15 Mo. App. 492 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1884
delivered the opinion of the court.
This cause was before the court at a former term (13 Mo. App. 89), and we reversed the judgment of the circuit court on the ground that the jury had awarded nominal damages only, whereas the evidence showed that a very substantial injury had been suffered. On the trial in the circuit court, from which this appeal has been taken, the plaintiff had a verdict and judgment for $500. We are asked to reverse this judgment on the ground that the court erred: 1. In refusing an instruction for a non-suit at the close of the plaintiff’s case. 2. In submitting the question of permanent injury to the jury. 3. In refusing to grant a new trial on the ground of excessive damages.
I. On the first point, it seems to us that the plaintiff submitted substantial evidence sufficient to take her case to the jury. Her husband and co-plaintiff, John Welch, testified as follows: “ On the 22d of March, 1881, my wife and I went into the defendant’s pork house at Nos. 9 and 11 South Eleventh Street, in the city, to buy a smoked shoulder. We had been buying meat there for two years, about once a month. When we went in the defendant’s foreman, Stephenson, was sitting near the door. We had bought meat from him a number of times before. I told him we wanted a smoked shoulder. He said they were out of smoked shoulders, but they had some green ones. There was a big lot of fresh ones on the north side of the room,
On cross-examination he said: “ He went to look at green shoulders; that .the building was fifty feet wide, fronting on the west side of Eleventh Street, by a depth of one hundred feet; that the building was lighted by an eight by twelve feet door and two windows in front, and by a six by twelve feet door and seven windows on the south side of the building; that the door and windows on the south side opened on to an alley; that there was a shed on the north side, of the building, so that very little, if any, light came from that side; that the hatchway was about midway of the building, and immediately in front of a window; that the hatchway was extended down to the cellar and up to the third story; that it was open up as well as down, and that opposite each opening was a window; that he did not know whether or not the hatchway was the lightest part of the building; that he did not request his wife to come into the building, and did not know that she was coming back in the building until he heard her make a noise just before he saw her fall into the hatch; that the accident occurred on a
The plaintiff, Mrs. Welch, testified: “ That on the day of the accident she walked into defendant’s store and fell through the floor. My husband and I went there to buy some meat, as we had- been doing for several years. He asked the foreman for a smoked shoulder, and he said they had none, but talked about salted shoulders, and said he would show them to us. Then we all started back. I never was back there before. I was behind. When I was near these shoulders, all at once I stepped right off into this hole. I shrieked, and then I did not know any more until I was on the street. There was no guard or protection about this hole at all. I did not see it until I fell into it. It was dark there. We had bought meat from this same foreman at that store before.”
On cross-examination she said : “ That she did not know that the hatchway was the lightest part in defendant’s pork house, as she could not see back in there, as it was dark; that she was not invited, requested, or commanded to go into the defendant’s pork house on the day of the accident by her husband, defendant’s foreman, or any other person ; that she did not see any window right in front of the hatchway, or any window in the second story, or any window in the third story, through which the light was shining brightly * that her feet slipped forward from the south side of the hatchway towards it, and that she fell backwards ; that she did not see a large board sign on which was printed plainly and in large letters ‘ No admittance behind this board; ’ that she could not say whether or not such a sign was there * * * that the accident occurred at noon on a bright day ; that she could not say that there were seven windows and a large door standing open on the side of the building where she fell into the hatchway or not, as it was dark to her back in there.”
This judgment was unanimously affirmed in the court of Exchequer Chamber; and in the opinion of this court, given by Chief Baron Kelly, the views, thus expressed by Mr. Justice Willes were quoted and approved. L. R. 2 C. P. 311. The American courts have stated and applied the rule in the same way. Thus, in a case in Massachusetts, it was said by Mr. Justice Gray, with his usual clearness and accuracy : “ The owner or occupier of land is liable in damages to those coming to it, using due care, at his invitation or inducement, express or implied, on any business to be transacted or permitted by him, for an injury occá
Applying the doctrine of these cases to the case made by the plaintiff’s evidence in the case before us, it will appear that, if the jury believed this evidence, they were authorized to find that husband and wife, two old persons, had gone to this pork house to buy a smoked shoulder; that they had frequently bought meat there before, and of the foreman who was then in charge of the- place; that the husband inquired for a particular -kind of meat, and was told by the foreman that they did not have that kind of meat, but that they had a different kind of meat, which he recommended, and which he would show to them, pointing to a lot of meat in a distant pai’t of the room ; that they started back to look at this meat, the husband in advance, the foreman of the house follQwing, and the wife following in the rear; that no warning was given them of any open and unguarded hatchway in the direction in which they were walking; that no warning or sign of “No Admittance” was seen or heard by either of them ; that that part of the room was dark; that the wife walked into the hatchway, and, falling, received the injuries complained of. It may be added that, in the defendant’s evidence, the case thus made by the plaintiff’s evidence was assisted by the testimony of this foreman, that “ the floor was slippery from the grease.” We think the case thus made comes within the rule of the cases above cited. Neither the husband nor
II. Nor do we think that the court erred in submitting the question of permanent injury to the jury. It is true that the evidence upon this point was meager, in that it did not define the nature and character of the permanent injury which Mrs. Welch had sustained, or show to what extent it would reduce her capacity to earn wages. It consisted solely of the following statements of witnesses: —
Dr. Beckendorf said: “ A concussion which would pro
John Welch said: “ Before she was hurt she had always been in perfect health. She was as strong and active a woman for her years as there was in St. Louis. Now there is nothing left of her.”
Mrs, Welch, the injured plaintiff, said: “ That she was badly hurt and had not been her self since.”
When it is recollected that this accident took place more than two years before the trial, it can not be said, in the-light of these statements, that there was not some substantial evidence of permanent injury which the jury were authorized to take into consideration* and the instruction complained of merely said to the jury, “if you believe that she sustained any permanent physical injury in consequence of the fall, you may make a reasonable allowance on that account.”
III. It is quite clear that the court did not err in refusing a new trial on the ground of excessive damages. Damages, it must be remembered, in cases of personal injuries, are given for physical suffering, as well as for an actual loss of time and of earning capacity, and an actual expenditure of money* surgeon’s bills, and the like. An examination of the precedents in such cases would, we are sure, show many cases where verdicts as large as this have been sustained, where the injury appeared to have been no greater than this. It must be remembered that the law has committed the estimation of damages in these cases,— where, from the nature of the case, the amount of damages which are to be awarded is largely a matter of individual opinion, — to juries, and not to judges ; and that the court, in general, has no power to oppose its judgment to that of the jury upon this question, except where the award made by the jury is either so great or so little as the indicate that the jury have proceeded in a clear disregard of the evidence,
Plaintiff John Welch said: “ She laid in bed at home for two weeks ; then she got out of her mind, and sent her to St. Mary’s infirmary. I visited her there every day. She was out of her mind most of the time. She was there three weeks.”
Mrs. Welch said that “ she had four cuts on her head ; * * * that her wounds were dressed at the City Dispensary, by her doctor, and at St. Mary’s infirmary; that she had no one at home to help her or care for her, except her husband; that while suffering from this accident Mrs. Laughlin had helped her ; that she had gone to the infirmary, two or three days after being hurt, and remained about two weeks; that they had shaved her head and put poultices on it; that she was seventy years old.”
Mrs. Laughlin said that “ she waited on Mrs. Welch for a day or two after she was hurt; that the wounds bled to an alarming extent; that she called on her after she went to the infirmary, and found her with her head shaved and face swollen; that she was badly hurt and had a severe, time of it.”
Dr. Beckendorf said : “ That, on the same day of the accident to Mrs. Welch, he was called to see her ; that there were two wounds on her head from which the hemorrhage was fearful; that he had stopped hemorrhage by bandaging her head and applying great pressure thereby to the head ; that he was called in again that day or the next day ; hemorrhage had broken out again and her face and ■ head very swollen, and thereafter she was sent to St. Mary’s infirmary.”
This case was tried by a special jury drawn from .the
The case seems to have been carefully tried in all respects. The instructions were carefully drawn, with the manifest purpose of bringing to the attention of the jury, in a few brief sentences, the i’elative rights of the parties. The appellant makes no complaint of them.
Upon the whole, we are clear that the judgment ought to be affirmed. It is so ordered.