Railway Co. v. Davis

Cockrill, C. J.

It was settled in the former appeal in this case that it was a question of fact for the jury, and not of law for the court, to determine whether the deceased, who was a country-reared lad of narrow experience, knew that service about an unblocked guard-rail was attended with danger. Davis v. Railway, 53 Ark., 128-9. The testimony was not materially varied on the second trial, and the question remained one of fact, and was therefore properly submitted to the jury.

The only objection urged to the charge of the court, outside of that which goes to the measure of damages, is that it was abstract in that the jury were told that it was the defendant’s duty to warn an inexperienced servant of the hazards and risks of his employment, without limiting the direction to the hazard or risk about the unguarded rail, which was the sole cause of the injury. But there is no pretense that warning was given to the deceased about any other danger, and other parts of the charge given at the instance of the railway pointedly limit the jury’s consideration to the hazard of the unblocked rail. We are unable to see, therefore, that the jury could have been misled by the charge. They have found in effect that the railway put an inexperienced lad in a place of danger without apprising him of the risk, and that, by reason of his inexperience, he was ignorant of the danger and was therefore killed. The proof justified the finding; the court committed no error in submitting the question to the jury, and the company is liable.

It is claimed that the verdict is excessive. For the pain .and suffering of the deceased and the damage to his estate recovered by the administrator for the estate a verdict of $5000 may be considered ample on the facts of this case, tbut it should not be disturbed by this court.

The damages recovered for the benefit of the father as next of kin are intended as compensation for a pecuniary loss and can be measured with a nearer degree of accuracy. The amount recovered on that score was $1500. If the recovery could be for no more than the services of the son until ■the date of his majority, the sum is excessive, because the proof does not show that his services would have been worth that much in the limited time between the injury and the ■date of his majority.

The question whether the recovery for the benefit of the father as next of kin can go beyond the minority of the deceased son is therefore presented. It is a question upon which the authorities divide. There are many cases on both •sides of the controversy in which the question has been passed upon without discussion, and but few shed light on the reason for adopting either rule. The leading cases which ■deny the right to recover for any expectation of benefit beyond minority are State v. Ry., 24 Md., 84, and A. & M. Association v. State, 71 id., 86. The argument of those •cases is about this: As a minor has no legal right to his own services or earnings, even though he is working for himself with his father’s consent; when he aids his father, whether h>y his personal services or by contributions from his earnings, he is only rendering to him what is already his, and the act, however often repeated, affords a vague conjecture but ■no legal evidence of what he will do after majority, when he has the absolute right to serve whom he pleases without the fear of parental interference.

When confined to the case of a child of such tender years as to be unable to maintain itself beyond the parental roof, the argument is doubtless sound. It seems to have received the sanction to that extent of this court in two cases which arose under the act of 1875, which, so far as the award of ■damages in a case like this goes, the court assimilated in those cases to acts like Lord Campbell’s. But in each of those cases the -child killed was an infant of such tender years that it was incapable of rendering any service or of affording evidence of an intent to render pecuniary aid after majority to its parents. The cases are not authority therefore upon the question in hand. Little Rock, etc., R. Co. v. Barker, 33 Ark., 350; St. Louis, etc., R. Co. v. Freeman, 36 id., 41.

Some of the courts sustain the right to recover beyond minority, even-in such cases. .2 Sedgwick, Dam., sec. 576 Birkett v. Knickerbocker Ice Co., 110 N. Y., 504; Potter v. Railway, 21 Wis., 377. Those authorities of course sanction recovery in a case where the minor son, as in this case, had shown himself able and willing to make his own living and to contribute out of his earnings to the support of his parents. The analogy of other cases under the statute, and the terms and the spirit of the statute itself, authorize the extension of the recovery beyond minority in such a case.

If there are no parents, and the case is thus relieved of the legal obligation of the minor to them, but in their stead a sister as next of kin is shown to have been dependent upon, and supported by a minor brother, his acts and declarations, in reference to the aid extended would have the same probative force as though he were an adult, and if the proof warranted the expectation of continued support, a recovery on behalf of the sister would be sustained. The lack of probative force in the minor’s acts arises, then, not from the fact of minority, but from the relationship of parent and child. But the question in every case under the statute is, does the evidence show a reasonable expectation of pecuniary advantage to the next of kin, whether it be a parent, sister, or another who stands in that relation? Recovery may be had in either case as readily upon a reasonable expectation of a gratuity as of the enjoyment of a legal right. If the loss of the decedent has deprived the next of kin of a 'legal right to services or support, that fact does not militate against his. right to recover also for a gratuitous pecuniary advantage, which the proof shows he had the reasonable expectation of receiving if the life of the deceased had continued.

But as the acts and declarations of a minor who is capable of supporting the next of kin have the probative force to> ■establish the fact of the intention to continue to do so, if it can be shown that the minor son entertained that intention toward his father or mother, there is no reason for withholding the right to recover from them. If there is any difference ■between the difficulty of showing the probable future intent •of an adult and that of a minor son in such a case, it is one of degree only; but that goes to the weight of the evidence without necessarily destroying its probative effect. It is for the jury to say whether a minor son, who has contributed from his earnings to the support of his parents, was actuated ¡by filial affection which gave assurance of like conduct after majority, or whether his acts were prompted by a sort of parental coercion or other motive which rendered it probable that the experience of the past was not a safe guide by which to judge what his future conduct would have been.

But when the proof shows that the intent to aid the parent after majority has been manifested, a pecuniary injury to the parent when next of kin is established, within the meaning of the statute.

The jury was justified from the evidence in believing that the son’s donations to his father would have continued if he had reached his majority, and that they would have reached the sum awarded by them. We are not therefore to disturb the verdict.

The judgment will be affirmed.