Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Holbrook
Norfolk & Western Railway Co. v. Holbrook
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
W. T. Holbrook, a bridge carpenter, aged thirty-eight and employed by plaintiff in error at a wage of $2.75 per day, was killed by a passing train while at his work in McDowell County, West Virginia, January 4, 1913. He left a widow, thirty-two years old, and five children of
. The orily assignment of error now relied upon' goes to a single sentence in instruction No. 5, wherein comparison is made between the pecuniary injuries of a widow and infant children and those of adults or mere next of kin. At the instance of the administratrix, the court told the jury (instruction No. 4) that if Holbrook’s own negligence contributed proximátely to his death only proportionate damages could be recovered and then gave instruction No. 5, in the following words:
“The court further instructs the jury that if they believe from the evidence that plaintiff is entitled to recover, then the amount of her damages is, subject to diminution, if any, as set out in instruction No. 4, to be measured by the pecuniary injury suffered by the widow and infant children as the direct result of the death of the husband and father, it not being permissible for the jury to go beyond the pecuniary loss and give damages for the loss of the love of the husband or father by wife or children, or to compensate them for their grief or sorrow or mental anguish for his death, or other-purely sentimental injury or loss.
“However, the court instructs you that where the persons suffering injury are the dependent widow and infant, children of a deceased husband and father, the pecuniary
“ (1) What the earning capacity' of deceased has been prior to and was at the time of his death, and what it probably might have been in the future had he not been killed, at the same wages he was receiving at the time of his death, as shown by the evidence; and, in estimating the probable earnings of decedent, and what his family might have realized from them during his future life had he not been killed; and, in estimating the length of his probable life-had he not.béen killed, it will be the duty of the jury to consider his age, health, habits, industry, intelligence, character, and expectancy of life, as shown by the evidence introduced before you.
“ (2) The jury will also take into consideration the care, attention, instruction, training, advice and guidance which one of decedent’s disposition, character, habits, intelli.gence, and devotion to his parental duties, or indifference thereto, as shown by the evidence, would reasonably be expected to give to his infant children during their minority, and the pecuniary benefit therefrom to said children, and include the pecuniary value of the same in the damages assessed.”
The Railway Company duly excepted because “the court tells the jury that the widow and infant children of decedent are entitled to larger damages than would be the
Under the Employers’ Liability Act, where death is instantaneous, the beneficiaries can recover their pecuniary loss and nothing more; but the relationship between them and the deceased is a proper circumstance for consideration in computing the same. The elements which make up the total damage resulting to a minor child from a parent’s death may be materially different from those démanding examination where the beneficiary is a spouse or collateral dependent relative; but in every instance the award must be based upon money values, the amount of which can be ascertained only upon a view of the peculiar facts presented. Michigan Central Railroad v. Vreeland, 227 U. S. 59, 68, 72, 73; American Railroad of Porto Rico v. Didricksen, 227 U. S. 145, 149; Gulf, Colorado &c. Ry. v. McGinnis, 228 U. S. 173, 175, 176; North Carolina Railroad v. Zachary, 232 U. S. 248, 256, 257.
In the present case there was testimony concerning the personal qualities of the deceased and the interest which he took in his family. It was proper, therefore, to charge that the jury might take into consideration the care, attention, instruction, training, advice and guidance which the evidence showed he reasonably might have been, expected to give his children during their minority, and to include the pecuniary value thereof in the damáges assessed. . But there was nothing — indeed ther'é could be nothing — to show the hypothetic injury which might have befallen some unidentified adult beneficiary or dependent next of kin. The ascertained circumstances must govern ■in every case. There was no occasion to compare the rights of the actual beneficiaries with those of supposed dependents; and we think the trial court plainly erred when it declared that where the persons suffering injury are the dependent widow and infant children of a deceased
The facts brought out during the course of the trial were adequate to constitute a strong appeal to the sympathy naturally engendered in the minds of jurors by the misfortunes of a widow and her dependent children. In such circumstances it was especially important that the charge should be free from anything which they might construe as- a- permission to go outside of the evidence. It is the duty of the court in its relation to the jury to protect the parties from unjust verdicts arising from impulse, passion or prejudice, or from any other violation of lawful rights. Pleasants v. Fant, 22 Wall. 116, 121.
Considering the whole record we feel obliged to conclude that the probable result of the indicated language in Instruction No. 5 was -materially to prejudice the rights of the Railway Company. The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is accordingly reversed and the cause remanded to the District Court for the Western District of Virginia for further proceedings in conformity with this opinion.
Judgment reversed.
Concurring Opinion
with whom
I am unable to concur in the opinion and judgment of the court. I think the criticism that the railway company makes of the charge of the court to the jury is too severe in inference and makes a single sentence in a charge which
The court in the case at bar was confronted with the difficulty with which courts are often confronted and which no court has yet been able completely to surmount by any form of words — of bringing home to itself or to a jury the loss to wife and infant children through the death of the husband and father. The court in the present case ventured to say that these relations had something more 'in them and their destruction had something .more of “pecuniary injury” than the injury to “the mere next of kin” and that there might be a loss to infant children greater than to adults. Would any one like to deny it? Would not its denial upset all that is best, in sentiment and duty, in life? And must that sentiment and duty, so potent in motive and conduct, be illegal to emphasize in a court of justice as an interference with the strict standards of the law?
By these standards, I admit, the charge of the court must be determined, and, therefore, let us turn to them as applied by the district court. The court said the amount of recovery must “be measured by the pecuniary injury suffered by the widow and infant children as the direct result of the death of the husband and father, it not being permissible for the jury to go beyond the pecuniary loss and give damages fbr the loss of the love of the husband or father by wife or children, or to compensate them for their grief or sorrow or mental anguish for his death, or other purely sentimental injury or loss.” (Italics mine.) Can there be any mistake in the standard declared by the court? Not love, not sorrow, not mental anguish, not sentiment, but loss in money “as the direct result of the
A money standard with careful iteration, it will be observed, is declared throughout, and there is no dispute as to the elements to which it is to be applied; and of which the law assigns to the jury the duty of estimating. I repeat, no error is asserted-of these elements or of the estimate of their pecuniary value by the jury, but counsel say that they were made vicious and might have been exaggerated or misunderstood by the comparison made by the court between the widow and children and dependents who were mere next of kin and between infants and adults. It may be well to give the court’s language.
Reference
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- Under the Employers’ Liability Act, where death is instantaneous the beneficiaries can recover their pecuniary loss and nothing more; but the relationship between them and the deceased is a proper circumstance for consideration in computing the same. In every instance, however, the award must be based on money values, the amount of which can be ascertained only upon a view of the peculiar facts presented. While it is proper for the trial court to instruct the jury to take into consideration the care, attention, instruction, guidance and advice which a father may give his children and to include the pecuniary value thereof in the damages assessed, it is not proper to give the jury occasion for indefinite speculation by comparing the rights of the actual beneficiaries with those of the supposed dependents who are mere next of kin. Where the facts are adequate to constitute a strong appeal to the sympathy of the jury the charge should be free from anything which the jury can construe into a permission to go outside of the evidence. It is the duty of the court in its relation to the jury to protect the parties from unjust verdicts arising from impulse, passion or prejudice or any other violation of lawful rights. Pleasants v. Fant, 22 Wall. 116.