Hopkins v. Atlantic & Saint Lawrence Railroad

36 N.H. 9
CourtSupreme Court of New Hampshire
DecidedJuly 15, 1857
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 36 N.H. 9 (Hopkins v. Atlantic & Saint Lawrence Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hopkins v. Atlantic & Saint Lawrence Railroad, 36 N.H. 9 (N.H. 1857).

Opinion

Peuley, C. J.

The objection to joining the two counts in the [13]*13same action would properly be taken by demurrer, or motion to arrest tbe judgment, and not on trial. However taken, it must be overruled. The claim in each count is for an injury to the husband alone. The wife has no legal interest in the suit. 1 Chitty’s PL 46, 61; 2 Chitty’s PI. 375, (note.)

The court was moved to instruct the jury that -nothing could be recovered for loss of the wife’s services and society, or for expenses incurred on account of her injury, after the commencement of the suit. No objection was taken on the ground of variance in this respect between the declaration and the proof, and none can be taken now. Objections of that kind are considered as waived, unless taken on trial. If taken then, they may be removed by amendment. McConnihe v. Sawyer, 12 N. H. 396, 405.

The question is therefore general in this case, whether the husband, in an action brought by him to recover his damage for an injury to the wife, may recover for expenses incurred, and for the loss of the wife’s services, after the commencement of the suit.

The plaintiff could maintain but one action for the same injury to his wife. All the damage which he could recover he must claim as the direct and necessary consequences of the wrongful act, or the default of the defendants; and that act or default was not divisible, and had no continuance beyond the time when the accident happened. This has no resemblance to the case of a nuisance continued after the commencement of the suit; for the continuance of the nuisance is another injury and a new cause of action. The wrong to the plaintiff was, in this case, entire and complete at once, though the injurious consequences might remain for an indefinite period afterwards. The defendants were guilty of but one wrong, and can be subjected to but one action for it to the same party.

The real extent of the injury which the plaintiff’s wife received, and the actual amount of his damages, would not at all depend on the time when the action was brought or tried. He might commence his suit forthwith, or delay it for years; in either case the same question would be tried and the same damages recoverable; [14]*14though, if the trial were delayed, the delay would be likely to afford more satisfactory means of ascertaining the real extent of the wife’s injury, and the actual amount of the husband’s damages.

When an injury is received of such extent and character as must disable one from labor, and require nursing and medical treatment, the loss from inability to labor and the expense of medical treatment arte' the necessary and uniform consequences of such an injury. They are not special damages, in the sense of that term as. it is used in the law of pleading and evidence. They are not caused by any incidental fact, or by the peculiar situation and circumstances of the party, but are the natural and uniform effects of the injury itself. And when the injury to the wife is. once shown to be of such a nature, the damages to her husband, from the loss of her services and society, and the expenses of her cure, follow uniformly and by legal necessity from the relation of husband and wife, which entitles him to her services and society, and charges him with her support. Dickinson v. Boyle, 17 Pick. 78; Smith v. Sherman, 4 Cush. 408 ; Furlong y. Pollys, 80 Me. 491; Styles v. Telford, 10 Wend. 338 ; 1 Chitty’s Pl. 333, 385; 2 Greenl. Ev., sec. 254.

Money, therefore, expended by the plaintiff for medical and surgical treatment of his wife, would not be special damages, in the legal sense of the term, and evidence of such expenses might be received on trial without any special allegation of that particular item of damage.

If the action were tried soon after the injury was received, and the wife at the time of the tidal was still disabled from service, and still required medical treatment, and her injuries were such as must leave her disabled for the future, and involved the husband in additional expense, it is quite clear that he would not receive a just compensation for the injury which he had sustained, if he were allowed to recoyer for nothing but the sums already expended and the loss of her services up to that time. The law in such case gives damages for the prospective loss and expense. The jury would be obliged to estimate, as well as they could from the condition in which they found the wife at the time of the [15]*15trial, the whole ultimate loss and damage of the husband, in the same way and on the same principle that they would estimate such damage for a like injury to himself.

The evidence, though it introduces subsequent facts, is referred in law to the time when the injury was received. The legal inquiry is, what was the extent of the injury and the amount of the plaintiff’s damage at the time of the accident ? for the wrong was all done and the whole injury received then, and the' plaintiff’s right of action was complete to recover at once, in a single suit, for all the consequences of the defendant’s wrong; otherwise, in order to give the plaintiff adequate remuneration for his injury, he must be allowed to maintain successive actions for his subsequent losses and expenses, as they might accrue from time to time, and the defendants might be subjected to separate suits for every surgeon’s bill that the husband should pay for treatment of the wife’s injury, and for every month of her services that he should lose. Subsequent facts are therefore proper evidence, and generally the most satisfactory evidence, to show the nature and extent of the original injury to the wife, and the actual amount of the husband’s damages. Down to the time of trial the plaintiff may show, with more or less exactness, what his actual losses and expenses have been. As to the future, the jury can only make a probable estimate.

Evidence of the actual condition of the wife, or of the plaintiff himself, at the time of trial, is admissible only on the same ground; that is to say, for the purpose of' showing what the nature and severity of the injuries really were when they were received. At first it might be entirely uncertain how serious the accident would turn out to be; but that would be proved more or less fully by experience at the time of the trial. And so in respect to damages from loss of service and from necessary expenses. The extent of the injury and the consequent damage to the plaintiff could then be better known, by actual experience, than could be conjectured and foretold from evidence confined to the time when the injury was received. And evi[16]*16dence was properly admitted on trial to show the actual amount of the plaintiff’s expenses down to that time.

In Lowry v. Walker, 5 Vt. 181, it was held that evidence as to the measure of damages was admissible, though the facts arose after the action was brought; and Herring v. Tomlin, 28 Eng. L. and E. 142, goes to sustain the same point. So in Dearborn v. The B., C. & M. Railroad,

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Bluebook (online)
36 N.H. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hopkins-v-atlantic-saint-lawrence-railroad-nh-1857.