Brownell v. Pacific Railroad

47 Mo. 239
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJanuary 15, 1871
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 47 Mo. 239 (Brownell v. Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brownell v. Pacific Railroad, 47 Mo. 239 (Mo. 1871).

Opinion

Wagner, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court.

There are no objections urged here against the instructions given by the court below, and an inspection of the record has led us to the conclusion that there are but two questions requiring any special consideration. The first is the nature of the petition and the sufficiency of the verdict; and the second is whether the declarations of Brownell, just previous to his death and shortly, after the accident happened, were admissible in evidence.

The suit was commenced in the Circuit Court against the defendant for damages for the death of the plaintiff’s husband. The petition contains two counts. The first, is based upon the second section of the damage act, charging that Charles F. Brownell, the husband, through the negligence, unskillfulness, and criminal- intent of the officers, agents, servants, and employees of. defendant,-whilst running and- conducting a certain locomotive and train of oars belonging to defendant, was violently thrown, with said locomotive' and train of cars, from the railroad track off defendant' and instantly killed, and asks damages to the amount of $5,000. The second count is based -upon section 3 of the same act, and charges that by reason of the neglect and default of the defendant in not providing and using a safe and secure locomotive and headlight, in not providing competent and reliable switchmen, etc., the said husband was violently thrown, with said locomotive, from the railroad track and instantly killed, and asks judgment for $5,000. The answer was- simply .a denial of- the matters set forth in the petition-. The - cause was tried- before a jury, who, after hearing -the evidence, returned a general verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $4,500. ■ Upon- this verdict the court entered -up judgment, and the defendant appealed.

[243]*243The first question is, was the general verdict rendered in the cause the proper one, or should there have been a verdict on each count ? The answer to this question depends upon the inquiry, did the two counts in the petition embrace each a separate and distinct cause of action ? If they did, the verdict is bad, and the damages should have been assessed upon each cause of action separately. When the petition sets out several distinct causes of action, a verdict for an entire and gross sum can not be sustained. There should be a separate assessment on each cause or count, in order that the court may know how the issues were found and what amount was assessed on each count. (Mooney v. Kennett, 19 Mo. 551; Clark’s Adm’r v. Hann. & St. Jo. R.R. Co., 36 Mo. 215; Pitts v. Fugate, 41 Mo. 405; State ex rel. Collins v. Dulle et al., 45 Mo. 269.) But if there is one entire cause of action, and one good count in the declaration, a general verdict and a general assessment of damages will answer. (Clemens v. Collins, 14 Mo. 604.)

It is conceded that there might be a cause of action based on the second section of the act concerning damages, and a different cause founded on the third section, but this certainly could not be done in the same petition and against the same party. Th'e second section applies where the injury is occasioned indirectly by the corporation or owner through the negligence, unskillfulness, or criminal intent of the officers or employees ; the third section, where the injury is committed directly by the wrongful act, neglect .or default of another. To constitute.two causes of action there must be two subjects of complaint. But in the present case there is but. one injury, one subject-matter of complaint — the killing of the plaintiff’s husband. There being but one cause of action, there could be only one assessment of damages. There could not be a verdict for ' causing the death one way, and another verdict for causing the death in a different way. The law declares that if the injury is caused under the circumstances mentioned in one section, the damages shall be for a fixed amount; and if under the circumstances mentioned in another section, the damages shall not exceed a certain amount. It is for the jury to determine from the evidence whether the injury was caused and the death [244]*244resulted under the circumstances as described either in the one section or the other, and then to assess the damages accordingly. There is but one cause of action Stated in the petition, and that is the killing, although it is stated in different ways to meet the evidence, which may show that it occurred either in the manner mentioned in one section or the other. It is very certain that a verdict based upon either section would be a complete bar to the prosecution of an action on the other, and where such is the case the cause of action must necessarily be the same.

The next question is in reference to the admission of the declaration of Brownell. The accident happened in consequence of a switch being left open on the defendant’s track. There is no dispute or controversy about the fact that the switch was left open. Immediately after the accident, when Brownell was restored to consciousness, and just before he died, he said, * * —“if it had not been for that man who left the switch open.” This was objected to, but the objection was overruled and the testimony admitted. As a dying declaration it was clearly inadmissible, for the modern decisions clearly establish the doctrine that the rule permitting dying declarations to be given in evidence applies exclusively to criminal prosecutions for felonious homicides, and has no reference to civil cases. But every declaration of a deceased person is not to be rejected upon this principle. Where a declaration is made by a deceased person cotemporaneously, or nearly so, with a main event, by whose consequence it is alleged he died, as to the cause of that event, though generally the declarations must be cotemporaneous with the event, yet where there are any connecting circumstances, they may, even when made some time afterward, form a part of the whole res gestee. (Insurance Co. v. Moseley, 8 Wall. 397.)

In The Commonwealth v. Pike, 3 Cush. 181, the indictment was for manslaughter; the defendant was charged with killing his wife. It appeared that the deceased ran up stairs from her own room in the night, bleeding and crying “ murder!” Another woman, into whose room she was admitted, went, at her request, for a physician. A third person who heard her cries went for a watchman, and, on his return, proceeded to the room where she [245]*245was. He found her on the floor bleeding profusely. She said the defendant had stabbed her. The defendant’s counsel objected to the admission of this declaration in evidence. The objection was overruled. The Supreme Court of Massachusetts held that the evidence was properly admitted. It was said that the evidence was “ of a nature res gestae,” and that the time when it was made was so recently after the injury was inflicted as to justify receiving it upon that ground. In Hanover R.R. Co. v. Coyle, 57 Penn. St. 402, where a peddler’s wagon was struck, / and the peddler injured by a locomotive, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania said : “We can not say that the declaration of the engineer was no part of the res gestae. It was made at the time, in view of the goods strewn along the road by the breaking-up of the boxes, and seems to have grown directly out of and immediately after the happening of the fact.” The declaration was held to be “a part of the transaction itself.’?

The Insurance Company v. Moseley, supra, was an action upon a policy of insurance.

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Bluebook (online)
47 Mo. 239, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brownell-v-pacific-railroad-mo-1871.