Affirmed. *Page 62 The plaintiff, husband of Wanda Malone, brought this suit to recover damages for alleged loss of "comfort, benefit, and society, services and assistance" resulting from alleged personal injuries sustained by her from the alleged negligence of defendant in causing her to be thrown from one of its cars when alighting therefrom at or near Main Street and Cleveland Avenue in the City of Fairmont, on February 1, 1922, and for which personal injuries she sued and obtained a verdict and judgment in the circuit court on November 8, 1926, for $4,500.00, subsequently reversed here for errors committed in the trial on November 1, 1927. 104 W. Va. 417, 140 S.E. 340.
The present case is founded upon the facts in the former case, and the resulting injuries of which she complained.
The plea of defendant was the general plea of not guilty with specification of defenses demanded by plaintiff: First, that the said Wanda Malone at and immediately before her accident was a mere licensee upon said street car and was neither a passenger by invitation nor for hire, and was there without the knowledge of the defendant or of any of its servants, agents or employees in charge of the operation of said car; that while in the act of alighting therefrom, and after said car was in motion the said Wanda Malone stepped off said car and fell backwards on the pavement by reason of having attempted to alight therefrom in a direction opposite to that in which said car was slowly moving, and whereby alone she incurred the accident, and the defendant was guilty of no act of negligence causing the alleged injuries of which plaintiff complains.
Second, that the fall which the said Wanda Malone so sustained did not result in loss of comfort, benefit, etc., of the said Wanda, of which plaintiff complains in this action, from February 1, 1922, to the date of the institution of this suit, nor for the twenty-five weeks immediately following the date of said accident, nor for the partial loss of said services for one hundred weeks next atfer the expiration of said twenty-five weeks, nor for the alleged loss of such services for alleged *Page 63 permanent injuries; nor was it guilty of any negligence resulting in any injuries for which doctor bills and other services were properly incurred.
On the trial of this case, as on the trial of Wanda Malone's case, the principal issue was whether there was any evidence, or such preponderating evidence, as justified the submission of the case to the jury on the fact of negligence, and the denial of defendant's proposed peremptory instruction to find for it, one of the errors here complained of.
On the fact of negligence the witnesses and the testimony were nearly the same as on the trial of Mrs. Malone's case. One witness for the plaintiff, Virginia Moon, the maid who accompanied Mrs. Malone to or upon the car that is alleged to have injured her, was not called as a witness on the trial of this case, nor so far as we can find in the record was her absence accounted for. On the other trial her evidence was substantially the same as that of Mrs. Malone and fully supported her as to the facts and circumstances of the accident. The defendant in accordance with its bill of particulars, as in the trial of the former case, sought to establish by its proof that when Mrs. Malone accompanied by her maid first came to the car, the maid got up on the steps on the left hand side of the rear platform where Brookover, the conductor, was standing, and that Mrs. Malone handed to the maid her young child, who took it in her arms and went inside the car, and when Mrs. Malone advised the conductor that she did not intend to become a passenger then and requested Brookover to look after the maid and child and put them off at the particular street nearest her home, he promised her he would; that she then left the car and proceeded back up Cleveland Avenue towards Main Street, and that Brookover immediately turned his attention to the passengers boarding the car on the right or opposite side of the car, helping them on, and that while so engaged Mrs. Malone, forgetting whether she had provided the maid with car fare and given her the key to her door, suddenly returned to the car, and unobserved boarded and entered it, calling in to the maid from the door, and then likewise left, and after the car was put in motion *Page 64 got down on the step of the platform and stepped off backwards with the result indicated, and thereby negligently contributing to her injuries. Which of these versions of the occurrence be the correct one, we cannot say from the evidence. The conductor of the car is corroborated by the motorman of the car immediately following him and by two or three witnesses, ladies to whom they say Mrs. Malone described the accident the following day, and by one or two other witnesses present. Defendant's counsel say that the evidence of these witnesses is so preponderating that the court should have so instructed the jury and directed a verdict for defendant. But the plaintiff's case does not wholly depend on whether Mrs. Malone entered the car in the first place as she contends or subsequently returned as defendant claims. If the latter, the defendant owed her the duty not to negligently or wantonly injure her. One of plaintiff's witnesses, Miss Mary B. Powell, passenger on the car, and boarding it from the right hand side, assisted by the conductor, describing the occurrences, said that Mrs. Malone was then on the platform and at the door talking to the maid loud enough to be heard by them, and by the conductor, about car fare or the key. Mrs. May Hull, a witness for defendant, and a passenger on the car, as she went in or after she got on the car saw a woman on the platform and on the car when it started. Could not the jury find from this and other evidence in the case, and from the circumstances of the accident, that Mrs. Malone was on the platform or steps in a position of danger when she was observed, or should have been observed by the conductor, before he signaled the motorman to go ahead, whether she got to that position on the first or second visit to the car? He was on the rear platform and had taken on passengers from both sides. The side or vestibule doors seem to have both been open, and so long as open there remained the invitation to passengers to get on, and to others to leave it. Wanton and wilful negligence imposing liability does not necessarily imply malice, but imputes to the wrongdoer reckless disregard of persons or property of another by failing after discovering the peril to prevent the injury. Keystone Mfg. Co. v. Walker D. Hines, 85 W. Va. 405, 414. 3 Elliott on *Page 65 Railroads (3rd Ed.) § 1789, § 1794. 2 Thomp. on Negligence, § 1724. The instructions of the plaintiff to the jury No. 1A, No. 2A, and No. 3A rather elaborately cover both these theories of liability and consistently with the principles laid down in the authorities cited, and properly instructed the jury on the liability of the defendant in this case. On the evidence in the case we think the jury were warranted in concluding that the defendant was negligent in not observing Mrs. Malone and in putting the car in motion while she was in a place of danger, and without timely warning.
On the question whether Mrs. Malone was in a position of danger on the car or the platform thereof where she was and should have been observed by the conductor when he signaled the motorman to put it in motion, we think there is no doubt from the evidence. At all events the evidence of the plaintiff on that fact so largely preponderates over that of the defendant that the jury were perfectly justified on plaintiff's instructions Nos. 4, 5 and 6, properly instructing them, in finding for plaintiff on that question.
But assuming that defendant was or may have been negligent in either of the two ways on which liability was predicated, is plaintiff entitled to recover against defendant for the "losses of comfort, benefit, society, service and assistance" thereby incurred as alleged? The bill of particulars filed with his declaration evinces a very broad and ambitious plan fork recovery, as follows: For the loss of comfort, benefit, aid, society, services and assistance of his wife in and about his domestic affairs from February 1, 1922, the date of the accident, to the date of the suit, December 22, 1922, he demands $5,000.00. For same for 25 weeks immediately following the _____ day of February, 1922, at $25.00 per week, $725.00; For partial loss of service of said wife 100 weeks at $15.00 per week next after the expiration of said 25 weeks, $1,500.00; For future services on account of permanent injuries sustained by said Wanda Malone, $2,500.00; For doctor's bill incurred to Dr. Criss, $100.00; For undertaker's bill for burial of the still born child, $32.50; For amount paid hired girl rendered necessary by injuries inflicted on *Page 66 wife, 20 weeks at $7.00 per week, $140.00; For two days' work lost on account of said injuries at $7.50, $15.00; Total, $10,012.50. The verdict of the jury on which the judgment presently complained of is founded was the sum of $797.60.
The specification of defenses while not specifically referring to the domestic infelicities between plaintiff and his wife, their estrangement and subsequent divorce and separation as the causes of plaintiff's alleged losses, and not the personal injuries sustained by the accident, we think sufficiently cover the subject so as to give notice of that defense so vigorously urged and relied on as a complete defense to plaintiff's action. There is much evidence of plaintiff and his wife, and the wife's mother and father, tending to show the effect of the injuries on Mrs. Malone and the impairment of her health and strength as the cause of her alleged inability to perform her duties as wife and housekeeper. There is little room for doubt we think, considering the evidence of the doctors examined and others, that the fall from defendant's car resulted in the death of the unborn child, and its premature birth, perhaps, so that but for the subsequent evidence of plaintiff in the divorce case now to be considered, the court was justified in the submission of the case to the jury on the question of damages presented. On the trial of the divorce case of plaintiff against his wife, he admitted on cross-examination that he had testified substantially that Mrs. Malone appeared not to have suffered any substantial injuries from the accident incurred on defendant's street car in February, 1922; that grounds of divorce began prior to that time in her neglect and refusal to perform her duties as wife and housekeeper; that instead of discharging properly these duties she gave too much of her time before and after the accident occurred to attending dances and expending her time and energies therein, and in absenting herself from home and neglecting her household duties, and also in going away once to Wheeling in company with another man, and on the evidence of such neglect of duty and improper conduct he finally obtained a divorce from bed and board in the suit referred to. The introduction of this evidence of plaintiff in the divorce *Page 67 case was resisted, but we think it was properly admitted. It amounted to a substantial contradiction of plaintiff's evidence in the present case on the question of the causes of most of his alleged losses. And there is no doubt it was very potent with the jury in limiting all recovery to the time between the date of the accident, February 1, 1922, and July 17, 1923, the date Mrs. Malone deserted plaintiff, about seventy-five weeks, not at the rate of $25.00 per week as claimed by him, but at the rate of about $10.00 per week, with the added expenses of doctor bills, and that the jury gave due consideration to the defendant's instruction on the subject. In disposing of the question pertaining to the verdict and the evidence bearing thereon, we cannot wholly ignore the evidence of the plaintiff in explanation of his evidence in the divorce case, so far at least as it pertained to his wife's health and ability to do her work, that it was based largely on her appearances and her propensities for dancing, etc., as to which he had become better informed since he gave his evidence in the divorce case. And we cannot wholly ignore the evidence of other witnesses, particularly that of Mrs. Malone's mother and father, and the evidence of the doctors, pertaining to the facts of her disabilities. The evidence shows that Mr. and Mrs. Malone have since the divorce decree, January 31, 1924, become reconciled, without any order of the court permitting it, resumed marital relations, had another child born to them, which relationship so re-established has, so far as the record shows, continued ever since.
The defendant requested, and the court gave, some twenty-five instructions to the jury covering every phase of counsel's theories as to what the evidence showed, and on the law of the case, and to which the jury evidently gave proper consideration, and on which they evidently eliminated all elements of damages for the loss of services of the wife between February 1, 1922, and the date of separation, July 17, 1923. Upon consideration of the whole record and the numerous assignments of error, we are unable to say that the jury were not justified in the verdict rendered, or that there is any error in the judgment justifying reversal thereof, and therefore *Page 68 are of opinion to affirm it, so far as the questions considered are concerned.
One other question remains to be considered. One of the grounds of the motion for a new trial was that jurors McKinney and Hank Satterfield were incompetent to act as such, the former because of prejudice and bias against defendant, and Satterfield because of his double relationship to the plaintiff, all unknown to defendant until after the trial. As to juror McKinney, we do not think the evidence shows bias or prejudice against the defendant. One affidavit, that of Glen Parrish, one of the jurors, says that as McKinney was going into the jury box he remarked that he did not see why they left him on the jury, as they knew he was against the traction company, and would go against it, or words to that effect, and that immediately after the jury retired to consider their verdict, McKinney showed marked hostility against defendant and urged that a verdict be returned for an amount in excess of the amount asked for. McKinney himself in a counter affidavit, flatly denied that he had any such prejudice or bias, or that he had made the remarks attributed to him by Parrish, and two other jurors. And other jurors swore that McKinney showed no such prejudice or bias in the deliberations of the jury, and that he at one time proposed to return a verdict as low as one dollar. While McKinney admits that when first going into the jury room he proposed a verdict of $3,000.00, but that after his attention was called to the instructions and at his instance the jury had returned into court to be advised about the instruction he changed his mind, and at one time when it looked as if the jury were not going to reach a verdict at all, he proposed a verdict as low as $1.00, and at another time of $300.00. McKinney is corroborated on this subject by the affidavits of four other jurors. The burden is upon the complaining party to show bias and prejudice. As to juror Satterfield, he swore that he did not in fact know that he was in any way or degree related to either of the parties, and Hawkins, Mrs. Malone's father, did not know that Satterfield was in any way related to him or his family until it was discovered after the trial, and that during the deliberations *Page 69 of the jury he, Satterfield, says he voted for a verdict as low as $300.00. To set aside a verdict for any such alleged disqualifications of members of the jury, the burden is upon the complaining party to show that he has been prejudiced thereby. State v. Harris, 69 W. Va. 244. Rule explained in Beck v. Thompson, 31 W. Va. 459, and the other West Virginia cases cited in connection with State v. Harris, reported in 50 L.R.A. (N.S.) 933, note p. 944.
The judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.