102 S.E. 11 | S.C. | 1920
January 26, 1920. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The appellant, in its argument, thus states its case:
"It appears that the action was for damages due to personal injury, nervous shock, etc., alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiffs while passengers on a train of the defendant, consisting, among other things, of the Pullman car upon which the plaintiffs were riding.
"Both plaintiffs claiming to have been injured in the same accident and the allegations of negligence being the same in both cases and the defenses the same, the cases were tried together. A verdict of $10,000 was awarded to plaintiff, Mrs. Thompson, and a verdict of $100 was awarded the plaintiff, Mrs. Kellers.
"The allegations of negligence in each case were as follows:
"(a) In failing and omitting to take care to prevent derailment.
"(b) In not adopting the proper safeguards to protect said train and car so that said accident would not have happened. *266
"(c) In causing and allowing said train and car to be derailed.
"The allegation of injury in the case of Mrs. Thompson was as follows:
"`That she was thrown from the place occupied by her, and that she had her infant child in her arms, and that she was thrown with such force and violence against said car that she was rendered unconscious, and her head badly bruised and her side and back fearfully wrenched, jerked, and strained, and was seriously and permanently injured, suffered a fearful and terrible mental and bodily shock, and she was rendered almost a complete nervous wreck by reason of her injuries, and the frightful and awful experiences resulting from her injuries and shock; that plaintiff had only recently come out of a hospital in the city of Washington, where she had been treated for illness, and in consequence was utterly unable to withstand the agonizing and fearful shock to her mental and bodily system by reason of the jolt, jerk, and jar caused by the derailment of said train.'
"The allegations of injury in the case of Mrs. Kellers were:
"`That her right arm was fearfully bruised, jerked, and strained, her back badly wrenched, and her nervous and bodily system frightfully shocked and injured, she was seriously and permanently injured and (that she) was rendered an almost complete nervous wreck by reason of her injuries, and the frightful and awful experiences resulting from her injuries and shock, and will be otherwise injured.'
"Argument. Coming directly to the consideration of the first exception which complains of the ruling of the Court in permitting a question to be asked Dr. A.E. Baker, physician of the plaintiff, with reference to a serious physical condition from which the plaintiff had suffered, not set out in the complaint, and entirely different from any allegation of injury therein complained" *267
1. The testimony of Dr. Baker referred to the "mental and bodily" injury of Mrs. Thompson, which was the result of the injury. It included the loss of an unborn child, which was not the subject of the action. The testimony tended to prove the extent of the plaintiff's injuries and was competent. The testimony tended to show that the injuries caused the premature birth, and the premature birth was cause of the permanent injuries, i. e., the wreck was the proximate cause of the plaintiff's injuries. The testimony was competent, and this exception is overruled.
2. The appellant thus states the second question:
"The second exception assigns error in overruling the motion of the defendant, railroad company, having nonsuit made upon the ground that there was a total failure of evidence to support the allegation of negligence and specifications thereof alleged in the complaint."
When a passenger is injured by an instrumentality of the common carrier, there is a presumption of negligence. How much testimony is necessary to overcome this presumption is a question of fact for the jury.McLeod v. Railroad Co.,
Mrs. Thompson, one of the plaintiffs, said, "What is the matter with this train; it rocked and pitched all night?" Did it rock and pitch all night? Mrs. Thompson was in the drawing room of a Pullman. Would a man of ordinary prudence, who was exercising due care, know that something was wrong when the Pullman rocked and pitched all night? If the jury thought so, then there was evidence from which the jury could infer negligence, independent of the presumption. The appellant says it did everything that it could have done, in that it made inspection after inspection and found only one thing wrong, to wit, two new brake shoes were needed for the "Judsonia" (the car in which the plaintiff was injured). These were supplied. The witness *268 did not know how long a brake shoe would last. So it seems that the brake shoes that needed replacing had passed several inspections, unless they had worn to the danger point after leaving the initial terminal. There was no evidence to show that this defect developed after the car passed the other inspection. The appellant places much reliance on the testimony of an expert who states that he examined the wreck and in his judgment the cause of the accident was a broken bolt, and that the broken bolt was so placed that the most careful and expert inspection would not have revealed the defect; that the defect was a latent defect for which the carrier was not liable.
The jury is not bound to take the opinion of an expert witness.
This Court cannot say as a matter of law that the mere opinion of an expert witness is sufficient to overcome the presumption of negligence. This witness did not see the car until after the accident. Can even an expert tell, by looking at a wreck, what bolts were broken before the accident and what bolts were broken by the accident? That was a question for the jury, and this exception is overruled.
What has been said applies to the third exception, and the third exception is overruled.
3. The fourth exception complains that the verdict is against the manifest weight of the testimony. More than one inference can be drawn from the testimony, and this Court has no jurisdiction to pass upon the manifest weight of the testimony, nor to disturb the verdict, because it may be greater than the Court may think proper.
The fifth exception is withdrawn.
4. The sixth exception is:
"`I charge you that, if you conclude from the evidence in this case that the consideration paid for these releases was so out of proportion to the injuries received as to shock the *269 conscience of a reasonable person, under those circumstances it would release them and would not hold them bound by it, but that depends on the extent of the injuries that was caused by the Atlantic Coast Line Railroad Company; if the injuries were slight and reasonably in keeping with the amount paid for the release and they were willing to settle for that amount, why they would be bound by it.'
"The error being that this constituted a direction that the release was invalid, if the amount paid was not reasonably in keeping with the injuries received.
"Whereas, inadequacy of compensation is not ground for setting aside a release obtained without fraud, coercion, or misrepresentation."
His Honor charged as follows:
"If these releases were signed and the parties who signed them knew what they were doing, and did it freely and voluntarily, based on the belief that they were only slightly injured, and did it in good faith, why then they could not recover. But if they were induced to sign these releases by fraud, coercion, or misrepresentation, not knowing or understanding what they were doing, and were persuaded to sign these releases, they would not be bound because fraud vitiates."
Thus his Honor charged that, not mere inadequacy of consideration, nor after developed facts, would destroy the release, but that fraud was necessary, and he charged that both before and after the charge complained of.
There was testimony in the case from which the jury might have inferred that the ladies were not in a condition to know what they were doing. A mother with her children and aunt are fastened in the drawing room of a Pullman car. The car is turned over on its side; the door will not open; there is a cry made that they may burn up if the car takes fire before they can get out; they find it necessary to break open a window, through which they are taken to safety; the negro porter, by whose heroism the sick baby is *270 taken out, collapses from his own injuries; the mother, the plaintiff, is wounded on the head and shows a mark as big as a "lemon" — and all the other circumstances connected with the accident were before the jury.
The issue was properly submitted, and the charge was not misleading, taken as a whole.
This exception is overruled.
5. His Honor directed a verdict in favor of the Pullman Company, and this is the basis of the last exception.
The appellant cannot complain as its own witnesses testified that it was the duty of the railroad company to inspect and repair the running gear of the Pullman cars while in use. There was no suggestion that the Pullman Company was responsible for the roadbed. This exception is overruled.
The judgment is affirmed.