187 Iowa 501 | Iowa | 1919
This action is brought by the administratrix of the estate of Pat Brady, to recover for injuries causing his death. It is admitted that he came to his death. through the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff included in her claim for damages the sums necessarily expended for funeral expenses, and doctors’ and hospital bills, and introduced evidence as to the same. The necessity for such expenditures, and that the amounts expended are reasonable, is not questioned.
At the conclusion of the evidence, the defendant moved “to strike from the record and take from the jury all testimony relating to the matters of funeral expenses, nurse hire, doctor bills, and hospital bills as incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and not presenting a proper measure of damages.” This motion was overruled. Thereupon, the plaintiff filed an amendment to her petition, claiming $160 for funeral expenses, $15 for doctors’ bills, $10 for hospital bills, and $15 for church expenses connected with the burial. A motion to strike this amendment was filed and overruled, and exception taken.
-Before the argument was begun, the defendant, asked
“If, under the evidence and the instructions given, you should find for the plaintiff, you will then proceed to determine from the evidence the amount of her recovery herein. The measure of such recovery, if any, will be the present worth or value of the estate which deceased would reasonably be expected to have saved and accumulated, if he had been permitted to live out the natural term of his life. The measure of recovery, in cases of this character, hl^the amount, estimated at its present worth, which, under all the circumstances disclosed, in the evidence, you believe would/have been added to the estate which he left at the end of his natural life. Also such amount as you find from the evidence to be the reasonable funeral expenses, doctor's bill and hospital bills, not exceeding the amount claimed for such funeral expense, doctor’s and hospital bills.”
To this instruction proper exceptions were taken.
With this instruction, the court submitted the following special interrogatories:
“(1) What amount, if anything, do you find that the deceased, Pat Brady, would reasonably be expected to have saved and accumulated, had he lived out his natural life? A. $500.
“(2) What was the actual amount of the funeral expenses of the deceased, Pat Brady ? A. $185.”
The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $685. Judgment was entered upon this verdict.
The defendant, in his argument here, now concedes that there was sufficient competent evidence introduced on the trial to justify the general verdict and judgment to the
As to hospital and doctor’s bills, we say that the deceased suffered physical injuries at the hands of the defendant. These injuries sent him to the hospital for care. These injuries made it necessary to employ the aid of physicians and surgeons. There is no assurance that, had he lived out his expectancy, he would ever have suffered like injuries, resulting in like expenditures, or even approximately like expenditures, or that he would ever have suffered the injuries that called upon him for these expenditures. These were properly allowed.
The court, however, erred in allowing the full amount of expenditures for funeral and burial. It should have instructed the jury that this expenditure is an element to be considered by the jury in determining the present worth of that which the plaintiff would, if permitted to live out his expectancy, have accumulated and left to his estate. They should consider that these expenses were forced upon the estate in anticipation of a time when, in the course of nature, they would be incurred.
For the error pointed out, the case is — Reversed.