Brown v. Finger

124 S.E.2d 781, 240 S.C. 102, 1962 S.C. LEXIS 78
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedApril 2, 1962
Docket17892
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 124 S.E.2d 781 (Brown v. Finger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Finger, 124 S.E.2d 781, 240 S.C. 102, 1962 S.C. LEXIS 78 (S.C. 1962).

Opinion

Lewis, Justice.

The plaintiff instituted this action on December 13, 1954, with an amended complaint being served on April 30, 1956, against the defendant, a physician, to recover damages for loss of consortium of his wife and medical expenses incurred by him, as a result of the alleged conduct of the defendant in having willfully and maliciously administered and made available narcotics to plaintiff’s wife for such period of time as to reduce her to a dope • addict, ruin her morals and to reduce her mentally and physically to a degenerate person, effectively destroying plaintiff’s marriage. The defendant in his answer admitted that the wife of plaintiff became addicted to the use of narcotic drugs and alcohol, but denied any responsibility therefor, and alleged that any damages suffered by the plaintiff were due to plaintiff’s own negligence, and the negligence of his wife in acquiring her addiction to narcotic drugs. The answer further alleged that, if any' of the alleged delicts set forth in the complaint were true, the same originated and culminated more than six *106 years prior to the institution of this action and are barred by the statute of limitations.

The case was tried in November, 1956 before the late and esteemed Resident Judge of the Third Judicial Circuit, Honorable J. Frank Eatmon, and a jury, resulting in a verdict for the plaintiff for $55,170.00, actual damages. Timely motions by the defendant for judgment in his favor notwithstanding the verdict, and in the alternative for a new trial, were made and by consent marked “heard”. Before the motions could be disposed of by Judge Eatmon, he became ill and subsequently died. The motions were then argued before Honorable James Hugh McFaddin, the successor of Judge Eatmon, who overruled all grounds of the motions except bne, relating to the alleged error of the trial judge in permitting the jury to consider, as an element of damage, loss of earnings of the wife. Judge McFaddin held that loss of earnings of the wife was improperly submitted to the jury as an element of damage in this action by the husband for loss of consortium. He further held however, that such error could be cured by requiring the plaintiff to remit upon the record the maximum amount of such element of damage, which he found to be the sum of $14,400.00. An order was accordingly passed granting a new trial unless the plaintiff remitted upon the record the foregoing amount, which remission the plaintiff duly made. From this order the defendant has appealed.

The first and most serious question to be decided is that relating to the failure of the lower Court to grant a new trial generally after concluding that loss of earnings by the wife was improperly allowed as an element of damage in the case. The testimony shows that the wife was a nurse and received separate earnings from her employment as such. As heretofore stated, the trial judge permitted, over the objection of the -defendant, testimony as to the loss of earnings by the wife and consideration by the jury of such as an element of damage for which the husband could recover in his action *107 for loss of consortium. This ruling'of the trial judge was apparently based upon testimony that the earnings of the wife were deposited in a joint bank account with the plaintiff and that he had access to and the use of her money. On motion for a new trial, however, the lower Court correctly held that loss of earnings of the wife was improperly allowed as an element of damage recoverable in a suit by the husband for loss of consortium.

1 In the case of Cook v. Atlantic Coast Line R. Co. et al., 196 S. C. 230, 13 S. E. (2d) 1, 7, 133 A. L. R. 1144, it was settled in this State that, despite the adoption of the so-called Married Women’s Acts, the husband’s common law right to the wife’s services, aid, comfort, society and companionship, comprehended by the term consortium, remain, together with the attendant right to sue therefor in the event of their loss through personal injury to her by a third party. It was there held that in such an action “the husband is entitled to recover the value of those services of his wife which he has lost, including the loss of his wife’s society and companionship in the home — all of which are comprehended by the term ‘consortium.’ He is also entitled to recover for any expenses which he has incurred for her care and treatment because of illness or bodily harm suffered by her, and for any medical expenses which he has incurred.”

The rule that a husband may recover for the loss of consortium of his wife is based upon the principle that his right thereto, which existed at common law, has not been abridged ,by the so-called Married Women’s Acts. However, the common-law rule that a husband is entitled to the separate earnings of his wife, has been specifically changed by statute in this State. See: Bryant v. Smith, 187 S. C. 453, 198 S. E. 20. Section 20-204 of the 1952 Code of Laws provides that “all the earnings and income of a married woman shall be her own separate estate and shall be governed by the same provisions of law as apply to her other separate estate.” And she may sue and be sued in regard to her separate estate. Section 10-216, 1952 Code of Laws.

*108 By virtue of the foregoing statutes the right is conferred upon the wife to bring an action for the recovery of loss of earnings resulting from personal injury to her. And “where a married woman’s separate earnings belong to her by force of a statute specifically providing that a married woman shall be entitled to her own earnings, the husband cannot recover for loss of such earnings.” 27 Am. Jur. 104, Section 504.

The lower Court, recognizing that loss of earnings of the wife from her separate employment was improperly considered as an element of damage in this case, found that the total amount of such earnings which could have been allowed by the jury, in any event, did not exceed the sum of $14,400-.00, and reduced the verdict by that amount, holding that any error committed in submitting such item as an element of damage was cured by so reducing the verdict. It is the contention of the defendant that it was impossible for the Circuit Judge to determine with exactness the maximum amount which the jury included in its verdict for loss of earnings of the wife, because the jury was permitted to award loss of future earnings. The plaintiff contends on the other hand that loss of future earnings was not submitted to the jury as an element of damage and, therefore, could not have been included in the jury’s verdict. It is plaintiff’s position, sustained by the lower Court, that the sum of $14,400.00 is the maximum amount which could have been awarded for such item.

Of course, where the verdict of the jury is deemed excessive, the trial court has the power in proper cases tO' grant a new trial unconditionally, or order a new trial nisi, requiring the plaintiff at his option to remit a certain portion of the verdict or submit to a new trial. Anderson v. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co., 175 S. C. 254, 178 S. E. 819. Such is not the question here.

It is equally well settled that where the jury is permitted to consider an improper element of damage in arriving at its verdict, and the element of damage er *109

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 S.E.2d 781, 240 S.C. 102, 1962 S.C. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-finger-sc-1962.