The facts are sufficiently stated in the opinion of the Court by MR. JUSTICE ALLEN. The evidence in this case and the questions presented are practically identical with those in John P. Arthur v. Henry, ante, 393, except in that case the plaintiff was seeking to recover damages for injury to his property, compensatory and punitive, while in this the plaintiff, who is a sister of John P. Arthur and lived in the house with him, sues to recover damages for injury to her health.
In this action punitive damages were not awarded.
There was evidence which, if accepted by the jury, established the fact that the plaintiff was made sick and suffered in body and mind as the result of the operations of the defendant and of the Faragher Company, for whose acts the defendant was liable, and his Honor was careful to exclude the idea that the plaintiff could recover for fright unaccompanied by physical injury.
He said to the jury: "That mere fright is not actionable. Because a man or woman gets frightened at something, it is not actionable. If you find that the plaintiff in this cause was frightened, that she was put in fear, the court charges you that that is not actionable; but if you *Page 346 find that she was put in fear and frightened to such an extent that she suffered physical pain, suffered in body and mind, and was made sick, and that such fright and fear were brought about by the negligence of the defendant and was its proximate cause, then the law says it is actionable.
"If you find the defendant was guilty of negligence, and that rocks fell about the house, and that thereby she was put in fear or frightened, but if you find that she was not made sick by reason of such fright, but her sickness was caused by other causes, that her sickness came (440) from some other cause, and that she was not made sick by reason of this fright, and that she was made sick by some other cause than the fright, she could not recover. As I have said, mere fright is not actionable; but if she was put in fear by reason of rocks falling around, if you find they did so fall, and she became sick, and that the sickness was the immediate result of the fright, that the sickness followed from the fright, and that had it not been for such fright and fear the sickness would not have come, then it is actionable; but if it did not flow directly from that, she would not be entitled to recover.
"Or if you find that she was not put in fear and not frightened, and not made sick by the negligence of the defendant, if such acts were negligent, then she would not be entitled to recover. If you find that she was consulted, and that she consented that they might go on with blasting, on condition that they would come and give her notice before the blasts were set off, and that they did give her notice, then the court charges you that she could not recover."
This follows the principle announced in Kimberly v. Howland,143 N.C. 398, which has been affirmed in May v. Telegraph Co., ante, 416.
No error.