Court Opinion

ID: 7364294
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-27 23:50:05.260786+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:20:43.088604
License: Public Domain

MAYFIELD, J.
This is an action by the appellant against the appellee street car company, brought under the homicide statute, to recover punitive damages for its wrongfully causing the death of plaintiff’s intestate.
The complaint contained a great number of counts; some declaring on simple negligence, some on wanton negligence, and some on willful injury. Some of these counts were palpably bad, to which demurrers were interposed, but overruled as to all. To each count the defendant filed a great number of pleas, general issue and special, to which special pleas demurrers were interposed, and sustained as to some and overruled as to others. Many of the rulings on the demurrers to the pleas were erroneous; but no questions as to the plead*496ings are raised or insisted upon. Hence we need not, and do not, consider them.
A number of assignments of error as to the rulings on the evidence are insisted upon. Some of these are clearly good, to wit, those which go to the question of refusing to allow plaintiff to prove, by the physician who treated the wounds of the intestate on the night of the injury, that intestate died that night from the effects of the injury. This, of course, was material, competent, and relevant evidence, and we can see no reason for refusal to allow it. Hence, in declining to allow plaintiff to make proof of this fact, in the manner and at the time he offered so to do, there was error.
Had the court allowed the plaintiff to prove that the person shown by the evidence to have been run over by defendant’s car was plaintiff’s intestate, and that he died of the injuries thus received, we are not prepared to say that there would not then have been sufficient evidence to authorize the jury to infer actionable negligence, as alleged; nor are we prepared to say that the evidence conclusively showed negligence on the part of the intestate which proximately contributed to the injury. Therefore we cannot know that the errors, as to declining to allow plaintiff to prove the identity of the person run over by the defendant’s car with the intestate, and that this person so run over by the car and treated by the physician died of the effects of the injuries thus received, were without injury to plaintiff.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Dowdell, C. J., and Simpson and Denson, JJ., concur.