
    NORMAN COX, as Executor, etc., of HENRY PECK, Deceased, Respondent, v. THE NEW YORK CENTRAL AND HUDSON RIVER RAILROAD COMPANY, Appellant.
    
      Action for personal injuries — stipulation that action shall notábate — -Measure of damages — excessive damages.
    
    This action, was brought by one Peck to recover damages for injuries sustained by reason of his unlawful expulsion from one of the defendant’s ears. While the action was pending, a stipulation was entered into between the parties thereto that, in case of the death of Peck, the action should not abate. Peck died during the pendency of the action, and after a judgment in his favor had been reversed by the General Term. Held,, that, upon a new trial, his executors were entitled to recover the sum which would have compensated him for his injuries if he were alive, although his estate had not suffered at all by reason of the injury.
    The intestate was wrongfully removed from a parlor car, for a refusal to pay his fare, by one of the defendant’s conductors, who was acting in good faith. The only unnecessary violence alleged to have been used consisted in seizing him, while standing upon the ground, and pulling him from the car while he was holding on to the rail by one hand, thereby wrenching him and injuring his finger, so that subsequently a felon appeared, from which he suffered two weeks. The judge charged that compensatory damages only could be allowed. The jury brought in a verdict for $3,000. Held, that the verdict was excessive, and should be set aside.
    MotioN for a new trial on exceptions ordered to be beard in the first instance at the General Term, after a verdict in favor of the plaintiff, and appeal from an' order denying a motion for a new trial made upon the minutes of the justice before whom the action was tried.
    This action was brought to recover damages for the ejection of plaintiff’s testator from- defendant’s cars. It has been three times tried. On the first trial, the jury rendered a verdict in plaintiff’s favor for $8,000. The complaint claimed but $5,000, and judgment was entered for that amount, the plaintiff remitting $3,000 of the verdict. On appeal from this judgment, the General Term set aside the verdict as excessive, imposing costs as a condition. After this, and before a new trial, Henry Peck died, and his executor was substituted, by order entered upon a stipulation made by the defendants, on putting the cause over a term of court before the first trial; the stipulation also providing that the action should not abate with the death of the plaintiff, but any verdict and judgment rendered therein should be regarded as rendered in the lifetime of the plaintiff. After substitution of plaintiff’s executor, the action was again tried, and a verdict of $4,000 rendered in plaintiff’s favor. The defendants appealed, and the General Term reversed the judgment, denying a new trial upon the ground that the action had abated with the death of Henry Peck. (4 Hun, 116; 6 T. & O., 405.)
    The defendants entered judgment upon the order, and the plaintiff appealed. The Court of Appeals reversed the judgment of the General Term, upon the ground that the stipulation was valid and binding upon defendants (63 N. Y., 414), and. remitted the cause to the General Term for the consideration of the other questions in the case. A new trial was granted by the General Term upon the grounds stated in the previous opinion, the court imposing costs of trial as a condition. The case has been again tried, and a verdict rendered for $3,000. Tbe defendants moved upon tbe minutes for a new trial, wbicb was denied. They then procured an order staying proceedings and sending tbe exceptions, as well as tbe review of tbe order denying a new trial, to tbe General Term in tbe first instance.
    Tbe plaintiff, with bis wife and daughter, entered a palace car of tbe defendant at TTtica, with tickets entitling them to a passage in tbe ordinary cars to Albany. Whether they entered this car, knowing that it was a palace car and that extra fare would be demanded, or whether they did so by direction of tbe conductor, and in tbe expectation of riding therein without further charge, was in dispute, and was settled by tbe verdict in favor of tbe plaintiff. Having refused to pay tbe extra fare, they were put off tbe train at Palatine Bridge. Tbe principal violence consisted in tbe fact that while tbe intestate was standing on tbe ground, bolding on with one band to tbe car rail, tbe conductor put bis arm around bis waist and jerked him away, wrenching him all over and injuring bis band.
    
      J3. A. Stcmton, for tbe respondent.
    
      Isaac S. Newton, for tbe appellant.
   LeabNed, P. J.:

It has always been tbe law that a right of action for an injury to tbe person dies with tbe party aggrieved. Not merely does tbe action abate (as it formerly did always on tbe death of tbe plaintiff), but tbe right of action is absolutely gone. Tbe reason is that there is no longer any person who has been injured and who ought to be compensated. Tbe executors represent tbe estate; but neither they nor tbe estate have suffered from tbe personal injury. And so it was said by tbe Court of Appeals, that executors cannot maintain an action on an express or implied promise where tbe damage consists entirely of personal suffering of tbe deceased, whether mental or corporeal. (Zabriskie v. Smith, 13 N. Y., 333.)

Tbe statutory action given to tbe representatives of a deceased party by wrongful injury is no exception to this rule. Tbe ground of that action is not tbe injury to tbe deceased, but tbe injury to bis surviving relatives, to whose support he bad contributed. The right of action wbicb the deceased might have had for the injury which caused his death dies with him.

The English courts have made one wise exception. When the injury has affected the estate of the deceased by preventing him from earning money as usual, or by occasioning expense in paying for medical aid, to this extent the right of action survives to the executors or administrators, because they represent the estate thus injured. (Bradshaw v. Lancashire amd Y. R. W. Co., L. R., 10 Com. Pl., 189.)

In the present case, however, there was no injury to the .estate of Mr. Peck, the deceased. The wrong occasioned only bodily and mental pain. But it was held by the Court of Appeals (63 N. Y., 414) that the stipulation of, the defendant’s counsel had given the estate of the deceased as assets in the hands of the executors a right of action which it would not otherwise have had. And on the last trial his executors claimed, and were allowed, to recover damages, to go to his estate, on account of the insult which Mr. Peck had received and the suffering, bodily and mental, which he had endured. And the question is now presented by the defendant, what are the proper damages which will compensate Mr. Peck’s executors or his estate for pain in his feelings and pain in his finger.

At the first statement, it would seem that such damages could be only nominal. Eor it might be said that it is no compensation for an assault and battery on Mr. Peck to pay money to his executors, any more than it would be to pay it to any other persons. But the Court of Appeals would not have sent the case back for the recovery of nominal damages. They must, therefore, have held that Mr. Peck’s estate was entitled to recover, for the benefit of his creditors and legatees, pecuniary damages, as compensation for his sufferings in mind and body, by reason of the assault and battery.

It might have been suggested that analogy to the English case would hold that the expense of the litigation, already incurred before Mr. Peck’s death, was the rule of damages in behalf of his estate. But no such view was taken by the Court of Appeals. We conclude, therefore, from that decision, that Mr. Peck’s death transferred to his executors his right of action to recover the sum which would have compensated him for the injury, although, as by the case then appeared, his estate had not suffered at all.

"Were tbe damages given by tbe jury excessive ? Tbis ease bad been previously tried twice. Tbe damages given on both of those trials bad been held excessive. But it was said on tbe argument, and not denied, that on each of those trials tbe plaintiff bad been allowed to recover exemplary damages. On tbe present bis recovery was limited by tbe court to damages compensatory. Tbis is,.therefore, tbe first time that a jury has passed on tbe question of damages in that light.

It was necessary for tbe conductor to use some force, for Mr. Peck made some resistance, though slight. Tbe principal alleged injury was in pulling him from tbe car, when be bad bis band on tbe railing. It is claimed that tbis act wrenched him and injured bis finger, so that subsequently a felon came on it, from which be suffered two weeks. No bone was broken; no blow inflicted. No inability to work was occasioned, unless during those two weeks. And, even as to them, it appears that, at tbis time, Mr. Peck was on. an excursion for health or pleasure.

If any individual, without malice, bad inflicted tbis amount of injury on Mr. Peck, would a jury have rendered a verdict of $3,000 % Considering that tbe conductor was doing what be thought be ought to do, can we avoid tbe conclusion that tbe jury was prejudiced ? Perhaps tbe fact that tbe difficulty arose about Mr. Peck’s claim to ride in a parlor car may have prejudiced them. But whatever tbe cause, is it not obvious that these damages were rendered for something more than tbe mere actual injury to body and mind ? Tbe defendants ought not to be punished for being a corporation, or for running parlor cars. And yet it seems to us that some motive of tbis kind must have influenced tbe verdict. If tbe jury bad passed on tbis question twice before, we might think differently.

Ve think tbe damages excessive, and a new trial must be granted on payment of costs by tbe defendants.

If, however, tbe plaintiff prefers to stipulate within twenty days after service of a copy of tbis order to reduce tbe damages to $1,500 (Murray v. H. R. R. R. Co., 47 Barb., 196; affirmed, 48 N. Y., 655) then tbe motion for a new trial is denied, and tbe order denying a new trial affirmed, without costs to either party.

Present — Learned, P. J., and Bockes, J.; Boardman, J., not sitting.

Motion for new trial granted, costs to abide tbe event, unless, witbin twenty days after notice of tbis decision, tbe plaintiff stipulates to reduce tbe verdict to $1,500, and, in that event, new trial denied, without costs to either party.  