Citation Numbers: 52 S.E. 731, 140 N.C. 196
Judges: Brown, Hoke, Clark, Connor, Walker
Filed Date: 12/12/1905
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This case was before the court at the last term and the facts are fully stated, 138 N. C., 555. The case comes back upon one exception only by the defendant to the refusal of the judge to give the following instruction: “That in no aspect of the case can the plaintiff recover punitive damages.” The court erred in refusing the instruction. Damages are classified generally as “compensatory”’ and “punitive.” The latter are termed also vindictive or exemplary damages. Compensatory damages are defined by Joyce and other text writers as “those by which the actual loss sustained is measured and the injured party recompensed therefor.” Joyce on Damages, sec. 26. Punitive damages are independent of the injury inflicted or the legal wrong com
The facts are, as .testified to by the plaintiff, that he applied to the defendant’s agent at Almond for a ticket to Noland. The agent said he did not have any and that “I could get on and he would speak to the conductor about it, and that the fare would be 40 cents. I rode down the road about a quarter of a mile and the conductor came to me and said he wanted a ticket, and I handed him 50 cents and said I wanted to go to Noland’s Creek, and he looked at his book and said it would be 75 cents, and I asked him if he was not mistaken and he said ‘No,’ and I told him I would not pay 75 cents, and so he told me I would have to get off. I told him I had applied for a ticket and the agent said he didn’t have any, and he said they did have tickets, and I told him I didn’t know anything about it, only what they told me; that they told me they didn’t have any tickets and the fare would be 40 cents, and he told me then I would have to get off. So I told him if he put me off I would sue the railroad company, and he pulled the cord and stopped the train and I walked out.” Q. “What did he say in reply to you when you said you would sue the railroad company?” A. “He said he could not help that.” Q. “Is that all he said ?” A. “I believe that is all he said.” Q. “Can’t you remember what he did say when you said to him that you'would sue the company ?” A. “He said several words. I don’t remember every word he said.” Q. “Think if you know anything
To entitle a passenger -to such damages, his wrongful expulsion from the train must be attended by such circumstances as tend to show rudeness, insult, “aggravating circumstances calculated to humiliate the passenger * * * ” Holmes v. Railroad, 94 N. C., 318; Rose v. Railroad, 106 N. C., 170; Knowles v. Railroad, 102 N. C., 66. The subject of punitive and compensatory damages has been discussed in many cases in our own Reports. In the opinion in this case at the last term, Mr. Justice Walker called attention to some of the more important. The plaintiff’s testimony fails to bring his case within the authority of any of these precedents so as to justify the awarding of punitive damages.
On the next trial of this case, it will be the duty of the trial judge to explain to the jury the meaning of, and difference between, punitive and compensatory damages, and to instruct them upon the plaintiff’s own testimony, as herein set out, that he is entitled to compensatory damages only.
The findings upon the several issues are set aside and a new trial ordered.
New Trial.