(After stating the foregoing facts.) Special grounds 4, 5, 6, 7, and 8 complain that the trial court failed to give in charge certain written requests. Each request is quite lengthy and the wording of all is similar. The request in ground 4 concerned the duty of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff to use his sense of sight to apprehend the approach of the train. The request in ground 5 concerned the duty of ordinary care on the part of the plaintiff to use his sense of hearing to apprehend the approach of the train. Ground 6 sets out a request to charge in substance that, even though the plaintiff looked, if he could have, by a proper use of the sense of sight, seen the train, but did not do so, and the jury found this to be a lack of ordinary care which resulted in the plaintiff’s injury, he could not recover. In ground 7 the request is to the effect that, if the plaintiff looked but did not see, and did not see because he had placed certain cardboard boxes in the automobile which obstructed his view, the jury should determine whether this constituted negligence and the proximate cause of his injuries so as to preclude recovery. In ground 8, the requests of grounds 3 and 4 are combined, to the effect that, if by a prudent and careful manner of looking and listening, the plaintiff could have become aware of the approaching train but did not do so, the jury, if it found the plaintiff’s negligence in not becoming aware of the approaching train was the cause of his injuries, should return a verdict for the defendant. These requests were not given verbatim, but were consolidated and charged in substance. The judge charged the defendant’s contention that the collision was due to the plaintiff’s failure to use ordinary care by going upon the crossing without looking or listening for the approach of the train. He further charged that, “if you should believe that, under the particular circumstances that existed on this occasion, it was the duty of the plaintiff, as a careful, ordinarily prudent man would have done, to use his sense of seeing, and his sense of hearing, and by so doing he could have seen the train approaching, and that he could have avoided the accident,” he could not recover. He again charged that, if “the plaintiff could have avoided this collision by operating the automobile he was driving in an ordinarily prudent and careful manner and looking and listening for the approach of the train as ordinary care and diligence *509 required him to do under the circumstances,” he could not recover. He further charged the defendants’ contention that the “plaintiff did not exercise ordinary care of a prudent man at the time and occasion of crossing this track; they contend that he had in his car seat certain cardboard boxes, which obstructed his view; that he could not see out of the window as he probably should have, and that, by reason of such obstruction in the seat of his car, he was prevented, by his own act, from seeing the approach of the train as he should have.” There then followed immediately a direction that the jury should consider every fact and circumstance in determining whether the plaintiff exercised the ordinary care of a prudent man before he entered the crossing.
The charges requested were clearly repetitious in dealing separately with the plaintiff’s duty to look, to listen, to both look and listen, to see what he was looking at, and not to obstruct his vision so that he could not see what he was looking at. These elements were charged specifically, but they were charged jointly rather than severally. As to repetition in requested charges, it was held in
Hammack
v.
State,
52
Ga.
398, 404, as follows: “The judge was not required to repeat it. If he distinctly and clearly gave the law upon the point, his duty was discharged. The repetition of it, in another shape, is only a waste of time and a confusion, instead of making the matter clearer. When is the judge to stop? Is he to repeat, over and over again, the same principle, in every shape in which ingenuity can throw the idea? We think not.” A party to an action has a right to have the court charge in the language of an apt and pertinent request, and this is true although the principle is covered by other instructions of the court in more general and abstract terms.
Metropolitan Street Ry. Co.,
v.
Johnson,
90
Ga.
500 (
*510
Special ground 9 complains of the charge that the rights of a railroad to lay and use tracks in a public street must be exercised in such manner as not to unnecessarily or materially obstruct or interfere with the rights of the general public therein. This is a correct principle of law.
Louisville & Nashville R. Co. v. Ellis,
54
Ga. App.
783 (
Special ground 10 complains of the following excerpts from the charge: “It is a question for you to determine whether the defendants operating the train on this occasion failed to give adequate and sufficient warning of the approach of the train; and whether they were operating the train at a dangerous speed according to the time, locality, and circumstances surrounding and existing at the time. . . It is the duty of the defendant railroad, in approaching this crossing in question, to operate its train at a reasonable and safe rate of speed, and what is a reasonable and safe rate of speed is to be determined by you,” etc., on the ground that the true rule is not whether the speed of the train was either “dangerous” or “reasonable and safe,” but whether the defendant used ordinary care in operating the train at the speed at which it was being operated. A charge given in
Thompson
v.
Powell,
60
Ga. App.
796 (
The plaintiff’s petition alleged in part as follows: “10. Plaintiff has suffered general damages by reason of pain and suffering, disfigurement and impairment of earning capacity to work in the sum of $28,475.00. 11. Plaintiff shows that said *511 injury has impaired his earning capacity at least 25%.” Special ground 12 contends that, under these pleadings, it was error to charge the jury so as to authorize them to award the plaintiff damages for loss of future earnings; and special ground 13 contends that, in so charging, it is error to fail to instruct the jury that such future earnings should be reduced ,by declining years and diminished capacity to labor. The testimony of the plaintiff was to the effect that before the injury he was making about $35 per week; that he was away from his job for three months and one week; that he is now working and is making $35 per week; that it is necessary for him to take about two days a week from his work; that he still limps, and for about six months after going back to work his leg would “give out” on him; and that he is not able to lift certain articles and do other described duties as well as before because of his bodily weakness. There was medical testimony that the plaintiff suffered severe pain and would continue to suffer from the involvement of the fracture of the socket of the hip bone, “I wouldn’t say permanently—I don’t know how long that will continue, but he will likely suffer from it a great deal.”
“A diminution in one’s capacity to labor is an element of pain and suffering.
Wall Realty Co.
v.
Leslie,
54
Ga. App.
560 (
Under the pleadings and evidence, the court properly failed to instruct the jury specifically on loss of future earnings, but did properly instruct them on the question of reduced earning capacity; nor are we cited any authority which would have made it necessary to plead and prove specifically the amount thereof, this being a question for the jury under the instructions of the court. The wages actually lost were pleaded as an item of special damage. Future impairment of earning capacity, where there is no present loss of earnings as such, must necessarily be ah element of damage admissible under general allegations, and the criticism of the charge on the ground that this element was not pleaded as an item of special damage is not well taken. It was pleaded that the plaintiff’s earning capacity was diminished
*513
by 25%. This is not to say, however, that loss of earning capacity is compensable where there is no evidence as to earning capacity based on past experience, and evidence must be introduced as to the extent to which the earning capacity has been diminished, and damages so found must be reduced to their present cash value.
West
v.
Moore,
44
Ga. App.
214 (
There are exceptions to the judgment of the trial court overruling certain demurrers of the plaintiff in error. The case was not argued orally before this court, and the brief of counsel contains no reference to these exceptions. The same is true as to special ground 11 of the amended motion for a new trial and the general grounds, all of which are treated as abandoned.
Southern Ry. Co.
v.
Black,
141
Ga.
35 (4) (
The trial court did not err in overruling the motion for a new trial.
Judgment affirmed.
