Stockton v. Frey

4 Gill 406
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1846
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 4 Gill 406 (Stockton v. Frey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stockton v. Frey, 4 Gill 406 (Md. 1846).

Opinion

Spence, J.,

delivered the opinion of this court.

This was an action instituted in Baltimore county court, by Ira Frey, for the recovery of damages against Lmcíus W. Stockton, the owner of a line of stage coaches, for carrying passengers from Hagerstown to Wheeling. The declaration alleges, that Mr. Frey was a passenger in the stage coach on the fifth day of October 1839, when, bjr the negligence, carelessness, unskilfulness and default of the defendant, his agents, and servants, the stage coach was upset; by reason of which, the plaintiff had his skull bone fractured and broken, and was otherwise greatly cut, bruised and wounded, insomuch that the said plaintiff became very ill, and his life was endangered.

The first question presented for our review in this case, arises on the first exception.

[420]*420At the trial, the plaintiff offered to prove by a witness, that he, the plaintiff, had a family, consisting of a wife and several small children. To the admissibility of which evidence, the defendant, by his counsel, objected; but the court overruled the objection, and allowed the evidence to go to the jury, and the defendant excepted. If, in an action of this character, it be legal to offer evidence of the relations of husband and wife, and father and child, by way of augmenting the damages, it would be difficult to determine, what relations in civil and social life might not be offered for the same purpose.

If the argument be, that the party injured is thereby rendered unable to discharge the obligations which he owes as husband and father, why may not the same argument apply to the relation of debtor and creditor, guardian and ward, and many others? In all of these relations, there is both a legal and moral obligation, and to sanction such a distinction in this case, would be to establish an uncertain and dangerous doctrine. Instead of meting out to the plaintiff, the measure of damage which he has sustained from the injury, it would be compensating the wife and children for that injury.

Gh-eenlcaf, in his work on evidence, at page 220, vol. 2, slates it to be law, (‘that injuries to the person or reputation, consist in the pain inflicted, whether bodily or mental, and in the expenses and loss of property which they occasion. (The jury therefore, in the estimation of damages, are to consider not only the direct expenses incurred by the plaintiff, but the loss of his time, his bodily sufferings, and, if the injury was wilful, his mental agony also.” The same author, in the same work, at page 210, uses this expression: “The damage to be recovered, must always be the natural and proximate consequence of the act complained of. This rule is laid down in regard to special damages, but applies to all damage.” We therefore think the court erred in overruling the defendant’s objection to this evidence.

In the further trial of this cause, the plaintiff offered three prayers, and the defendant six; the court gave the instructions asked by the plaintiff’s three prayers, and refused all of the [421]*421defendant’s; tlie defendant excepted, and the judgment of the court on these nine prayers, form the second exception.

The plaintiff’s first prayer presented the law of the case correctly to the jury. Vide the cases of Curtis and wife, against Drinkwater, 22 Eng. Com. Law Rep., 51, and 23 Eng. Com. Law Rep., 331, Sharp vs. Grey. This prayer raises no question upon the pleadings in the cause, but asks the court to instruct the jury, that the hypothesis of the prayer, is the law of the case, if supported by the evidence. With a view to conform to the manifest intent of the act of 1825, ch. 117, this court have on more than one occasion determined, that neither appellant nor appellee can here be permitted to urge or insist upon any point or question, which shall not affirmatively appear to have been raised and decided by the court below.

In granting or refusing any prayer asking an instruction to the jury, that if they believe certain facts, the plaintiff is or is not entitled to recover, this court will not assume, that the county court inspected the pleadings in the cause, and adjudged their sufficiency to sustain the prayer.

If the party seeking the court’s instruction designed to obtain the judgment of the court upon the pleadings in reference to his prayer, he should have framed it accordingly; as for example, that the plaintiff is, or is not, entitled to recover under the pleadings in the cause. Then the court below must have decided, upon the sufficiency of the pleadings to support the prayer, and their decision on the question would have formed a fit subject for review, on an appeal to this court. But where, without any direct reference to the pleadings, a prayer is made for an instruction to the jury, that if they find certain facts, the plaintiff is entitled to recover; all that the court decides since the passage of the act of 1825, in granting the prayer, is, that the facts enumerated constitute a good cause of action, wherever it is competent for the plaintiff to recover. Upon the pleadings, as no exceptions are taken to them, the court expresses no opinion, and grants the prayer, as if their sufficiency and accordance with the case made by the prayer, were admitted by the parties.

[422]*422To give a contrary construction to this act of Assembly, would be to open the door to many of the evils, which it was prominently designed to shut out. By its passage, the legislative intent was, that all objections to pleadings should be raised and determined in the county courts, where, by amendments, if necessary, such objections might be obviated, and in accordance with these views, was decided in the case of Leopard vs. The Ches. & Ohio Canal Co., 1 Gill, 222, where this court, in determining a question similar to that now before us, say:

‘‘ Whether the declaration states facts sufficient, if proved, to enable the appellant, the plaintiff below, to maintain his action, or whether the facts proved, sustain the allegations in the declaration, are questions which, in the case before us, under the act. of 1825, ch. 117, we are not called on to decide.”

The court erred in giving the instruction asked for by the plaintiff’s second prayer. Notwithstanding this prayer did not state all of the terms of the accord; yet inasmuch as there was evidence in the cause to sustain, (if believed by the jury,) all the terms of the agreement or accord, the court, by instructing the jury that the plaintiff was entitled to recover, may have misled them.

There was no error in the instruction given under the plaintiff’s third prayer.

The court properly refused to give the instruction, asked by the defendant’s first, second, and third prayers. There was no variance: — the members of a firm are individually liable in actions of tort, for the acts of the firm, their agents and servants, and for such acts may be sued individually. 1 Chit. Pl., 74.

The defendant’s fourth prayer should have been granted by the court.

We cannot sanction the conclusion of the plaintiff’s counsel, that this prayer is, in principle, identical with the plaintiff’s first prayer; it contains a very important qualification, not found jn the plaintiff’s first prayer, to wit,

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Bluebook (online)
4 Gill 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stockton-v-frey-md-1846.