2 Colo. 141 | Colo. | 1873
This was an action on the case instituted by the appellee against the appellant to recover damages for injuries sustained by the appellee by reason of the negligence of the appellant in the construction, erection and establishment of a line of telegraph through and over a portion of the city of Denver and across Blake street. The defendant filed four pleas : 1st. The general issue. 2d. Nul tiel corporation. 3d and éth pleas set up that the injury was occasioned by the contributory negligence of the plaintiff. A demurrer was sustained to the second, third and fourth pleas, and the case was tried on the general issue. A verdict for the plaintiff for $5,000. Motion for new trial overruled. Judgment on the verdict and appeal.
It is claimed first that the court erred in sustaining the plaintiff’s demurrer to the defendant’s second, third and fourth pleas.
It is no objection to a plea which is well pleaded in other respects that the matter of it may be given in evidence under the general issue. The right to plead as many pleas as a defendant may deem necessary for his defense is secured by statute. In so pleading, however, it is not his privilege to incumber the record with tautologous allegations, nor with pleas which while they pretend to be special amount only to a denial of the plaintiff’s allegation. Where a plea
Any matter of defense which denies what the plaintiff on the general issue would be bound to prove, may and ought to be given in evidence under the general issue, and a plea setting up negatively such facts is bad. Bank of Auburn v. Weed, 19 Johns. 302. But any ground of defense which admits the facts alleged in the declaration, but avoids the action, by matter which the plaintiff would not be bound to prove or dispute in the first instance on the general issue, may be pleaded specially. Evidence that the plaintiff’s negligence contributed to the injury sued for may be given in evidence under the general issue. Indianapolis Railroad Co. v. Rutherford, 29 Ind. 82; Bridge v. Grand Junction Railroad Co., 3 M. & W. 244. If the negligence of the plaintiff did contribute to the injury, that was a fact to be proved by the defendant. Railroad v. Glodman, 15 Wall. 401. I therefore see no objection to the ruling of the court on the demurrer as to third and fourth pleas. The second plea — that of nul tiel corporation — seems to have been regarded by the court as a plea of abatement, and by the plaintiff’s counsel as objectionable, not only on that ground, but on the further ground that the general issue filed in the case admitted that the defendant was a corporation, and the two pleas, being inconsistent, could not stand together. ’ I think that both court and counsel were mistaken in the estimate placed on this plea. It seems to be almost uniformly held that when an action is brought by a corporation plaintiff and the defendant files the general issue, the capacity of the plaintiff to sue is admitted. Phœnix Bank v. Curtis 14 Conn. 438, and authorities cited. In Massachusetts and New York, decisions are to be found wherein it is held that where a corporation is defendant and files the general issue, it devolves upon the plaintiff to prove the corporate capacity
A plea in bar impugns the right of action altogether; a plea in abatement only the form or names in which it is brought. Stephen on Plead. 432. Hence the misnomer of a corporation as well as of a natural person must be pleaded in abatement. But the defense that there never was such a natural person as the plaintiff in rerum natura, or that such a corporation as that named as plaintiff or defendant never existed, which are pleas of precisely the same nature, go to the right of action altogether, and are, therefore, pleadable in bar, one reason is that, in the latter case, the defendant cannot give the plaintiff a better writ, which must generally be done in abatement. In a case reported in the Year Book 22 Edw. IY, it is held that in an action by a corporation or natural person, misnomer of the one or the other goes only to the writ, but to say there is no such person in
In Massachusetts the plea of nul tiel corporation is regarded as good whether plead in abatement or bar of the action. Christian Society, etc., v. McCumber, 3 Met. 235; Townsend v. First Freewill Baptist Church, 6 Cush. 281; Greenwood v. Lake Shore Railroad Co., 10 Gray, 374, and to the same effect is the case, The Society, etc., v. Paulet, 4 Pet. 480. It has been suggested that it is an anomaly in the law for a corporation to interpose this plea. The right to do so is abundantly established by many respectable courts. See authorities last above cited; also, Judah v. Ins. Co., 4 Ind. 336; Stone v. Cong. Society Berkshire, 14 Ver. 86. In the plea under consideration it is averred “that it, the said defendant, was not at the commencement of said suit, and is not now, and was not, at the time the said supposed grievances in the declaration mentioned were committed, a corporation as by the said writ and declaration is
It is a special traverse of a material allegation of the declaration, to wit: that the defendant is a corporation. If there is no corporation, then the action must be defeated. It is claimed, however, that the plea of the general issue and the plea of mil tiel corporation are inconsistent and repugnant. That one wars upon the other. That the one denies what the other admits. Our statute provides that the defendant may plead as many matters of fact in several pleas as he may deem necessary for his defense. I take it to be well settled that when several pleas in bar are pleaded in virtue of this statute to one and the same thing or demand, each of them is treated, and operates as if it were pleaded alone. It being an established rule that one of them cannot in the language of Chief Justice Willes, “ be taken in to help or destroy another, but that every plea must stand or fall by itself.” Commenting on a similar statute in England, Mr. Could, page 433, section 26, says: “Many questions have heretofore arisen, as to what several defenses in bar may be pleaded together under this statute to one and the same demand,” and a copious catalogue of such pleas as may, and of such as may not, be thus pleaded together is presented in Comyir s Digest, Pleader, E. 2. For an opinion was formerly entertained that mere inconsistency between two given pleas was a decisive objection to their being pleaded together, under the statute. But if such a rule should prevail, the statute would, in a great measure, be practically repealed. For the general issue which is almost universally the first of the several pleas pleaded together under the statute, is, on strict common-law principles, inconsistent with almost every special matter of defense whatever. At this day, however, it appears to be generally understood, as a sound rule in the construction of the statute, that mere inconsistency between two or more pleas in bar is no objection to their being pleaded together. A rule which would appear to follow of course from one before laid down, viz.: “ That each of several pleas thus pleaded together is to be
The first instruction given by the court is as follows: “ In order to entitle the plaintiff to a verdict, it is incumbent on him to establish: 1st. That the injuries complained of by him resulted directly from the negligence of the servants or agents of the defendant while engaged in doing what was within the scope of their authority and agency to do. That the culpable negligence of the plaintiff did not contribute to occasion such injury, that is to say, that the plaintiff did not, on the occasion complained of, omit to exercise such effort and caution to avoid the accident and injury as aman of ordinary prudence and circumspection placed in the same circumstances would have exercised.” It is claimed by the appellant that the instructions given do not embrace the law; that if the plaintiff was guilty of any negligence, that fact alone would preclude a recovery.
I am unable to accede to this proposition. It is conceded by text-writers, that all the American decisions upon this question have been professedly based upon the English precedents, and that if we can ascertain what was the real meaning of the English decisions thus cited, they should have controlling influence. Their conclusions are generally so reasonable and so clearly expressed, that but little hesitation can be felt in relying upon them as furnishing the true rule. In Butterfield v. Forrester, 11 East, 60, Lord Ellenborotoh says: “A party is not to cast himself upon an obstruction which has been made by the fault of another, and avail himself of it, if he does not himself use
In the case of Davies v. Mann, 10 M. & W. 545, the same subject is considered, and it is there held that the plaintiff is entitled to recover, notwithstanding he may be guilty of some negligence, if the defendant might, by proper care, have avoided inflicting the injury.” To the same effect is the case of the B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Fitzpatrick, 35 Md. 32; Am. Law Keg. (N. S.), vol. 11, 596. I think the true rule is, and should be, that if the plaintiff exercise reasonable care, though he may have been guilty of some negligence or want of caution, he is still entitled to recover for any injury sustained in consequence of the defendant’s negligence. To defeat his action he should not only contribute to his injury, but he must be in fault in so doing. If his share in the transaction be innocent, and not faulty, it should furnish no excuse for a defendant. Shearman & Redfield on Negligence, §28, and note 3, p. 16. And this doctrine seems to have received the warm approval of the court of appeals , in New York. In Fero v. Railroad Company, 22 N. Y. 215, Bacon, J., says : “ It is very possible that by unusual precaution and watchfulness on the part of the plaintiff, the consequences of the defendant’s wrong might have been
It seems to me, therefore, that the instructions given lay down the law correctly, and are in no way open to the objection urged by appellant.
The court further instructed the jury : “ That in fixing the plaintiff’s damages they should compensate the plaintiff not alone for his actual loss of time during his confinement or disability, if any, resulting from the alleged accident, but might award exemplary damages proportioned to the nature and extent or character of the injury.” Saving the question of exemplary damages for subsequent comment, I am of the opinion that the court below was quite favorable to the defendant in laying down the rule of damages in this case. When an injury is received of such extent and character as must disable one from labor, and require nursing and medical treatment, the loss from inability to labot and the expense of medical treatment are the necessary and uniform consequences of such an injury. They are not special damages in the sense of the term as it is used in the law of pleading and evidence ; they are not caused by an incidental fact, or by the peculiar situation of the party, but are the natural arid uniform effects of such injury. In addition to the mere expense of nursing and medical treatment, it has been held that a party suffering from injury occasioned by the neglect of another is entitled to recover for his bodily pain and mental suffering. And evidence is admissible to show the loss he has sustained by reason of his failure to prosecute his business. Swarthout v. New Jersey Steamboat Co., 46 Barb. 222; Nebraska City v. Campbell, 2 Black, 591; Wade v. Leroy, 20. How. 34, 43, 44. And speaking on this subject, Judge
Notwithstanding the divinity which was anciently supposed to hedge in a corporation and shield it from liability on account of the wrongs done by its agents, these institutions, like all others, have fallen under the dominion of the law, and courts have not only applied to them principles congenial to the present condition of society, bnt such as have been for a long time applied to the conduct of individuals. We recognize the fact that corporations enter into almost all the concerns of life, political, financial, eleemosynary. They build churches, erect colleges, construct railroads, operate mines, run newspapers, distribute charities, and in some instances claim to be the sole custodians of the keys that unlock the gates of glory. In every instance they act through agents, and so acting they may be made responsible in an action on the case for a tort; arid even in an action of trespass, if by their managers and authorized agents, they command the trespass to be committed, or sanction or approve the act when done. 1 Chitty, 87; Underwood v. Newport Lyceum, 5 B. Monroe, 130. Artificial, as they may be, there is still a human intelligence and volition controlling their affairs just like those of an individual, and which may act wrongfully, maliciously and recklessly, thus laying the basis for exemplary damages. Whatever may have been the doctrine anciently, it is now too well settled to be uprooted, that corporations like these defend
When the wrong done to the party partakes of a criminal character, though not punishable as an offense against the state, the public may be said to have an interest that the wrong-doer should be prosecuted and brought to justice in a civil suit; and exemplary damages may, in such cases, encourage prosecution where a mere compensation for the private injury would not repay the trouble and expense of the proceedings. But it is only where these elements, or
It is claimed, however, that the evidence fails to show that the wire was being erected under the direction of the defendant. We are of a different opinion. The facts disclosed ars as follows: B. F. Woodward was in the employ of the defendant as operator and manager at this place; subordinate, however, to Hibbard, who was the defendant’s superintendent for the third division, dowry was also in the employ of the defendant, as superintendent of the second division. Woodward, under directions from Hibbard, employed Washburn to put up the line. The expenses were reported to Clowry, and the money to adjust them forwarded by him. Here, then, we have three superintendents of the defendant all engaged in the work of erecting a line, and their conduct supplemented by the further fact that the line is used by the company, and the money, arising therefrom, placed in the general treasury. If corporations are invisible and intangible, this one comes quite prominently into view through gentlemen who fill its offices, and manage its affairs.
It is claimed, however, that all this does not show that these superintendents had authority from the company to do this work. By the general rules of evidence, presumptions are continually made, in cases of private persons, of acts even of the most solemn nature, when these acts are the natural result or necessary accompaniment of other circum
No opinion is expressed upon the question whether the plea of nul tied corporation may be pleaded in bar, or not, but the majority of the court are of the opinion that the defendant cannot deny its own capacity by a plea pleaded either alone or with other pleas in abatement or in bar. If the defendant be not a corporation, then it is nothing ; it cannot appoint an attorney, it cannot, by attorney or otherwise, be present in court; it cannot plead, for it is not; the plea is, therefore, felo de se. The President & Trustees, etc. v. Wadleigh, 6 Blackf. 297.
. The demurrer to this plea was, therefore, properly sustained.
Upon the other questions the opinion of Mr. Justice Belford is the opinion of the whole court.
Let the judgment of the district court be
Affirmed.