In this case the jury found, the trial justice approved and, after reading the evidence, we think correctly, a verdict for plaintiff.
The action was assault and battery. Plaintiff, a laborer forty-dhree.- years of age, was struck over the eye with a hammer and the chief resultant injury was the development of a traumatic cataract in his right eye. Plaintiff lost no time from his work but suffered from bruises, contusions and deep scratches. Immediately after the assault plaintiff’s right eye was badly inflamed and the next day he saw a doctor. He visited the doctor four or five times and'; about ten days after the affray the doctor observed an “opacity of the cornea” developing, which indicated the beginning of a traumatic cataracti Plaintiff began to wear glasses but did nothing further and at the time of the trial, a f little over a year later, the sight of the right eye was “nil.”i Prior to the accident he had had no trouble with his sight. *318 All medical evidence is to the effect that the loss of sight will be permanent if no operation is performed. The jury awarded $2,500 damages.
Apart from the claim that the verdict is against the evidence, which we have above dispdsed of, defendants take exception to the verdict as excessive, basing their claim on the contention that the preponderating evidence shows that an operation would probably restore the sight of the eye. There was no evidence that plaintiff had been advised prior to the trial that an operation might restore his sight. His own doctor, who was not an eye specialist, said at the trial that sometimes an operation will restore sight in cases of traumatic cataract and sometimes not. Whether an operation would improve plaintiff’s condition, his own doctor said he did not feel competent to say. Defendants’ expert j witness, an eye specialist, said that the prospects were that an operation remedy-plaintiff’s condition and that ninety-eight per cent of such operations were successful in competent hands and under ideal conditions. He did not know whether plaintiff’s physical condition would stand ; the operation and though performed without other anesthetic than cocaine, he admitted that it was a “very delicate operation” and would confine plaintiff to a hospital for about two weeks. He said that he could not guarantee the result.
The court charged the jury, among other things, concerning damages, to “consider whether an operation more or less simple or more or less complicated would restore the sight of that eye.” To this charge no exception was taken and no additions were requested.
The question presented to us is whether we must say in the light of the evidence that the damages awarded were excessive because of probability of restoration of sight if plaintiff will submit to a,n operation.
*319
*318
It is the duty of a person injured, as was plaintiff, to use due care and diligence under the circumstances to effect the cure of his wounds and reduce the damages.
O’Donnell
v.
*319
R. I. Co.,
28 R. I. 245;
Potts
v.
Guthrie,
Permanent loss of sight of one eye and consequent shrinkage in earning capacity in a laborer forty-three years, of age is not excessively compensated by an award of $2,500, particularly if, as here, punitive damages may account for a. portion of the award.
The defendants’ exceptions are overruled and the case is-remitted to the Superior Court for entry of judgment on the verdict.
