Simone v. the Rhode Island Company

66 A. 202, 28 R.I. 186, 1907 R.I. LEXIS 18
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 15, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 66 A. 202 (Simone v. the Rhode Island Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Simone v. the Rhode Island Company, 66 A. 202, 28 R.I. 186, 1907 R.I. LEXIS 18 (R.I. 1907).

Opinion

.Parkhurst, J.

This is an action by a widow to recover for loss of the services of her minor daughter, caused, as she alleges, by the negligence of the defendant's servants, whereby the minor child was injured and disabled from earning the wages which she had earned prior to the accident and turned over to her mother.

It appears in evidence that on the morning of December 17,\ 1904,-the plaintiff’s minor daughter, then about seventeen eighteen years old, was a passenger in a car of the defendant, proceeding easterly from Olneyville on Westminster street in' Providence, and was seated about midway of the car on the-left-hand side thereof talking with a friend when the car reached^ a point near the junction of Broadway and Westminster street,.; where there is a switch crossing over from the east-bound track; and so arranged as to enable a car taking the switch to turn; from Westminster street into Broadway. When the car in’ question had approached this switch near enough to allow the-motorman to turn the switch, he stopped the car and turned the switch so as to enable his car to proceed along the straight track easterly on Westminster street, and then started his car-forward; the wheels of the forward truck passed the switch in the-usual manner as intended, but the wheels of the rear truck, in\ some way and for some reason unexplained, “split the switch,” as it is called, i. e., in some unknown way the switch was so far opened that the rear wheels left the straight or main track and*’ proceeded on the switch track towards Broadway, thereby approaching the line of the west-bound track; as soon as the motorman perceived that the rear of his car was thus slewing: toward the west-bound track, he put on his brake and' stopped the car, but not quickly enough to avoid a collision with a *188 west-bound car, operated by the defendant’s servants, which was proceeding at this time towards Olneyville on the westbound track. This latter car had stopped, according to custom, on approaching the said switch or cross-over track, and its motorman, seeing the other car apparently passing the switch in safety, had thereupon started his car, intending to pass onward westerly into Olneyville, when, just as he was coming alongside of the other car, he saw its rear end slewing towards the track on which he was proceeding, and immediately applied his brake, but not quickly enough to avoid a collision. The forward end of the west-bound car struck the side of the east-bound car, towards its rear end, just before they stopped, doing little, if any, damage to the cars, which moved only a few inches before they stopped altogether.

The testimony shows that the collision was not a violent one, and it does not appear that any particular damage was done to /either of the cars, or that any person, other than the plaintiff’s | daughter, was injured; although Miss Gillan, the friend with whom Miss Simone was sitting and conversing at the time, says: ¡ I was very badly shaken up,” and that there was a “crash.”

v It further appears that Miss Simone fainted immediately after the crash,” and was taken from the car into a drug store, where she recovered from her fainting fit, and was then taken home. It does not appear that she suffered any actual external bodily injury at the time of the collision; and she herself testifies that when she heard the crash she was frightened with the idea that the car had been struck by a steam train at the crossing of the steam railroad at Plainfield street, and immediately fainted. After she got home she claims that she suffered from vomiting, insomnia, headache, pains in the left side, left leg and back, the pains sometimes going across to her right side; that she remained in bed for nearly three months, was too weak to get up without assistance, and continued to suffer from headaches and the pains above mentioned; had frequent fainting attacks, continued to suffer from insomnia and nervous disorders and weakness down to the time of the trial, and that she has suffered complete failure to perform her menstrual functions. A doctor was called to her on the day of the accident, and *189 attended her subsequently for some weeks. He made a complete physical examination of her, and he does not testify that he found any external injury to her body whatever; and there is no other evidence tending to show any external physical injury.

We think it is fairly to be inferred, from all the testimony in the case, that whatever physical sufferings and disorders resulted to the plaintiff’s daughter were due to nervous shock brought on by fright.')

The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff for the sum of $400.')

The defendant asks to have this verdict set aside:

1. Because there is no proof of negligence on the part of the defendant.

2. Because the plaintiff’s daughter was not injured as a result of the accident.

3. Because the damages were excessive.

4. Because the Superior Court erred in its rulings in admission of testimony, and in its charge to the jury.

(1) As to the proof of negligence of the defendant company, it is uncontradicted that there was a collision between two cars, both operated by the defendant company, and a presumption of negligence arises from this fact which places the burden explanation upon the defendant; the question of the defendant’s negligence was therefore properly submitted to the jury, and it was for the jury to say whether the explanation offered by the defendant was or was not a satisfactory explanation. The jury, having found for the plaintiff, must have found that the defendant was negligent, and this court can not properly set the verdict aside on that ground.

As to the question whether the plaintiff’s daughter was or was not injured as a result of the accident, there was some conflict of testimony as to certain claims of injury, as to the nature, character, and extent of the actual suffering of the plaintiff’s daughter, and as to whether such suffering was a result of the accident or was due to her previous physical conditions; and it was therefore properly left to the jury to determine whether *190 such injuries as the plaintiff’s daughter actually suffered were the result of the accident or were due to other and independent causes. We can not properly disturb the verdict on this ground, since the jury have found for the plaintiff.

Nor do we think the amount of the verdict is excessive, in view of the previous earning capacity of the plaintiff’s daughter, and of the length of time the plaintiff has been and probably will be deprived of the earnings,' while still bound to support and maintain her minor child.

All of the foregoing questions were properly submitted to the jury, and we do not find that the evidence was insufficient to warrant the jury in finding its verdict for the plaintiff.

The defendant urges the following exceptions, relating to alleged errors of law of the Superior Court:

(2) 1.

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Bluebook (online)
66 A. 202, 28 R.I. 186, 1907 R.I. LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/simone-v-the-rhode-island-company-ri-1907.