1, 2. We fail to see that there was any error in admitting evidence. The conductor was informed that the plaintiff' and her child were sick when they boarded the ear. Surely it was competent for her to testify that she took the car because of the sickness of herself and child, or that for this reason her husband desired her to take the car. If it was a fact that she and her child were sick and the conductor knew it, why should this not go before the jury ? If they were sick people, they were entitled to be treated as such, the conductor knowing of their condition. It is true that whether the sickness constituted the motive for going by the cars or not, was of little consequence, but it was not wholly irrelevant, inasmuch as it served to.account for the plaintifFs presence on the car, and her relation to the company as a passenger. The declaration did not allege that at the place where the plaintiff' was ejected there was no police protection for ladies or strangers, but it was competent
. „ 3. The court charged the jury as follows : “ In some torts the entire injury is to the peace, happiness or feelings of the plaintiff. In such cases no measure of damages can be prescribed, except the enlightened conscience of impartial jurors. The worldly circumstances of the parties, the amount of bad faith in the transaction, and all the attendant facts, should be weighed by the j urv. In every tort there may be aggravating circumstances, either in the act or the intention, and in that event the jury may give additional damages, either to deter the wrong-doer from repeating the trespass, or as compensation for the wounded feelings of the .plaintiff.” This charge is complained of, because, under the facts in the case as alleged and proved, there were no aggravating circumstances either in the act or the intention of the parties who acted for the defendant, and there was no ground for finding punitive damages. The language of the charge is found 'verbatim in the code, but the two sections quoted from are presented in their inverse order. Sec. 3066 reads thus: “In every toft there may be aggravating circumstances, either in the act or the intention, and in that event the jury may
4. The eighth ground of the motion for a new trial is well founded. It complains that “ The court erred in failing to state to the jury that the defendant denied the allegations of the plaintiff, and did not state to the jury the issues made by the pleadings and the evidence, and did not charge the jury the defendant’s side of the case.” The whole charge is in the record. It contains no allusion to any issue between the parties nor to any defence set up or sought to be established. It submits to the jury the plaintiff’s side of the case alone, and, except in finally instructing as to the form of the verdict, it■ ignores any possibility of a finding in favor of the defendant. On looking to the evidence, we discover that it was legally possible under an appropriate charge of the court for the jury to arrive at a conclusion that the case was well defended. The evidence was clear that at the time of the alleged' misconduct, the defendant had in its employment only nine conductors who ran on the particular line upon which the alleged tort was committed. All of these were examined, and the motorman who ran the car on which the plaintiff said she was a passenger, was also examined. If the evidence of these ten witnesses was true, it was scarcely possible that the plaintiff had any cause of action. She was the only witness as to the misconduct complained of, and there was enough eonflict between her evidence and that submitted in behalf of the défendant, to render necessary at least some reference, in the charge of. the court, to the case made by the defendant. We doubt not it was an inadvertence on the part of the presiding judge not to have mentioned the defendant’s side of the case at all, but it was certainly an error of sufficient magnitude to require a new trial.
5. The request to charge that “ The jury must find a
Judgment reversed.