Carlton v. St. Louis & Suburban Railway Co.
Carlton v. St. Louis & Suburban Railway Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is an action for personal injuries alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the crew of one of defendant’s trolley cars. The amount prayed for is ten thousand dollars, and the verdict is for twenty-five hundred dollars.
The respondent boarded one of defendant’s cars on the evening of February 24, 1904, at the corner of New-
The first point made' for reversal is that the physical facts contradict her oral testimony, inasmuch as she swore that when the car started she fell so the back of. her head struck the step of the car. It is contended for the appellant this was a physical impossibility, because as respondent was in the act of alighting, she was facing outwardly at right angles to the car, and the forward movement of the car would give her such a motion in falling the back of her head could not possibly strike the step. It might well be argued to
“Although the jury may believe and find from the evidence that the plaintiff prior to receiving the injuries complained of in this case, was unchaste or that the pregnancy alleged in the evidence was the result of her unchastity, such fact can only be considered by the jury as affecting her credibility as a Avitness in the case; and Avhether she Avas chaste or of moral character or not at or prior to the time of the alleged injuries does not in the least affect her right to recover in this case, and should not be considered by the jury in determining the alleged negligence of the defendant and the right of the plaintiff to recover for injuries, if any, through the negligence of defendant.”
In instructing on the measure of damages, in case
It is said in 8 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2 Ed.), p. 645, that there is a conflict of opinion on the question of whether or not evidence of the moral character of a. plaintiff is admissible in an action for damages for personal injuries. But most of the opinions can be reconciled if attention is paid to whether or not the attempt to take the moral character of the person into consideration, is made in connection with damages for bodily and mental pain, or in connection with damages for loss of time or earnings. As already said, the moral character of .the respondent has nothing to do with her right to recover damages for bodily or mental pain, but there are respectable authorities in favor of the proposition, that her character might have been considered by the jury in passing on what damages should he awarded for loss of earnings. This point was decided in Abbot vs. Tolliver, 71 Wisc. 64, 36 N. W. 622, a case strikingly similar to the one at bar. The lower court had charged that the fact that the plaintiff was unchaste, or had more than one husband, had nothing to do with the amount of damages she was entitled to recover. In disposing of the point on appeal the Supreme Court said:
“This charge was excepted to, and we think it had a tendency to mislead the jury on the question of damages. We do not wish to intimate that an unchaste Avoman who is maimed and disabled by an accident on the railroad may not suffer as much pain of body or anxiety of mind as a virtuous woman would from a like*458 injury; but still, when it conies to a question of awarding damages it may be that a jury would not give — perhaps ought not to give — the same damages for injuries to an unchaste woman that they would allow a virtuous, intelligent, and industrious woman, who could command good wages, or take care of a family. The fact of chastity as well as other personal virtues and business qualifications, would be proper matter for a jury to consider in making up their verdict as to what damages should be given as a compensation for the injury received in view of all the facts. We think the court erred in refusing a new trial on the ground that the damages were excessive. For this reason the judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a new trial awarded.”
In Boyle vs. Case, 18 Fed. 880, the action was for physical injury caused by a mob it seems, of which the defendants were members, and which had inflicted corporal punishment on the plaintiff, who was a bartender. It was held as to the compensatory damages for physical pain and mental anguish, that this fact was immaterial, but that the damages for the humiliation might depend somewhat upon it; thus holding that damages may sometimes depend on a plaintiff’s character. The court said:
“A man whose life is low, coarse, and brutal, who is accustomed to brawls, to knock-down and drag-outs, may not feel the same degree of suffering and shame at being beaten or whipped as one who lives a higher and purer life, and who deserves and is accustomed to receive from his associates and the community personal esteem and favorable consideration. As I have said, what may be a great indignity to one person may not be felt to be such by another. Apply these suggestions to the circumstances of this case, as they appear to you from the evidence, and allow the plaintiff what you think right on this account.
*459 “In estimating compensatory damages in this case, you will endeavor to reach a fair and just conclusion; and, in this respect, your conclusion ought not to be unfavorably affected towards the plaintiff by the number and respectability of the defendants, or the character of the motives or causes which induced them to act. Nor should these damages be diminished, so far as the physical pain and mental anguish are concerned, by the fact that the plaintiff is an obscure man in the lower walks of life — that he is a bar-tender, a professional gambler, or even a vagrant. The- physical pain and mental anguish, which you find from the evidence the plaintiff suffered from the whipping and the attendant circumstances, you ought, by your verdict, to compensate him for, irrespective of his calling or condition in life. But the damages to be allowed for the indignity and disgrace involved in his treatment by the defendants, depends largely, as I have said, upon such circumstances.”
In Kingston vs. Fort Wayne, etc., R. R. Co., 112 Mich. 40, 40 L. R. A. 131, the question was whether plaintiff’s habit of intoxication could be shown on the question of the damages sustained in consequence of the injury. Plaintiff claimed damages for physical injury, that is, pain and suffering, and for loss of wages during the period of the accident, and for probable loss of future earnings. The injury was alleged to have been caused by a street car conductor carelessly pushing him from a car. From the opinion it appears the Supreme Court held first that the trial court had erroneously admitted proof of plaintiff’s habits, but on further consideration held the evidence was properly admitted as throwing-light on the probability of his securing employment and the continuity of any employment he might procure. It should be observed the ruling was that proof could be made of the actual fact that he was addicted to intoxication, and not proof of his reputation in that
In Metropolitan St. R. R. v. Kennedy, 82 Fed. 156, it was assigned for error that Kennedy was permitted to prove he was sober and industrious, but the court held it competent on the issue of damages as “the earning power of the plaintiff was an element in estimating the loss which he had sustained, and was likely to sustain in the future, by being incapacitated for labor in consequence of the injuries received.”
The foregoing are all the decisions we have found which throw light on the point before us, and on their authority we hold the court erred in instructing the jury in such form that they might well think they could ignore the unchaste character of the respondent in assessing damages for loss of time or earnings.
For respondent it is1 argued, the instruction fairly interpreted, did not mean to forbid the consideration of respondent’s character in connection with her loss of earnings, but only excluded it in connection with her right to recover at all for the injury received. Respondent’s counsel insist the court was compelled to instruct the jury, as was done, in view of the position taken by counsel for the appellant before the court, and in the presence of the jury, that respondent’s unchastity was grounds for a verdict against her. Appellant’s counsel did not so contend, but as indicated above, insisted that as respondent’s pregnancy was the result of unlawful intercourse, appellant ought not to be mulcted in damages for the abortion which followed the injury. However, if we should allow the lower court was justified by the attitude of appellant’s counsel in instructing the jury that the mere fact that respondent was unchaste would not debar her from recovering com
The other points made by appellant’s counsel have been considered and found devoid of merit. The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.