Judges: Love
Filed Date: 7/1/1871
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/6/2024
in overruling the motion for a new trial, held:
That on the grounds of public policy and for the better security of the rights of the public, punitive damages can, and in certain cases ought to, be awarded against railroad corporations. Punitive damages, it is true,, are in the nature of punishment; and it is equally true that in ordinary cases it is contrary to our ideas of justice that the defendant should receive more than compensation for the injuries he sustained, but in cases like the one at bar, although the excess above the amount of real damages goes to the plaintiff, still, it is well settled that it is one of the means of securing more care and attention on the part of corporations having great rights and privileges, that in cases of injury-arising from the gross misconduct or negligence of their employes, they are liable to punitive damages. It is a right and interest that the public have in every prosecution of this kind, that these companies shall be taught, so to speak, that they are held to exercise not only ordinary care, but extraordinary care in the transportation of passengers, and on these grounds, courts are inclined to uphold the reasonable verdicts of juries where punitive damages are awarded.
The counsel for the defendant have suggested to the court that railroad companies should not be held liable for punitive dam
Under the peculiar circumstances of this case the court is unable to separate the proof of the actual damages from the inference of punitive damages. The conduct of the agent of the company is so intimately connected with the proof of the circumstances connected with, and the character of the injury received, that one cannot be excluded without the other. So that the evidence, although in its nature tending to show a reason for punitive damages, would be still admissible as showing the actual damages. But under the rulings of this case heretofore stated by the court, it would, for other reasons, be admissible.
Judgment on the verdict. '