Judges: Ci-Iief
Filed Date: 4/21/1910
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This appeal is from a judgment against appellant and in favor of appellee for the sum of $13,000 as damages for personal injuries suffered by his wife as the result of a collision between two of appellant's trains, on one of which she was riding as a passenger. That the collision was due to negligence on the part of an employe of appellant was admitted. The issue was as to the amount of damages appellee was entitled to recover.
We can not say that the trial court abused the discretion the law conferred upon him (Rev. Stats., art. 1371, as amended, General Laws 1905, p. 21), when he refused to grant appellant a new trial *Page 429 on the ground that the jury had been guilty of misconduct in that they had reached their verdict by lot. The testimony offered by the parties on the question made by the motion was sufficient to support the court's finding that the verdict was not so reached. The assignment complaining of the action of the court in the particular stated therefore is overruled.
Appellant insists that the trial court erred in refusing to grant it a new trial on the ground set up in its motion that the verdict of the jury was excessive.
At the time she suffered the injury complained of Mrs. Swann was about thirty-seven years of age, and, notwithstanding she was the mother of eight children and had suffered one miscarriage, was enjoying and had always enjoyed good health, and had always been able to do and had done the cooking, sewing, washing, ironing, etc., for the family, consisting of herself, her husband and their children. As a result of the collision of the train she was riding upon with another train, the shin of her right leg was scratched and bruised, her hip was bruised, and she received a blow on the back of her head severe enough to produce a knot thereupon. She did not then realize that she had suffered other injuries, but on the next day found it necessary to take to her bed, where she remained several days under treatment of a physician, called in on the third day after she received the injuries. Off and on from that time until the date of the trial, which occurred about twenty-six months later, she had been confined to her bed for periods ranging from a day or two to two weeks at a time, and had suffered from pains in her leg, back and head. Her monthly periods became irregular and painful, an ovary and her womb had become displaced, she occasionally suffered from a little fever, her pulse at times ran from 132 to 140, when it should not have exceeded 75 to 80, she was troubled with insomnia, she suffered from a twitching or jerking of the muscles of the face, and she lost fifteen or twenty pounds in weight. Two physicians testifying for appellee each stated that the condition of Mrs. Swann's health after she suffered the injuries was due to traumatic neurosis — which one of them defined to be an injury causing a functional disturbance of a nerve or nerves, and which, he said, as a rule, "gradually grows worse and in a majority of cases the result is paralysis." The same physician testified that only about fifty percent of the number of persons suffering from traumatic neurosis recovered, and that in view of the fact that Mrs. Swann had suffered with it for two years he did not think she would recover. The physician referred to seems to have been the one in charge of the case during the time intervening between the accident and the trial. The other of the two physicians referred to, on three different occasions, had been called into a consultation with the one in charge of the case, and testified that some patients suffering from traumatic neurosis "get gradually worse and worse until finally they become paralyzed and die — the tendency is that way." On cross-examination he testified: "I did not say I never knew a case of traumatic neurosis to be cured; some of them probably get well after years — some of them do get well. I have seen some very miraculous recoveries from that trouble after a *Page 430 judgment rendered against a railroad." The bills of the physicians who treated Mrs. Swann aggregated about $160.
The foregoing is as favorable a statement of the evidence relied upon to support the verdict as fairly can be made from the record. We do not think it warranted a verdict for as great a sum as that found by the jury. Chicago, R.I. T. Ry. Co. v. Jones, 39 Texas Civ. App. 480[
The judgment of the court below will be reversed and the cause will be remanded for a new trial, unless the appellee within twenty days from the date of the judgment of this court herein shall remit of the amount of the judgment obtained in the court below the sum of $5,000, in which event the judgment of said court will be reformed and affirmed for the sum of $8,000.
Affirmed on filing remittitur.
Writ of error refused.
Houston & T. C. R. Co. v. Gray ( 1911 )
Galveston, H. & S. A. Ry. Co. v. Craighead ( 1915 )
Louisiana & Arkansas Railway Company v. Mullins ( 1959 )
Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Rasmussen ( 1915 )
Brown Cracker & Candy Co. v. Castle ( 1930 )
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Dooley ( 1910 )
Coryell County v. Fegette ( 1934 )
Parks v. Missouri, K. & T. R. of Texas ( 1929 )