DocketNumber: No. 43. [fn*]
Judges: Middlebrook
Filed Date: 12/11/1915
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is a suit by C. J. Sehevoight and his wife, Lula Sehevoight, against the Texarkana & Ft. Smith Railway Company, in which the plaintiffs, defendants in error here, sought to recover damages of the defendant, Texarkana & Ft. Smith Railway Company, plaintiff in error here, for wrongfully and negligently carrying plaintiff’s wife, Lula Sehevoight, to a different place from that to which she had secured a ticket.
Briefly stated, C. J. Sehevoight was at Port Arthur, Tex., having gone there ahead of his wife, and prepared a home. They were at Quitman, Miss., prior to his going to Port Arthur. After he had prepared a home at Port Arthur, he sent his wife a railroad ticket to Quitman, Miss., to come to him at Port Arthur. She received the ticket, and started on her journey to Port Arthur, but when she reached Beaumont she was in a car that was cut out of the train that went to Port Arthur, and this car was attached to another train and carried to Galveston. At Shreveport she inquired of the conductor for the train to Port Arthur, and the conductor placed her in the car she was in when she arrived at Beaumont. She knew nothing of any change at Beaumont, nor was there any announcement in the car that she was in that it would be cut out of the Port Arthur train and would be carried to Galveston, and she was carried some 20 miles out of Beaumont when she learned that the car she was in was going to Galveston, and not to Port Arthur. She learned this through the conductor, who came to take up her ticket. The conductor insisted on her paying railroad fare, but she refused, and did not pay it. The conductor told her that she should get off at Port Bolivar, and there remain until the next train back to Beaumont, which she did. When the conductor told her she was on the wrong train, it attracted the attention of others in the car, and she was laughed at and humiliated. It was'hot-weather, and she could not stay on the galleries of the little station at Port Bolivar, and requested the railroad agent there to let her go to his home, which he did. She remained at his home the balance of the day from about noon until 7 p. m., and was treated kindly by the agent’s family, but the agent’s family had supper while she was there, and she was not invited to participate
The only error assigned in this case is:
. “The verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $425 to Lula Schevoight is excessive in amount, and unwarranted by the evidence, and shows that the jury was controlled by prejudice and passion, or some other improper motive.”
Defendants in error object to consideration of this assignment of error for several reasons, which likely are not without merit; but, on account of conditions which it is agreed by counsel on both sides surrounded them at the time the motion for a new trial was overruled by operation of law, we have decided to consider the whole record.
In his argument attached to his brief plaintiff in error avers that much of the line of railroad between Beaumont and Galveston passes along the Gulf of Mexico, and affords a beautiful view; that there are several stations between Beaumont and Port Bolivar, at any of which she could have disembarked from the train and been back in Beaumont by automobile within a short while, and several of said stations are on shell roads.
“The law furnishes no rule for estimating damages for mental anguish; this is left to the discretion of the jury, and that discretion will not be controlled or the verdict vacated, unless it appears from the amount for which the verdict is returned, together with other matters disclosed by the record, that the jury may have acted from prejudice or other improper influence, rather than an honest desire to award adequate compensation for the injury.” 73 Tex. 430, 11 S. W. 388.
So far as we are able to see, there is nothing in this record that discloses any undue influence upon the jury, or that discloses or tends to disclose that the jury acted from any other than what, under the evidence of the ease, appealed to them to be a proper verdict.
Such being the case, we do not feel it the province of this court to disturb the findings of the jury and the judgment of the court. Howard Oil Co. v. Davis, 76 Tex. 630, 13 S. W. 665; Railway Co. v. Profert, 72 Tex. 344, 10 S. W. 207; Railway Co. v. Douglas, 73 Tex. 325, 11 S. W. 333; Western Union Tel. Co. v. Simpson, 73 Tex. 422, 11 S. W. 385; and cases in these authorities cited.
The case is affirmed.
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