Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad v. Dickey
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad v. Dickey
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action brought in the district court of Finney county, Kansas, by T. M. Dickey, as the husband of Jane Dickey, in which he seeks to recover from the railroad company for alleged loss of services consequent upon the injury of Jane Dickey through the negligence and carelessness of said company. There was a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff below, and the railroad company brings the case here for review.
The petition alleges that for a long time previous to the 29th day of October, 1888, and at the time of filing said petition, the plaintiff and Jane Dickey were husband and wife. It then alleges the corporate existence of the defendant company under the laws of the state of Kansas, and that said company was engaged in the business of operating a railroad and carrying passengers for hire upon its cars in the states, of Kansas and Colorado; that on or about the 29th day of October, 1888, Jane Dickey purchased from defendant’s agent at Garden City, in the state of Kansas, a ticket from Garden City to Pueblo, Col., and entered one of the regular passenger-cars provided by the defendant for transporting passengers from Garden City to Pueblo ; that she remained in said car' until the train reached the town of La Junta, Col., at which point, it is alleged, she was requested by the agent of the defendant to leave said car and enter-another; that while she was endeavoring to comply with said request, and while upon the steps; the said' car was, by the servants of the defendant negligently
To this petition the defendant railroad company filed its general demurrer, which was by the court overruled, which ruling is assigned as the first error in this case. The grounds urged by counsel for plaintiff in error, upon which it is claimed the demurrer should have been sustained, are : (1) That the petition should have alleged not only that the plaintiff arid Jane Dickey were husband and wife at the time the injuries were alleged to have been received by her and at the time the action Avas commenced, but should also shoAv that the plaintiff and Jane Dickey lived and cohabited together during such time, and that such actual relations existed between them as would indi
The second of these propositions is without merit. The plaintiff in this action was pursuing, not a statutory remedy, but a common-law.right of action, transitory in its nature, and which could be maintained in this state. The case cited by the counsel for the plaintiff in error was where a statutory right alone had been invoked, and the decision therein given plainly proceeds upon that theory.
The other objection raises a more serious question. It is true, that the rule formerly was that husband and wife are one person, and that he has the exclusive right to the labor, services and earnings of the wife, and, if this rule still obtains, it follows as a natural result that an allegation of the marital relation would be sufficient. But, this old rule has been radically and, we think, wisely changed. Many of the restraints and disabilities of coverture have been removed by positive legislative enactment, so that to-day, in this state, a married woman may carry on any trade or business, perform any labor or service, and her earnings from said trade or businéss, labor or service, are her sole and separate property, and she may sue both to protect and enforce her rights in the same manner as if she were unmarried. It follows from this, as was said in an opinion delivered by Mr. Justice Johnston, in City of Wyandotte v. Agan, 37 Kas. 530 :
"That the time and services of the wife did not*768 necessarily belong to the husband, nor does an injury which causes the loss of such time and service necessarily accrue to him. At least a portion of her time may be given to the labor or business done on her sole and separate account. The profits or earnings of such labor or business are her sole and separate property, and cannot be appropriated or controlled by her husband without her consent. So far, then, as she is deprived of these she suffers a loss which is personal to herself, for which she alone can recover. The fact that she is partially or wholly dependent upoi^ the husband for support does not abridge her right of action, nor transfer to him that which accrued solely to her.”
In Townsdin v. Nutt, 19 Kas. 282, an action was brought by the wife to recover damages for an alleged assault and battery. The petition was in the usual form, and did not disclose that the plaintiff was a married woman. It did state that she was hindered and prevented from performing her necessary work from the injuries which she received, and that she had been compelled to pay and had paid a certain sum to be cured of such injuries. The defendant, in answer to this petition, set forth as a separate defense, that at and before the filing of said petition the plaintiff was a married woman, intermarried with William Nutt, and that she is still a married woman. Upon the motion of the plaintiff, the trial court struck out this defense as irrelevant and immaterial matter, and this being alleged as error, the supreme court, in an opinion written by Chief Justice Horton, says :
“No error was committed thereby. Even if the husband be liable in some cases for medical aid furnished the wife, and under some conditions is the party to recover for the loss of the services of the wife, in this case the pleading struck out was not sufficiently specific and full to tender a defense. The injuries were alleged to have occurred about the 1st day of*769 February, 1876. The petition was not filed till March afterward; and as to the coverture of the plaintiff at the time of the assault and battery, nothing is asserted. Nor does the attempted answer set forth any circumstances showing that within the decisions of this court the husband was responsible' for the medical treatment of the wife or entitled to her earnings. Not only should the marriage have been stated as of the time prior to the payment of the money for medical treatment and loss of service, but the pleading should at least have shown.that the plaintiff and her husband lived and cohabited together, and possibly it should also have appeared that the wife was not engaged in performing labor and services on her separate account. . . . The plaintiff in error seems to have contented himself with the old ple.a of feme covert, and to have disregarded the provisions of the laws which authorize a married woman to sue and be sued in the same manner as if she was unmarried, and to perform labor and services on her sole and separate account, and make the earnings therefrom her sole and separate property.”
From the doctrine announced in these two cases it plainly appears that a pleading which simply alleges the marital relation does not tender an issue as regards the services of the wife, either as a cause of action or as a defense. Nor do we think that the further allegation contained'in the petition in this case that by reason of the injuries complained of the plaifttiff "has been and will be deprived of her services,” is sufficient to remedy this defect. This latter allegation is a statement of a conclusion alleged by the pleader to be the natural result of the injuries sustained, and not the result of any relationship existing between the plaintiff and the injured party by reason of which plaintiff was entitled to such services. It could only have the force contended for by the defendant in error by invoking the aid of the old rule of law which the
Plaintiff in error further urges that the trial court erred in overruling the motion for a new trial made by the plaintiff in error below, for the reason that the answers to the special questions of fact submitted to the jury at its request were inconsistent, contrary to the evidence, and the amount awarded excessive. The questions and answers to which our attention is especially directed, are as follows :
“7. How much do you allow plaintiff for loss of services of his wife? Ans. $400.
“8. Did you allow plaintiff anything for loss of society of his wife? If so, how much? A. $1,200.”
“12. How much do you find the plaintiff was required and obligated to pay for help employed to perform the ordinary services that would have been performed by Mrs. Dickey but for the injury complained of? A. Nothing.”
The court, in instructing the jury as to the measure of damages in case the plaintiff should recover, carefully set forth its views, specifying exactly what damages the jury were entitled to allow in a case of this kind.
First, as to expenses, the court instructed, in substance, that if the plaintiff was entitled to recover at all, he was entitled to recover for the pecuniary loss sustained by him by reason of the injury of his wife, and that such loss was the actual amount necessarily incurred by him for medicines, medical attendance, and such necessary appliances as he purchased, also the actual amount paid or obligations incurred by him for the necessary services and labor substituted for the ordinary services of his wife. And the court in
The plaintiff in error further contends that the court erred in excluding certain evidence offered on the trial of said cause by said plaintiff in error. The character of the testimony offered was to prove that a portion of the injuries complained of resulted from a lack of care and attention on the part of the plaintiff and his wife from a failure to procure, within what was claimed to be a reasonable time, medical attention for said injuries, and the defendant also attempted to show that the treatment first given by the physician called was unskillful, and in a great measure caused the permanency of such injury. The court properly excluded such evidence. The defense tendered by the railroad company attempted to set up certain contributory negligence by alleging that the injuries complained of by Mrs. Dickey were the result of her own carelessness, and that only for the reason, as it alleges, that she stepped from the train while it was yet moving, and after, as it was claimed, she had been directed by the servants of the defendant company to retain her seat until the train had stopped. The plaintiff had a right to assume that this would
A further reason urged by the plaintiff in error why • a motion for a new trial should have -been sustained is that the damages are excessive, and appear to have been given under the influence of prejudice and passion. It is the duty of courts to see that exact justice is meted out to all litigants alike, and whenever either the letter of the law entirely lacking its spirit is invoked upon the one hand or a blind prejudice upon the other, the success of either being the destruction of law and society, courts should use their power to protect litigants, thereby maintaining the rights of society at large, and subserving the true purposes for which they were formed. It is plain from the evidence in this case that the wife of plaintiff was injured, and there is an abundance of evidence to sustain the propo - sition that this inj ury was the result of the negligence and carelessness of the servants of the plaintiff in error ; but because this is true, and because under the evidence plaintiff may have been entitled to recover some amount, it does not follow that this court should sustain a judgment based upon a verdict that not only entirely disregards the instructions of the trial court, but assesses large sums for damages which are based upon no evidence whatever. This was not an action brought by the party injured, but was one accruing to a third party, who was a person standing in a peculiar relation in life to the injured person. As before stated, the court clearly instructed the jury as to what measure of damages the plaintiff in this action was entitled to recover; but, notwithstanding these instructions, the jury found the sum of $500 for mental distress and anxiety, and $266 for personal service of the plaintiff
Plaintiff in error further contends that the court erred in instructing the jury in regard to the meaning and scope of the word ‘ ‘ services ’' when employed to indicate the ground on -which the husband is allowed to maintain an action. From the views expressed in this opinion we deem it unnecessary to decide whether the term “services,” when used in such connection, includes society or not, or to discuss any other errors alleged on the part of plaintiff in error.
For the errors above indicated, the judgment in this case is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad Company v. T. M. Dickey
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- 4 cases
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- Published