Louisville & N. R. R. v. Hull

Opinion op the c’ott.t by

JUDGE HOBSON

Reversing.

The wife of appellee, G-. W. Hull, died at Asheville, N. C., on May 26, 1900. He lived at Slauglitersville, Ky., and started home with the corpse of his1 wife. He bought tickets to Nashville for himself, • child, and the corpse. About sun-up, as he was approaching Nashville, he saw the conductor, and had him to telegraph to the ticket agent at Nashville to have the tickets ready for him. He did this for fear of want of time between the arrival of hisi train and the departure of the train for Slaughtersville. When he got to Nashville he went immediately with his little girl to the ticket office, and told the agent he wanted two whole tickets and a half ticket 'to Slaughtersville. The agent said to him to get back in line, and wait until his turn came. He said, “Didn’t -you get a telegram to have Míese tickets ready?” The agent answered, “Yes, but I knew you had plenty of time, and didn’t get them ready.” *566Hull then took his place in the line, and after a while got up to the window and received his tickets. , He then said, “One of' these tickets is for a corpse.” The agent answered, “1 know it, and have it already marked.” Hull then asked, “Take that and show7 it to the baggage master in the baggage room.” Hull went immediately to the baggage room, and handed the baggage master the corpse ticket, telling him he had a ticket for a corpse. The baggage master punched it and handed it back to him. Hull then said, “Now, who must I give it to?” He said, “Keep it, ’and give it to the conductor on the train. That is all you have* to do. You need not be uneasy.' Everything will be all right.” The corpse was then between the baggage room door and the gate, setting on a truck between the door and the fence on the platform. Hull got on the train and sat there some minutes. Presently he saw his trunk pass to the baggage car, and, not seeing the corpse go by; went out to the conductor, who was standing beside the train, showed him his tickets, and told him he had a ticket for a corpse, and wanted to be sure that everything was all right. He wanted to know who to give the ticket to. The conductor said: “'That is all right. Whenever you get a ticket like that, that, is all you have got to do. I will take that ticket up on the train.” Hull replied: “I am uneasy. I am afraid everything isn’t all right. I have seen my trunk pass along, but I haven’t seen the corpse.” Then the conductor halloed to the porter, and asked if there- was a corpse on the train. The porter said, “No.” The conductor ran into the baggage room to see about it. He was gone probably two minutes, and when he came out the train started immediately. He came into the coach where Hull was, and told him that his wife’s remains had been “What must I do with the corpse ticket?” *567sent off on tlie Northwestern. Hull said: “How did this happen? This is an awful thing.” He said: “I don’t know. It is a terrible blunder. It is an inexcusable mistake.” Hull asked what he was going to do about it, and he said that he would telegraph to the superintendent, and get the box brought back and sent up on another train. At Burlington he brought Hull a telegram, stating that-lie had found the corpse; had secured it on some other road; that it would be sent up on the first passenger train; and for him to extend to Hull any courtesy he could. Hull reached Nashville at 6:40 a. m. The train for Slaughters-ville left at 7:10 a. m. The conductor was still looking for the corpse, when he was ordered by the station master to pall out, as it was then two minutes past leaving time. The. box containing the corpse had tacked upon it a card reading: “Mrs. G. W. Hull, Slaughtersville, Kentucky.” null had telegraphed to Slaughtersville that he would come on the morning train, and have the burial that evening. The train was due at Slaughtersville at noon. They got everything in readiness for the funeral, and, when the train arrived without the corpse, the relatives who had come to the station returned home, and those who had com" to the church for the funeral, three miles in the country, were sent home. Some time after midnight the corpse reached Slaughtersville, and it was buried the next day. ' It rained the next morning, and a great many did not come. Quite a concourse had assembled the day before. Hull had been nursing his sick wife six months. His vitality was nuii'h exhausted, and he was in a weakened condition, so that it wras only by a strong effort of the will that he ■was able to be on his feet. He seemed a good deal confused, looked like he was almost broken down, and was terribly worried over his trip, and the way he had been *568disappointed. He filed this suit to'recover damages of the railroad company, and proved on the trial substantially the above facts. The proof for the company was to the effect that when the corpse reached Nashville it was placed ou a truck by the side of the train, and remained there until after the Slaughtersville train left. After this it was taken to the baggage room of the road over which it had come, and later in the day, when the mistake was found out, was taken over to the baggage room of appellant. The baggage master and the conductor denied the statements of Hull given above, and testified that the corpse was not in charge of appellant’s agents until after the train for Slaughtersville had left. Their testimony is confirmed by a number of employes about the- station. Hull’s version of the transaction is confirmed by his little girl, by the punched marks in the corpse ticket, and some other circumstances. The jury to whom the case was submitted returned a verdict in favor of Hull for $1,640. and the defendant appeals. •

The court instructed the jury that if, after Hull purchased the tickets, the box containing the corpse was placed in charge of the defendant in reasonable time for shipment on the train, and defendant agreed to ship it on that train, and negligently failed to do so, or if defendant had a reasonable time after receiving the corpse to ship it omthe morning train by the exercise of proper diligence, and for the lack of such diligence it was not so shipped, and its arrival at Slaughtersville was delayed on account thereof, they should find for the plaintiff such an amount in damages as would reasonably compensate him for the trouble, inconvenience, and cost caused by the delay, and they might also allow a reasonable amount for any mental anguish the plaintiff suffered by reason of the *569delay. But if he failed to inform the agents of the defendant as to the whereabouts of the corpse,,or failed to notify them to put the same on the morning train for Slaughters-ville, the jury should find for the defendant, unless the defendant’s baggage agent assured him when he punched his ticket that defendant would look after putting the corpse on the train. The jury were also told to find for the defendant if, after receiving the box, its agents did not have a reasonable time, by the exercise of proper diligence, to put it on the train and ship it to Slaughtersville, and that they could in no event award anything to the plaintiff on account of the delay, inconvenience, or distress suffered by those who attended at the depot or graveyard, or who were prevented from attending the burial by the delay in the arrival of the corpse.

It is earnestly insisted for appellant that there is no property in a corpse (Keys v. Konkel, 119 Mich., 550, 78 N. W., 649, 44 L. R. A., 242, 75 Am. St. Rep., 423), and that mental, suffering can not be recovered for in a case of this character. In Hale v. Bonner, 82 Tex., 33, 17 S. W., 605, 14 L. R. A., 336, 27 Am. St. Rep., 850, which was a' suit for damages for delay in the shipment of a corpse, the court said: “We are unable to distinguish, in principle, this case from those in which recoveries against telegraph companies have been allowed for failure to deliver with promptness messages announcing the death or mortal illness of near relatives. Such cases are exceptional. As a rule, mental suffering is not an element of) the damages which are recoverable for the breach of a contract, or in an action for tort, founded upon a right growing out of a contract. Ordinarily the object in sending a telegraphic message announcing the death or sickness of a relative is to afford the person to be benefited the solace that may result *570from being present during the last illness of the relative, or attending his obsequies, as the case may be. The direct result of the failure to perform the duty of delivering the message being to deprive the person addressed of this solace, and to cause distress of mind, it is not unreasonable that he should have his compensation therefor.” This case was followed in Wells, Fargo & Co.’s Express v. Fuller (Tex. Civ. App.), 35 S. W., 824. The right to recover for mental anguish for failure to deliver a telegram in the class of cases referred to was Upheld in Chapman v. Telegraph Co., 90 Ky., 265 (12 R., 265) (13 S. W., 880), and after reconsideration this case was adhered to in a numher of recent cases. In Telegraph Co. v. Vancleve (22 R., 53) (54 S. W., 827), the court said: “It is probably hi accordance with the views of the majority of the State courts that mental anguish and injured feelings alone, and unaccompanied with physical injury, do not furnish ground for recoven. P>ut in this State the rule has been announced otherwise. And so, likewise, a recovery in this class of cases can be had under the decisions in the States of Texas, Alabama, Indiana, Iowa, North Carolina, and Tennessee. It may be admitted that there are difficulties in the way of an exact measurement of such damages, but it does not seem to us that this is a sufficient reason why a negligent public carrier should escape with merely nominal damages. The same difficulty of accurately measuring such damages arises in cases of slander, breach of marriage contract, and in cases where mental suffering is accompanied with physical pain. If, as argued, the law does not deal generally with the feelings: and emotions, it may be answered that here the parties themselves have contracted with respect to those very things, or at least have contracted with respect to those things which naturally *571affect the feelings and emotions.” No. sound distinction can be maintained between the Telegraph cases and this case. They rest upon the principle that damages naturally resulting from a wrongful act, and fairly within the' reasonable contemplation of the parties, may be recovered. The logic of appellant’s position, if followed, would lead to' the conclusion that if it had lost this. corpse, however negligently, no action could be maintained, at least for any substantial recovery. For if there is no property in a corpse, and there can be no recovery for mental suffering for the failure to carry and deliver it at the proper time, then for a very great wrong there would be practically no remedy. The tenderest feelings of the human heart cluster about the remains of the dead. The duty of Christian burial is one which loving hands perform as a privilege. An indignity or wrong to a corpse is resented more quickly than a wrong to the living, and, if mental suffering may be recovered for in the one case, it is hard to see why' it may not be recovered for in the other. The damages for the loss of a corpse and those for the delay in delivering it differ only in degree. In actions for breach of a marriage .contract, damages for mental suffering are allowed because these are the natural result of the defendant’s wrong, and in no other way can proper compensation for it be had. The same rule must apply in actions for negligence in carrying a corpse, .if the carrier is to be held to proper responsibility in this class of cases. We therefore conclude that there was no error in the ipstructions of the court.

The question of negligence was for the jury, and, while the evidence was very conflicting, we do not feel at liberty to disturb'the verdict on the ground that it is against the evidence.

*572It is earnestly insisted that tin1 damages _are excessive, and that the plaintiff’s counsel was guilty of misconduct in his closing argument to the jury. The plaintiff was treated with proper courtesy. There was only a delay in the interment of his wife’s body from one afternoon until the next morning. The corpse remained at the baggage; room from the time his train left until that evening, when it was put on the next train, and taken safely to Slaughters-ville. There is no intimation that the condition of the corpse rendered a speedy interment necessary. Appellant was not treated with indifference, but the conductor seems to have done all that he could; and, on all the evidence, it is hard to escape the conviction that the damages awarded are palpably excessive, and given under the influence of passion or prejudice. In making the closing argument to the jury, the attorney for the plaintiff commenced reading from the defendant’s answer in the case, informing the jury that the defendant had entirely changed its theory of defense since it had taken its depositions, and that the plaintiff was not prepared to meet fully its present theory. On the objection of the defendant that this was a matter for the court alone, the court requested tin1 attorney to desist from this course. Thereupon he proceeded with his speech by beginning to state the substance of the answer, and, on the objection of the defendant, the court again required him to desist. Tie then said the issues had been changed by the defendant. On the objection of the defendant, the court directed him to confine his discussion to the facts of the case, and the law as embodied in the instructions of the court, whereupon he said to the jury: “We have nothing in our pleadings that we wish to conceal from the jury. We do not have» to ask the court to conceal our pleadings for us.” All this was ob*573jected to, and the court refused to exclude it. It was improper. If it was desired to get before the jury the statements in the pleadings of the defendant, these pleadings should have been given in evidence on the trial, so that the defendant might have an opportunity to explain any inconsistency. When this was not done, they should not have been referred to in the concluding argument, which should have been confined to the evidence heard before the jury, and the law7 of the case as given in the instructions of the court. The attorney also said, in his concluding argument, this: “Time is precious with railroad companies sometimes. Mr. Hull telephoned me to meet him in Slaughtersville to come here. I started there, and found that the Texas train was an hour late, and I was tohl that they had stopped the train at Louisville to load a negro minstrel show. I do not know7 this. I was told this. Stopped that train, wasted precious, time, loading Ward & How7es-’ or some other negro minstrel show. That train carried the mail, too.' That shows how railroads do. They are exceedingly accommodating when there is any money in sight. They will hold a train an hour for a negro minstrel show, but it could not hold its train three minutes to get a corpse on the train. There* was no money in that.” Again he said: “I am told that when a railroad company gets into trouble they get all their witnesses together to take their affidavits. I am no railroad lawyer. I do not know this, but railroad lawyers tell me that they just have to do this to hold their witnesses to the mark, — to keep them from forgetting. Mr. Fisher and Mr. Summerhays doubtless gave their affidavits when this matter came up.” Again he said: “If I had been at fault in this case, it w7as in asking so little damages. Mr. Hull and I visited Nashville to take deposi*574tions in the case. We Avere in the magnificent depot of defendant at Nashville (defendant’s counsel suggested that defendant owned no depot in Nashville, to which he said that it is true he referred to the Central Station), Avhich is more magnificent than Solomon’s Temple. The ticked: office there cost more than this court house, I reckon; and the doors of that station, more than plaintiff asked for his damages in this case, I imagine.” All this the defendant objected to, and moAved the court to exclude it from the jury, Avhich was refused. It AAras improper for the attorney to go outside of the* evidence heard by the jury, and the law of the case as given by the court. It was especially improper for him to state facts of his personal experience which had not been testified to, and were calculated to prejudice the jury against the defendant, or to swell the amount of the verdict. Considering the size of the verdieff. in connecting with the argument of the counsel, avo are clearly of opinion that a noAV trial should be granted.

It is certified in the bill of excejitions that it contains all of the evidence heard on the trial. This is condusiA'e, as the record is presented, that the bill contains all the evidence heard by the jury, although, from the grounds for new trial, it appears, complaint was made as to the reading of certain depositions, which are not incorporated in the bill of exceptions.

Judgment reversed, and cause remanded, Avitlx directions to grant appellant a new trial.