cause or excuse, did not stop said train at Doran Switch, as it was its duty to have done, but stopped its said train a mile and a quarter from said switch and then invited this plaintiff to alight therefrom, assuring her that it was only a short distance to the place of her destination. That the place in which she was left was unfrequented, and that she was compelled to travel the distance of a mile and a quarter afoot, back to the said Doran Switch; that she was unaccustomed to endure the fatigue or perform said journey afoot; and that at her tender age, and being left in an unfrequented place, she became greatly frightened and subjected to great peril of being assaulted by viciously disposed persons accustomed to travel up and down defendant’s railway track, commonly called tramps. And that by reason of all the premises and by reason of being so greatly frightened, she was prostrated physically for a long time thereafter and suffered great distress of mind and body, to her damage in the sum of $1,000, for which she prays judgment.”
The answer was a general denial coupled with a plea of contributory negligence.
A jury was waived and the trial judge found the facts substantally as declared in the petition, to wit: that on the afternoon of August 1, 1891, the plaintiff boarded Qne of the defendant’s passenger trains at Warrens-burg, and paid to the conductor the regular fare to Doran Switch, ten miles west, where such train was accustomed to stop when its business required. The conductor carelessly permitted the. train to pass the station without stopping; but at a point a mile and a quarter west of Doran, the Uain was stopped and plain-
The trial court found for the plaintiff, assessing her damages at $600, and defendant has appealed.
A careful reading of the evidence adduced at the trial of this cause and the court’s finding of facts thereon, has impressed us that the plaintiff has a.meritorious case. On the facts found by the trial judge, she ought clearly to recover. The plaintiff engaged the defendant to carry her from Warrensburgto Doran. It failed to perform this duty, negligently carried the plaintiff beyond her destination, and, against her will,
We must, however, reverse • the .judgment and remand the case, because of the court’s action in considering as an element of damage the mental distress and fright of the plaintiff which she experienced after leaving the train. It seems to be the settled law that mental anguish, distress of mind, or fright, unaccompanied with physical or bodily injury, affords no ground of action. Wood’s Mayne on Damages, p. 74 (note); Pierce on Railroads, 302; Trigg v. Railroad, 74 Mo. 147; Connell v. Telegraph Co., 116 Mo. 34, and other authorities cited in defendant’s brief..
A few brief quotations from the books illustrate the character of the decisions. Our supreme court has said: “The general rule is that pain of mind, when connected with bodily injury, is the subject of damages; but it must be so connected in order to be included in the estimate.” Trigg v. Railroad, supra.
In Connell v. Telegraph Co., supra, the question in the case was thus stated: “Where a telegraph company is advised by the contents of a message that great mental suffering and pain will naturally result from its neglect to transmit and deliver the message promptly, can damages be recovered by the sendee for such mental agony and distress caused by a failure to promptly transmit and deliver?” The quaere was answered in'the negative, the court announcing: “That an action for mental anguish, disconnected with physical injury, for the breach of a contract, could not be maintained at common law, with the single exception of the breach of a marriage contract, we think is abundantly established.” The court, after reviewing the decided cases in extenso, concludes that, “we find in none of them any reason for adopting the rule that for the mere negligent failure to comply with a con
In the ease just cited, the right to recover other actual damages for .the breach of contract to carry and deliver the message was conceded, but it was held that the mental distress flowing from the failure to deliver the telegram could. not be considered in assessing plaintiff’s damages. So, too, in the Trigg case, the supreme court conceded the plaintiff’s right to recover for the inconvenience, loss of time, labor and expense of traveling back to the station where she should have been permitted to leave the train, but denied the right to include in the damages the anxiety and suspense- of mind suffered, etc.
The reason, as generally stated, for the rule excluding fright or mental distress of any kind in the measure of damages, except when accompanied by actual physical injury, is that such a doctrine is an innovation' upon long-established and well-understood principles of law; that the difficulty of estimating the proper pecuniary compensation for mental distress is so great, its elements so vague, shadowy and easily simulated, and the new field of litigation thus opened up so vast, that the courts should not establish such a rule. And it would seem quite clear that if the fright or distress of mind, unattended by bodily injury, can not be made the basis of recovery, then of course the effects thereof can not be. It was so declared in Trigg v. Railroad, supra.
Without further comment, then, we must hold that for the fright and mental distress which the plaintiff experienced in traveling back to Doran, after leaving the train, and whatever effects may be attributable to such fright or' mental suffering, should be excluded
The judgment, then, will be reversed and cause remanded.-