delivered the opinion of the Court.
*13 This is an action for damages for personal injuries growing out of a collision in the city of San Antonio between an automobile and a bus. The suit is by petitioner, Ralph Bonney, an occupant of the automobile, against respondents, San Antonio Transit Company, owner of the bus, and its employee, Oscar Reyes, the driver of the bus.
The case was submitted to the jury on special issues, resulting in findings of (1) negligence and proximate cause against Reyes and against Vern Shipler, the owner and driver of the automobile, who was not a party to the suit; (2) negligence but not proximate cause against petitioner, Bonney; and (3) damages of $25,000.00. The jury also found in answer to Special Issue No. 42 that Bonney did not exercise any control over the driver, Shipler, in the operation of the automobile, but in answer to Special Issue No. 43 the jury found that he had the right to exercise such control. Based upon this latter finding, the trial court entered judgment that Bonney take nothing. That judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals, one of the Justices dissenting.
The theory upon which the Court of Civil Appeals affirmed the judgment is that Special Issue No. 43 was a submission of the question of joint enterprise and the answer of the jury thereto was a finding that Bonney and Shipler were engaged in a joint enterprise, with the result that Shipler’s negligence is imputed to Bonney. Bonney does not question that theory but contends that there is no evidence to support the jury’s finding in answer to Special Issue No. 43. Whether or not there is any evidence warranting the submission of that issue to the jury or supporting the answer of the jury thereto is the principal question in this case.
The material facts are without dispute. They may be stated briefly as follows; Vern Shipler, who lived in Iowa, decided to visit relatives in San Antonio, Texas. He invited his uncle and two friends, Earl Ackerman and petitioner, Bonney, to accompany him on the trip. In so far as the record discloses, Ackerman and Bonney went along for a vacation trip. Before leaving Iowa the parties agreed to share equally the expenses of the trip. To that end each of the four contributed an agreed amount to a common fund, which was replenished from time to time, and from which were paid the expenses of the car, lodgings, and meals. Bonney held and administered the common fund. The parties consulted together" concerning the routes to travel, the stops to be made, and the time to return home. Shipler’s uncle *14 occupied the front seat with him on the way to San Antonio and did some of the driving. Before returning to their home, the' group made a side trip across the border into Mexico, the expenses of which were paid from the common fund. On the morning when the group (less Shipler’s uncle, who had flown back to Iowa) was leaving to return home, the automobile collided with a bus on a San Antonio street. Bonney was riding on the front seat with Shipler and sustained personal injuries.
1 The cases are legion on the general question of joint enterprise, many of them by courts of this State. The established definition of joint enterprise in this jurisdiction as applicable to the facts here under review is that a joint enterprise exists where a driver and an occupant of an automobile “have not only a joint interest in the object and purpose of the enterprise, but also an equal right, express or implied, to direct and control the conduct of each other in the operation of the conveyance.” El Paso Electric Co. v. Leeper, Texas Comm. App.,
As indicated above, the principal question in this appeal is whether the jury finding in answer to Special Issue No. 43 is supported by any evidence. We have concluded that it is not. That question may be narrowed by observing, first, that we do not have before us a case in which the owner was present in his own automobile driven by another, as in Straff us v. Barclay, supra; second, nor one in which a parent was present in an automobile driven by his minor child, as in Nelson v. Fulkerson,
2 Respondents rely principally upon these facts: (1) Shipler and the occupants agreed to share the expenses of the trip; and (2) they conferred together concerning routes to be taken, stops to be made, and time for departure. We cannot agree that there is anything in the nature of an agreement by an owner and an *15 occupant to share in the cost of operating an automobile which evidences an implied agreement by the owner to relinquish, in part, his exclusive right to control the manner of driving his automobile. Doubtless, countless trips are taken where participants agree to share the automobile expenses, without any agreement, express or implied, to share the right to control the operation of the automobile. To permit a jury to infer from such an agreement that the owner has relinquished, in part, his right to control the manner of operating his automobile would be to extend the doctrine of joint enterprise far beyond its proper scope.
We have reached the same conclusion in regard to respondent’s contention that a joint right to control the operation of the automobile may reasonably be inferred from the fact that Shipler conferred with Bonney and the other occupants concerning the routes to be taken, stops to be made, and time for departure. While those facts relate in a general sense to the movement of the automobile, they do not pertain to the manner of driving it nor support a reasonable inference of a joint right to control its operation.
The majority opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals states, in effect, that in as much as Bonney moved from the back seat to the front seat of the automobile, it may be reasonably inferred that he was to share in the driving on the return trip. There is no evidence that he was to remain on the front seat during the journey home, and even if it might be inferred that he would remain there and share in the driving, which is, to say the least, a very doubtful inference, it does not follow that to do so would .evidence a right to control the manner of operating the automobile when the owner is at the wheel. West Texas Coaches v. Madi,
3 The position of respondents finds some support in Douty v. Delta Drilling Company,
4 The briefs of the parties have been largely directed to the theory urged by Bonney that the test announced in Raub v. Rowe,
5 There remains the question of the nature of the judgment to be rendered here. Having determined that the judgments of the courts below must be reversed, we look to the record to determine whether the case should be rendered here or remanded for a new trial. The court’s charge defined what elements the jury could take into account in assessing the damages. Among those elements were impairment of petitioner’s earning capacity from the date of the accident to the date of trial, and, another, impairment of his earning capacity in the future. Respondents filed written objections to the charge in so far as it permitted the inclusion of those elements, and have preserved their point by cross points in the Court of Civil Appeals and here. They contend that there is no evidence upon which the jury could reasonably determine the amount of damages resulting from such impairment. We have concluded that this point should be sustained.
The evidence introduced by Bonney pertaining to impairment of his earning capacity may be summarized as follows: For five years prior to his injury Bonney operated his own watch repair business in Burt, Iowa, a community of approximately six- hundred. During this time Bonney had excellent health and vision. He was thirty-nine years of age at the time of the collision. After a period of convalescence, Bonney attempted to resume his work repairing watches, but found that he was *17 unable to do so because of impaired vision, frequent headaches, and nervousness. Consequently, he sold his business. At the time of trial Bonney was employed as an assistant manager in a jewelry store in Fairmont, Minnesota, a community of approximately ten thousand, at a salary of $75.00 per week. He did very little watch repairing.
The point at issue here is the absence of any evidence which would indicate either the amount of Bonney’s earnings or a monetary measure of his earning capacity prior to the injury. The rule in this jurisdiction is that where a plaintiff seeks damages for impairment of earning capacity, he must prove the amount of such damages with the degree of certainty to which it is susceptible. Dallas Consolidated Electric Street Railway Co. v. Motwiller,
A question of improper argument of petitioner’s counsel is also brought forward, but it doubtless will not arise upon another trial. It will, therefore, not be discussed.
Judgments of the trial court and Court of Civil Appeals are both 'reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Opinion delivered May 27, 1959.
Rehearing overruled July 8, 1959.
