108 Mo. App. 607 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
— Plaintiff, a minor about twenty years of age, brought this action against defendant, a corporation operating an electric light plant and maintaining poles supporting electric wires erected on the public streets of the city of St. Louis, to recover for injury sustained by him, while a pedestrian on the sidewalk in the afternoon of June 6, 1903, caused by a metallic object, a mica insulator, which slipped from the grasp of defendant’s workman engaged in repairing overhead wires, on a pole near Papin and Eighteenth streets, and descending struck plaintiff on his head.
Defendant by its answer admitted its ownership
“The court instructs the jury that the sole issue to be determined in this case is the amount of damages which the plaintiff is entitled to recover.
“In determining this amount the jury should take into consideration the physical pain and mental anguish, if any, which the plaintiff has suffered or will hereafter suffer in consequence of his injuries, and also should consider the temporary or permanent character of the injury as shown by the testimony.
“Considering these elements of damages, the jury should award the plaintiff such sum as you believe from the evidence will reasonably compensate him for such injuries as he has sustained and will sustain in the future and resulting from the blow on the head which he received.”-
Investigation has proven futile to disclose any statute or decision in this State decisive of the question of the operation of a tender and payment into court of a specific sum as adequate compensation for injuries suffered in an action for unliquidated damages sounding in tort. The right to make a tender in such class of cases has been unqualifiedly denied in this State, but without consideration of the proposition here involved. Joyner v. Bentley, 21 Mo. App. 26; Lieurance v. McComas, 59 Mo. App. 119; Nanson v. Jacobs, 93 Mo. 1. c. 343, 6 S. W. 246.
In England, in an action for personal injury sus
In Massachusetts, in Bacon v. Inhabitants, etc., 7 Cush. 581, an action on the case to recover damages for an injury sustained by plaintiff in being thrown from his vehicle, while travelling through the town of Charlton, in consequence of an obstruction in the highway, where prior to the action, defendants tendered plaintiff a sum named, in full for his damages, and upon return day of the writ paid the same amount into court, the ruling of the common pleas judge, that the tender admitted the plaintiff’s cause of action and all that was necessary for him to prove to sustain it, and that the only question open was the amount of damages and denying to defendant the right of introducing evidence of carelessness on.the part of plaintiff, either as to the merits of the action or in mitigation of damages, was upheld on appeal. This early case has been cited and the principle approved in a series of subse
In New York, the code now appears to permit a tender in all actions brought for recovery of a sum certain or of damages for a personal injury. Taylor v. Railroad, 119 N. Y. 561. The earlier cases, anterior to the adoption of this provision, support the principle that a tender, though irregular in form, is an admission of the cause of action as alleged in the declaration. Johnson v. Ins. Co., 7 John. 315; Roosevelt v. Railroad, 45 Barb. 554.
In Iowa, a tender is declared to admit a valid cause of action for the amount tendered. Wilson v. Railway, 68 Iowa 673.
In Illinois, in an action on the case for damages alleged to have been sustained from personal injuries received in a railroad collision, where a tender of $1,000 by defendant had been refused and the money paid into court, the court held that the only question to be tried was as to the amount of damages sustained by plaintiff and a recovery of a sum materially exceeding the amount tendered was sustained. Illinois, etc., Railroad Co. v. Cole, 165 Ill. 330; s. c., 62 Ill. App. 480; Frew v. Railroad, 57 Ill. 42.
A commentator on the law of tender thus expounds the construction to be given payment of money by the defendant into court: “So where a tender is made and pleaded in a case where one can not be lawfully made or pleaded, as in case of an offer of a sum upon an unliquidated claim, it is an admission of record and dispenses with the proof necessary to enable plaintiff to recover, unless he goes for a greater amount of damages.” “Bringing money into court, as has been shown, • admits a liability to the amount paid in, dispensingwith all that proof which a plaintiff would otherwise be required to produce in order to recover the amount paid in, but it admits nothing more, and a defendant may
The better rule supported by the above authorities, we believe to be, that the payment of the given sum into court and its tender thereby to plaintiff as sufficient compensation for his injury operated as a solemn and conclusive admission of plaintiff’s cause of action, and of the existence of every fact essential to maintain his action, and the trial court rightly held that the extent of the injuries and consequent amount of plaintiff’s damages only were remaining. It would lie a gross inconsistency, particularly under the precise language employed by defendant in its answer, if after such tender and payment, the merits of the case were still open to contest at the trial and if its negligence in the occurrence could still be denied and disputed by defendant, and such issue be submitted for a finding by the jury in the instructions asked by defendant and refused by the court. The cases invoked by appellant as leaning to a contrary conclusion, we decline to recognize as persuasive insofar as opposed to the view here adopted, and they will be found on analysis to consist chiefly of cases ex contractu, where under the statute, a tender was sanctioned and such plea declared restricted to an a'ddition of liability to the extent of the sum offered.
Judgment affirmed.