The defendant, David Lembo, appeals jury verdicts issued in Superior Court (Sullivan, J.) in favor of the plaintiffs, Edward and Joyce Bennett. He challenges the trial court’s instruction on “loss of enjoyment of life” damages and the court’s denial of his motion to set aside the verdicts or, alternatively, for a remittitur. We affirm.
The following facts were adduced at trial. In July 1994, the defendant rear-ended Mr. Bennett’s car while it was stopped at an intersection. On the following day, Mr. Bennett had a severe headache and neck and shoulder pain. Mr. Bennett’s treating physician diagnosed cervical strain and prescribed physical therapy, which Mr. Bennett attended for approximately two months.
In March 1995, Mr. Bennett returned to his doctor when he experienced pain after shoveling snow. His doctor again diagnosed
The plaintiffs sued the defendant for negligence and loss of consortium. The defendant conceded legal fault but contested the nature, extent, and cause of the plaintiffs’ damages.
Mr. Bennett’s treating physician testified that the 1994 accident caused Mr. Bennett to suffer a 12% permanent impairment. The defendant’s expert agreed that Mr. Bennett suffered from a permanent impairment, but he assessed it at 9% and believed its cause to be a degenerative disk disease.
The plaintiffs and their children testified that after the accident, Mr. Bennett ceased engaging in many activities, including taking long vacations by car with his wife who does not drive, frequently visiting his daughter and grandchildren on Cape Cod, lifting weights, attending aerobics classes with his wife, wrestling with his grandchildren and coaching them in sports, mowing the lawn, and assisting his children with their home improvement projects.
In charging the jury on damages, the trial court instructed:
In awarding damages, the following may be considered:
One, the reasonable value of medical, hospital, nursing care, services and supplies reasonably required and actually given in the treatment of the plaintiff Edward Bennett' and the reasonable value of similar items that will probably be required and given in the future.
Two, reasonable compensation for any pain, discomfort, fears, anxiety or other mental or emotional distress suffered by the plaintiff Edward Bennett and any similar suffering that would probably be experienced in the future.
Three, a permanent impairment; a sum to fairly and reasonably compensate the plaintiff for the loss of bodily functions and permanent physical disability to his body and to his limbs which he has sustained and is likely to sustain •in the future.
No definite standard or method of mathematical calculation is prescribed by law by which to fix reasonable compensation for pain and suffering, nor is the opinion of any witness required as to the amount of such compensation. In making an award for pain and suffering, you should exercise your reasonable judgment, and the damages you
*279 determine have to be fair and reasonable in light of the evidence.
In addition, in a case in which the plaintiff has established permanent injuries, the jury is entitled to award such compensation as it determines would fairly and fully compensate the plaintiff for any loss of enjoyment of life which he has sustained as a result of the defendant’s legal fault. This element is separate and distinct from the claim of economic loss and conscious pain and suffering. . . .
It concerns the inability, if any, you find from the evidence, of the plaintiff to carry on and enjoy a life in a manner had the accident not occurred.
The defendant objected to the instruction regarding loss of enjoyment of life damages on the basis that such damages are unavailable under New Hampshire law, and that the instruction duplicated the other instructions with respect to general damages. The jury returned a $75,000 verdict for Mr. Bennett and a $25,000 verdict for Mrs. Bennett. The trial court denied the defendant’s motion to set aside the verdicts or, alternatively, for a remittitur, and this appeal followed.
I. Loss of Enjoyment of Life Damages
The defendant first argues that loss of enjoyment of life damages are unavailable under New Hampshire law. Second, he argues that the instruction allowed duplicate damages because it addressed loss of enjoyment of life damages as a “separate and distinct” element of damages.
“We review jury instructions in context and will not reverse unless the charge, taken in its entirety, fails to adequately explain the law applicable to the case so that the jury could have been misled.” Simpson v. Wal-Mart Stores,
We have recently addressed the compensability of “loss of life” damages in an action brought pursuant to RSA 556:12 (Supp. 1999), New Hampshire’s wrongful death statute. See Marcotte v. Timberlane/Hampstead School Dist.,
Loss of enjoyment of life damages “connote[] the deprivation of certain pleasurable sensations and enjoyment through impairment or- destruction of the capacity to engage in- activities formerly enjoyed by the injured .plaintiff.” Fantozzi v. Sandusky Cement Products Co.,
The capacity to enjoy life ... is unquestionably an attribute of an ordinary healthy individual. The loss of that capacity as a result of another’s negligent act is at least as serious an impairment as the permanent destruction of a physical function, which has always been treated as a compensable item under traditional tort principles.
McDougald v. Garber,
Relying principally upon Marcotte,
To determine whether damages for loss of enjoyment of life are an element of impairment, we must first examine the nature of such an award. An award for permanent impairment compensates the plaintiff for the permanent “loss resulting from complete or partial disability in health, mind, or person.” Flannery v. United States,
Damages for loss of enjoyment of life compensate a plaintiff for the lost ability to engage in activities that once brought pleasure. The inability to engage in certain activities is the natural result of the incapacity that an impairment award is designed to compensate. See Eyoma,
II. The Verdicts
The defendant argues that the trial court should have set aside the verdicts or granted a remittitur. “Direct review of a damages award is the responsibility of the trial judge, who may disturb a verdict as excessive (or inadequate) if its amount is conclusively
“Our task on review is not to attempt to ascertain or divine the one and only correct verdict.” Marcotte,
The defendant argues that the verdict for Mr. Bennett was excessive in light of his de minimis medical expenses and a “lack of evidence concerning an objectively visible ongoing permanent injury.” We disagree.
The plaintiffs introduced evidence from which a reasonable jury could have concluded that Mr. Bennett sustained a permanent impairment. There was evidence that in the two years following the accident, Mr. Bennett spent approximately six months in physical therapy, and that he would require similar treatment from time to time for the remainder of his life. The jury could also have found that prior to the accident, Mr. Bennett was physically active, and that he is no longer as active as a result of it. Mr. Bennett testified that his pain, while not always debilitating, remains a constant presence in his life, and can become debilitating with physical exertion.
Finally, the plaintiffs introduced evidence from which a jury could reasonably have found that Mr. Bennett can no longer engage in many of the activities he had planned to enjoy throughout his retirement as a result of the accident. In light of this evidence, we cannot conclude that no reasonable jury could have awarded Mr. Bennett $75,000.
Likewise, we conclude that Mrs. Bennett’s verdict of $25,000 was hot conclusively against the weight of the evidence. An award for loss of consortium compensates a victim’s spouse for the loss of services, society, and sexual rights. See Siciliano v. Capitol City
The plaintiffs introduced evidence from which a jury could reasonably have found that Mrs. Bennett lost a significant measure of her husband’s companionship in recreational activities, household chores, travel, and other pursuits. We cannot conclude, therefore, that no reasonable jury could have awarded Mrs. Bennett $25,000 for the loss of her husband’s services and society. See Steel,
Affirmed.
