Court Opinion

ID: 6542352
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 22:16:46.103845+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:52.176364
License: Public Domain

Sandels, J. The appellee, as administrator of the estate of R. Lee Connor, deceased, sued appellant Fordyce as receiver of the Texas and St. Louis Railway Company, to recover damages for the killing of his decedent. It was alleged that deceased was a passenger upon said railway, and that by reason of the negligence, etc., of defendant’s servants, the car in which deceased sat was thrown from the track, whereby deceased was killed. Defendant denied that deceased was killed by reason of said car being thrown from the track. It is alleged that the deceased left him surviving his father, L. D. Con-nor, his sole heir at law, who had suffered pecuniary loss, and damage from the death of his son. While there is a singular absence of proof identifying the time, place and circumstance of the accident, it does appear that plaintiff, on September 25, 1885, found deceased lying about sixty yards from where there had been a wreck on a railroad, suffering much. That he caused him to be carried to his (plaintiff’s) house, and sent for a physician. That the doctor, after driving some twelve or thirteen miles, arrived at McCants’ house and saw deceased about 7 o’clock p. m. Deceased complained of pain in the stomach and was vomiting blood. Pie died seven or eight hours after the doctor arrived. The court permitted the physician, Youmans, against the objection of the defendant, to testify to the contents of the telegram received by him from McCants; that Connor had been injured; that there had been an accident on the railroad, and that he had been seriously hurt and required the witness’s assistance; and, further, to the statements made to. him (Youmans) by Connor, after his arrival at McCants’ house. That he (Connor) had been thrown heavily across the corner of a seat, and so received the injury. Deceased was an adult, 22 years of age and unmarried. The action was for the benefit of his father. There was verdict and judgment against defendant for six thousand dollars and he appealed. The appellant, among other causes for new trial assigns as error: The admission of the testimony of witness, You-mans, as to the contents of the telegram and the statements of the deceased to him as to the cause and manner of the injury; and also the giving of instructions prayed by plaintiff and that prepared by the court.  1. Evidence: Hearsay: Res gestæ.   2. Reverseble error. 1. The contents of the telegram were hearsay and the statements of Connor to the witness were not part of the res gestae. It was error to admit them. It does not follow in all cases that a reversal should ensue because improper testimony has gone to the jury. In this case, however, there is not, beyond the statements of Connor to Dr. Youmans, a scintilla of direct proof, and very little circtimstautial, from which to conclude that deceased received his injuries by reason of the car being thrown from the track. And while, in the absence of this testimony, this court might sustain a verdict upon the other facts proved, it cannot measure the cogency of this statement with the jury, and think the admission of Connor’s statement manifestly prejudicial to the defendant. 2. Lord Campbell’s act, 9 and 10 Vict., ch. 93, has been substantially re-enacted in many of the American States; and to obviate the difficulties which early beset the construction of that act, as To the character of the loss for which a recovery might be had, and as to the principle upon which an action was maintainable, many legislatures provide that the damages shall be compensation, with reference to the pecuniary injuries resulting to the wife or next of kin of such deceased, from the death. It is so provided in this State. Mansf. Dig., secs. 5223, 5226. The liability of1 carriers, particularly under similar statutes, has been so stubbornly contested in the various States that every imaginable phase of the law has, been somewhere and at sometime presented. And upon a thorough examination of the authorities it is a matter of no little concern that we find the opinions of the courts as divergent and unsatisfactory as the verdicts of the juries upon which they passed. The chief difficulty seems to lie in their failure to recognize the impossibility of laying down a fixed rule by which damages are to be measured in ail cases. Some courts say that the earnings of the deceased during his or her expectancy of life, less necessary expenses, should be the measure of damages. Others say that sums proportioned to those habitually given, the value of assistance habitually rendered, or amounts promised, which rea-ronably may be expected to be paid, should be the measure. While others despairing, apparently, of a satisfactory formulation of a rule, say to the jury: “It would perhaps' be a fair way to estimate the amount of damages, to take the probable amount of his (deceased’s) accumulation for the time he might reasonably have been expected to live, and find that for the plaintiff; but if you can find a better rule, you are at liberty to adopt it.” Penn. R. R. Co. v. McCloskey, 23 Penn. St., 526.  3. Damages: To father from death of son.   4. Same. There may be great differences between the pecuniary loss sustained by different persons who are next of kin. The pecuniary loss to a child of tender years, arising from the death of its father, is different from its pecuniary loss upon the death of the mother. In the latter case the care, moral, intellectual and physical culture bestowed by a mother have been held to have a pecuniary value. McIntyre v. N. Y. Cent. R. R. Co., 37 N. Y. Rep., 287. The loss of a husband produces still a different pecuniary injury to the wife; while the loss of an adult son to a father, as in this case, involves other elements of damage. By the fourth instruction given to the jury in this case they were told that the measure of damages was •the probable earnings of deceased during his expectancy of life, less his expenses, taking into conside'ration his age, business capacity, habits, health and energy. How do we arrive at expectancy of life of deceased? Properly by tables compiled from mortuary reports. The expectancy of life of deceased was shown to be 42 years. By the same table the expectancy of life of his father, for whose benefit this suit is prosecuted, is 14 years. The vice of the instruction becomes apparent when we reflect that there is recovered by the father as a pecuniary loss to himself, the accumulations of the son for a period of twenty-eight years, after he (the father) is presumed to have died. In this case the plaintiff can recover substantial damages for the father of deceased, only by showing that deceased gave assistance to his father-contributed money to his support, or that the father had a reasonable expectation of pecuniary benefit from the continued life of the son; the reasonable character of this expection to appear from the facts in proof. These should furnish the measure of damages. In the absence of such proof only nominal damages can be recovered. Pierce on Railroads, pp. 393 to 399, and cases cited; 3 Huistone and Norman, (Exchequer) 2 II; Dalton v. S. E. Ry. Co., 4 C. B. N. S., 296; 4 Jur. N. S., 711; Penn. R. R. Co. v. Brooks, 37 Penn. St., 339; Little Rock & Fort Smith Ry. v. Townsend, 41 Ark., 382, and many other cases. For the errors indicated let the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.