Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Jones

21 Colo. 340
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 21 Colo. 340 (Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Jones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Pacific Railway Co. v. Jones, 21 Colo. 340 (Colo. 1895).

Opinion

ChieF Justice Hayt

delivered the opinion of the court.

A large number of errors are assigned, but in their consideration we think we may properly group them under five heads, as has been done in argument.

Upon the examination of the jurors upon the voir dire, each was asked by the plaintiff, against the objection of the defendant, as to whether or not he was a man of family, and the ruling of the court permitting this question is assigned for error. We think there was no error in this ruling. While the answers to the questions propounded could furnish no basis for a challenge for cause, it is customary to allow such questions to be put to the jurors in order that counsel may advisedly exercise their peremptory challenges. Within reasonable limits, counsel have the right to put questions to jurors not only for the purpose of ascertaining whether or not grounds exist for challenges for cause, but also for the purpose of intelligently exercising their peremp[343]*343tory challenges. But bejrnnd this the matter of examination must be allowed to rest almost entirely in the discretion of the trial judge.

Among the witnesses introduced by plaintiff was E. F. Arthur, chief clerk for the superintendent of the road. Arthur, among other things, testified to an inspection of the road made in the month of April, preceding the accident. This evidence was received without objection, but after its reception, it being disclosed that this inspection was made some months before the accident, the defendant asked to have it stricken out. This motion was refused by'the court and error assigned upon such refusal.

We think the motion was properly overruled for two reasons:

1st. Whether or not the defendant was operating the road was a controverted question at the time the evidence was received, and it was competent upon this issue.

2d. The record does not support the claim of counsel that the witness testified as to the condition of the road at the time the inspection was made. If he had given evidence as to the rotten condition of the ties six months before the accident, as contended, we think such evidence not improper for the consideration of the jury, with other evidence tending to show the condition of the roadbed at, the time of the accident.

Error is assigned upon the refusal of the court to allow certain questions to be put upon cross-examination, to each of the Misses Jones. The contention of counsel for appellant in this regard is that each of these witnesses .described at this trial injuries not mentioned upon the trials- in the United States court, and that he was denied proper cross-examination in this case as to the testimony of the same witnesses in those actions. But a careful examination of the transcript discloses that such objections as were sustained to this character of evidence were sustained because of the objectionable form of the interrogatories, and- that afterwards, in response to other questions, the witnesses were fully ex[344]*344amined as to the testimony given by each at the preceding trials.

The following questions were also objected to, and the objections sustained: “ You instituted a suit in the United States circuit court to recover damages for these same injuries, didyou not? Have you recovered a verdict in that suit?” The questions were properly excluded for several reasons, among which we need only mention the following : Where it is proper to prove a previous recovery, the record is the best evidence thereof. Again, in this case the offer did not include proof of a judgment, and for this reason it was properly rejected. Moreover, in a number of recent cases it has been held, under somewhat similar circumstances, that the record itself should not be admitted, it being res inter alios acta. Bridger v. R. R. Co., 27 S. C. 456; Karr v. Parks, 44 Cal. 46; Wilton v. Middlesex R. R. Co., 125 Mass. 130.

These cases proceed upon the theory that the measure of damages in one action is based upon injury to the child, and in the other upon injury to the father. In so far as the wife is concerned, the principle in these cases applies, but the children in this instance having passed their majority at the time of the accident, in view of the peculiar circumstances of this case, we doubt its applicability; but, as we have shown, the evidence was properly excluded for other reasons, .and we therefore leave this question undetermined.

Coming now to the evidence of damages and the charge of the court in reference thereto, it must be borne in mind that the measure of damages in case of the wife is necessarily different from that in case of the daughters.

First, as to the wife, the court instructed the jury in substance as follows: The husband can recover nothing for pain or suffering endured by the wife, nor for any mental anguish suffered by himself in consequence of her injuries. He is limited to such damages as will- compensate him for the actual pecuniary loss which he has individually sustained. In case you believe from the evidence that he is entitled to recover, you should assess his damages at such sum as will [345]*345compensate him for any expense incurred by him for medical treatment, or for expenses incurred in effecting, or having a tendency to effect, her cure, including such sums as have been necessarily expended by him in nursing and caring for her during her illness from such injuries, and also for the loss of his own time necessarily expended by him in caring for his wife during the time of her illness, resulting from such injuries, at such sum as his time is shown to have been reasonably worth. If you believe from the evidence that his wife has not yet fully recovered from the injuries caused by the accident, and that such injuries are the direct and necessary result of the accident, you may estimate the future expense and loss likely to be sustained by him from further treatment and care in fixing the amount of the damages which you allow to plaintiff for such. loss.

He -is also entitled to recover for the loss, past, present and prospective, of the society of his wife caused directly by such injuries, if any. The law affords no criterion by which such damages can be estimated, but leaves it to your sound discretion. In particular, the court cautioned the jury to carefully consider the condition of the wife prior to the happening of the alleged accident, her ability to respond to the rightful demands of her husband as a social being, and her condition since then, and the condition which is likely to follow; also, how far the changed condition, if there has been a change in her condition, was brought about as a necessary and direct result of the alleged accident, and allow plaintiff therefor such sum as in your honest and unbiased judgment will compensate him for such loss.

The jury were also instructed that if at the time of the injuries alleged to have been sustained, his wife was not engaged in business of any kind, but was simply discharging the duties of a housekeeper to her husband, the plaintiff, without compensation, he was still entitled to recovery, and in ease a verdict should be returned for him, he should be allowed such additional sums of money as her services are shown to have been worth from the time of the happening [346]

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Bluebook (online)
21 Colo. 340, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-pacific-railway-co-v-jones-colo-1895.