Harold v. New York Central & Hudson River Railroad

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

In the case of Young against the defendants, which was for an injury caused by the same accident, and arising under the same circumstances as in the present case, the General Term of this court held that the question of the defendants’ negligence, and of contributory negligence, were not for the court, but had been properly left, upon the evidence, to the jury (see ante, p. 294). The two cases are so substantially alike in respect to the evidence upon these two questions that the decision of the General Term in the one case is controlling in the other.

One of the principal grounds now relied upon by the defendants for a new trial is that the damages are excessive. As the jury in the former case gave but $4,500, and the jury in the present have awarded $8,000, it is urged that this increase in the amount by the last jury “ indicates, of itself, passion and prejudice.” I tried the former case, and my impression at the time was, that the amount of the verdict was much less than might have been reasonably expected ; and that a subsequent jury should give a much larger amount does not necessarily warrant the conclusion that they must have been influenced by passion or prejudice.

The counsel for the defendant argues that as the plaintiff’s wages at the time of the accident were but $30 a month, “ an impartial mind cannot fail to regard the $8,000 awarded by the jury as grossly excessive.” This does not necessarily follow. The measure of damages is not the amount that the plaintiff was able to earn before the injury, as distinguishable from what she may be able to earn now; but a very material consideration upon the question of damages in cases like this, is thg pain and suffering endured ; and the evidence here is that the pain which the plaintiff suffered *380“ was terrible.” Her companion and co-worker, who was by her side, was killed by the collision, and the injury she received was very severe. She was lacerated externally and injured internally; “ so badly hurt,” as she testified, “ that her sister did not know her,” and that she was “ hurt all over, internally.” She was taken to the hospital insensible, and after being there two weeks was taken home, and was confined to her bed for four months. It was three months after this before she was able to walk about her room, and the physician was in attendance upon her for eight months. Not only was the suffering she endured very great, but the jury was justified in inferring, from the evidence upon the last trial, that she will probably be a sufferer for life. She testified that there had been no time since the accident that she has been free from pain; that she never had such pain before; that she suffers^ all the time from the injury received ; that since the accident she has had symptoms of internal injury that she did not have before; that in one way she suffers terribly, that is from a falling of the womb and pain in her side; that she has had “ fainting spells ever since she was hurt; ” that “ sometimes it is not safe for her to go out in the street,” because she is “liable to have something come over her heart, and to fall in the street; ” that this has happened several times since the accident, and never happened before; that she never had any trouble with her womb before the accident, and that her general health before that “ was very good.” The physician described to the jury her condition as respects her internal injuries, which were attended by thé discharge of blood and mucus from the lower part of her body. He found that there was a falling of the womb, so much so that it protruded from the body, and when he attempted to replace it, after examining her, she suffered so much pain that he could not do so at that time. He said that she was suffering, at the same time, from pleurisy in the left side, and from inflammation of the bowels, and that she had had inflammation of the bowels, more or less, for four months ; that during the first month he visited her he had to keep her under anodynes, at *381least twice a day, and for the next month, at least once a day. He stated that when he last made an examination of “ her uterine troubles ” he formed an opinion as to their permanent or temporary character; and being asked what that opinion was, he said: “ I consider that she was inca-

pable of performing her household work, or to walk with any degree of comfort, or to take exercise, or any pleasure; she could not sit for any length of time without pain in her back, and that she had been permanently injured by the falling of the womb, as it could not be cured, it could only be relieved; that the effect of this injury upon her general health and strength was to produce nervousness; that if she married again she could not perform the regular functions of married life without a great deal of pain.”

But it is unnecessary further to refer to the testimony under this head: sufficient has already been cited to show the nature of the injury, and the effects of it; and it is not for the court to undertake to measure or judge what should be a proper pecuniary recompense to the plaintiff, who is now but 35 years of age, and who may possibly have to endure for the rest of her life what she had to endure up to the last trial. What she ought to recover must necessarily be left to the judgment of a jury; and the court are not called upon to interfere and set aside the verdict because a jury, upon the first trial, gave but $4,500, and a jury, in the second, have given $8,000, especially as there was not the same reasonable certainty of the permanent effects of the injury upon the first trial that there was upon the last one.

The defendants were not satisfied with the very moderate verdict then rendered. They applied for a new trial, and obtained one, for a technical error in the charge of the judge, from which the court, in granting the new trial, under the very technical rules that now prevail in respect to the granting of new trials, thought it probable that no harm had occurred to the defendants, and expressed its regret that it had to disturb the verdict, as it was a very proper one. That the result of granting the new trial has been different from what the defendants probably expected—that the *382second jury have greatly increased the damages—is no reason why we should order a new trial, upon the assumption that a third jury will or ought to give less.

Where actions of tort are brought to recover damages for personal injuries, courts will rarely grant a new trial upon the ground of excessive damages. Chief Justice Wilmot, in Huckle v. Money (2 Wils. 206), in referring to applications in such cases for new trials, said that the few cases to be found in the books shows that courts of justice have most commonly set their faces against them; ” that “ the courts interfering in these cases would be laying aside juries.” And Lord Mansfield, in Gilbert v. Burtonshau, Cowp. 230, in laying down the rule that has since been followed, that new trials should be granted for damages which manifestly show that the jury had been actuated by passion, partiality or prejudice, said: “ But it is not to be done without very strong grounds indeed, and such as carry internal evidence of intemperance in the minds of the jury; ” that “ it is by no means to be done where the court may feel that if they had been on the jury they would have given less damages, or where they might think the jury themselves would have completely discharged their duty in giving a less sum.” And in Smith v. Woodbine (1 C. B. N. S. 662), Justice Gees well, in remarking that the amount of damages in such actions was a question peculiarly for the jury, observed that he “ always felt it very difficult to interfere with their verdict upon the question of amount.” And Lord Mansfield remarked, in the case above quoted, that “ unless the damages are flagrant, outrageous and extravar gant, it is difficult for the court to draw the line.”

In Hewlett v. Crutchley (5 Taunt. 277), an action for malicious prosecution, in which the plaintiff recovered £2,000, Chief Justice Sir James Mansfield, in referring to the application for a new trial upon the ground of excessive damages, said that it was exceedingly difficult to estimate damages; that you may take twenty juries and every one of them will differ from £2,000 down to £200; that he always felt “ that it was extremely difficult to interfere and *383say when damages are too large.” And in that case he puts this test—whether any rational man of character would, for ¿62,000, put himself in the plaintiff’s situation. If not, then the damages, he remarked, are not excessive; and if this test he applied to the present case, the question might well he asked whether any rational person would undergo an injury such as the plaintiff sustained, with all the consequences that have followed it, for the sum of $8,000. The jurors, whose province it is to fix the amount of the damages in such a, case, would naturally apply some such test as the one suggested by the distinguished judge, and in doing so one jury may differ very widely from another; and the fact that a_ second jury gives a much greater or a much less amount than the first is not, in itself, a reason Avhy their verdict should be set aside. The amount, in any event, has to be left to the discretion of a jury, and it is only, as Lord Mansfield said, when it is flagrantly outrageous and extravagant that courts should set the verdict aside, and this is not, in my judgment, such a case.

More than twenty years ago, in Hegeman v. The Western R. R. Corp. (16 Barb. 359), when the value of money Avas much greater than it is noAv, the jury in an action for personal injury gave the plaintiff $9,900, which verdict the court refused to set aside as excessive. The case, as stated by Judge Harris, Avas that of an artisan avIio Avas confined to his bed for several months, and who, from the nature of his injuries, must have been subjected to extreme pain and suffering, who, up to the time of the trial, had scarcely been able to leave his house, and Avhose injuries were so permanent that it was not probable that he would thereafter be able to provide for himself and family. The court said that the injury sustained by him Avas beyond any pecuniary estimate, and that it could not say that the damages awarded by the jury Avere so excessive as to call for its interference.

In the present case, the plaintiff was unable to do anything for ten months. She then, to support herself, undertook to keep a little store, but was obliged to give it up because she was not able to remain upon her feet. She tes*384tiffed that she had done very little work since, as she was not able to use one of her hands; that she cannot use it fully as she cannot clasp anything tight; and if, she says, she does “ the least bit of work at all, it swells up.” At the time of the trial she was supporting herself by letting out rooms in a house that she hires from month to month. The ease is not as strong, perhaps, in respect to the permanent effects of the injury, as the one quoted, as the plaintiff has been able to do something for her support; but the amount recovered in that action was much greater, the value of money being now very much less than it was then.

Many exceptions were taken by the defendants, embracing exceptions to the striking out of evidence, to the refusal to strike out evidence, and to the admission of evidence, all of which I have gone over, and none of which, in my opinion, were well taken. The questions put to the experts, Drs. Molony and Ward, as to what is the usual effect of a falling of the womb, and whether it usually permanently affects the health and strength of the patient, was within the rule of law laid down in Strohm v. New York, L. E. & W. R. R. Co. (96 N. Y.), that is, evidence tending to show that there was such a degree of probability of the 'future consequences of the accident as amounts to a reasonable certainty; and the questions put were not of that speculative and hypothetical character for which the verdict was set aside in that case by a divided court—a case that went very far in excluding evidence by experts of the probable and possible consequence of an injury, and which should not, in" my opinion, be carried beyond what was strictly decided in it.

Before the judge charged the jury, he was requested by the defendants to charge fourteen propositions, and exceptions were taken to his assumed refusal to charge the sixth, seventh, eighth, eleventh and fourteenth requests.

The sixth request was charged as far as the defendants were entitled to it, that is, that the plaintiff knew that the business in which she was employed was a hazardous one; and that the duty devolved upon her to use such care as an *385ordinarily prudent person would take when engaged in such a business, the defendants’ proposition being that she took the risk of danger to which she might be exposed from, the use and management of the yard in the ordinary way, which last qualification the court very properly refused to assent to, remarking that if the usual and ordinary way was to be habitually careless, it would form no excuse.

As respects the seventh and the eighth propositions, the court charged all that the defendants were entitled to.

To the eleventh and fourteenth propositions, the defendants were not entitled.

The two exceptions to the charge werQ not, in my opinion, well taken.

The judgment should be affirmed.

Larremore and J. F. Daly, JJ., concurred.

Judgment' affirmed.