In this appeal, the Government challenges as excessive certain elements of the money damages the district court awarded appellee under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671-2680 (1982). We find that the challenged elements are not excessive, and accordingly affirm.
Elizabeth Jean Meader, the appellee, is a spastic quadriplegic, unable to care for any of her basic needs. Her condition is the result of medical malpractice she suffered at the Eisenhower Army Medical Center at Fort Gordon, Georgia. The Government admits that it is liable to appellee under the FTCA for the injuries she sustained at the medical center; given this admission, the district court considered the case on the issue of damages alone.
After hearing the parties’ evidence on damages, the district court awarded appel-lee $6,634,122.00. Of that amount, the court gave appellee $4,651,800 to cover her future medical expenses, and $285,134 to compensate her for the earnings she will lose because she can no longer work.
The Government asks us to set aside the court’s award and to remand the case for a reassessment of damages on the grounds that the district court (1) failed properly to discount to present value the damages it awarded for future medical expenses and lost future earnings, and (2) overcompensated appellee for some of her future medical expenses. 1 We discuss these points in order.
I.
It is a settled principle of law that an award of monetary compensation for future medical expenses and lost future earnings must be adjusted to its present value to account for two factors: first, the interest the award will earn before it is
*1058
used to pay for medical expenses or to replace earnings; second, the depreciation the award will suffer over time on account of inflation.
See Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. v. Pfeifer,
In the instant case, the district court, following Georgia law, assumed that the award for future medical expenses and lost future earnings would earn interest at the rate of 5% per annum. 4 It then relied on the evidence adduced at trial to determine the inflation rate. The only evidence presented on this point was the opinion testimony of appellee’s expert witness, John Brown, an assistant professor of actuarial science at Georgia State University. He stated that the inflation rate would be 5% over the life of the award. Using this rate (and assuming that the award would earn interest at the rate of 5% per annum), he calculated the present value of appel-lee’s lost future wages at $285,134, and the district court accepted his figure. With respect to future medical expenses, Brown testified that medical costs would increase at a rate greater than the 5% inflation rate. He said that this increase over inflation would amount to 3.5%, meaning that the future medical expenses would increase at the rate of 8.5% per annum. The district court rejected the expert’s opinion that the cost of medical care would increase at an annual rate that exceeded the inflation rate, 5 and therefore used the 5% inflation rate (together with the 5% statutory interest rate) in adjusting the compensation awarded for future medical expenses.
In sum, the court’s adjustment for interest and inflation was a “wash”: each item offset the other. The net effect was that no adjustment was made in the amounts the court awarded appellee for future medical expenses and lost future earnings. The Government contends that the district court erred in offsetting the interest rate and the inflation rate. According to the Government, the controlling precedent of
Culver v. Slater Boat Co.,
The Government concedes that, on the basis of the evidence before it, 7 the district court was justified in finding that the rates of interest and inflation were identical. Culver II, however, in the Government’s view, required the district court to reject this evidence and to apply a below-market discount rate of between 1 to 3%. We do not agree.
Culver II does state that “fact finders shall determine and apply an appropriate below-market discount rate as the sole method to adjust loss-of-future-earnings [and future medical expenses] awards to present value to account for the effect of [interest and] inflation,” id. at 117, and that in bench tried cases, “a trial court adopting a [] discount rate between one and three percent will not be reversed if it explains the reasons for its choice.” Id. at 122. The Government interprets this language as an absolute mandate to district courts: they must adjust downward their awards for these elements of damages by one to three percent.
We do not find such a mandate in
Culver II.
First, the former Fifth Circuit did not take judicial notice,
see
Fed.R.Evid. 201, as the Government’s argument implies, that the discount rate normally exceeds the inflation rate by 1 to 3%. The court’s opinion, especially its opinion in
Culver v. Slater Boat Co.,
[a]doption of [the below-market discount rate between one and three percent] guards against the wide disparity in results, the extended duration in trial time, and the increased cost to the parties that may be anticipated if a specific forecast of future price inflation is made anew in each case involving loss of future earnings.
Culver II,
In the case at hand, the parties did not address the issue of adjusting the damages award until the trial was underway and appellee called her actuary to the witness stand. The actuary testified without objection, and as we have noted, the question of how much to adjust the damages award was submitted to the court on the proof presented. The decision in Culver II was *1060 not mentioned. Under the circumstances, we believe that the parties should be treated as having stipulated to the method that the court actually employed. We therefore find no error in the court’s determination of the appropriate discount rate.
II.
The Government’s second contention on appeal is that the district court overcompensated appellee for some of her future medical expenses: the Government terms the compensation awarded for these expenses “excessive and duplicative.” We judge the district court’s award of damages by the clearly erroneous standard.
Cole v. United States,
We look to the law of Georgia to decide the question the Government presents.
Johnson v. United States,
The Government’s argument focuses on certain items of medical care and equipment and appellee’s need for a residence which could accommodate a person in her condition. The Government contends that the court’s award provides for too much care, in terms of the number of medical personnel needed to attend to her needs. 9 The record supports the court’s award for such care, and thus we will not disturb it. 10
The equipment in question is depreciable and must be replaced from time to time during the period of appellee’s life expectancy. The Government contends that the court failed to take into account the “trade-in” value of the equipment in determining the amount appellee would need to replace it. The court did not take the trade-in value into account because there was no evidence of such. 11 Under the circumstances, we could hardly fault the district court for not speculating as to the amount of the trade-in value. 12
*1061 No dispute exists that, as a result of her injuries, appellee requires a residence designed to accommodate her needs. She introduced evidence as to the cost of such a residence; the cost is reflected in the court’s award. The Government contends that the court failed to consider that the residence appellee occupied at the time of trial could have been modified to meet her needs at a much lower price; alternatively, the court failed to deduct the trade-in value of that residence from the cost of the new residence. The court failed to take such steps because the record contained no evidence that appellee owned, in whole or in part, the residence she was occupying at the time of the trial. Again, we could not fault the district court for refusing to speculate about this matter. 13
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Government also objects to the district court’s failure to deduct "normal living expenses” from its award of lost future earnings, and its failure to limit that award to appellee's current life expectancy. The Government’s first objection is frivolous; the Government cites no authority from Georgia or elsewhere for the proposition that an award for lost future earnings must be offset by the living expenses the plaintiff would incur during the period covered by the future earnings. The only cases the Government cites are wrongful death cases, where the survivor’s recovery is limited to the net amount lost by reason of the decedent's demise; these cases, though, are facially inappo-site. The Government’s argument might have merit regarding the amount of lost future earnings awarded beyond appellee's current estimated life expectancy; the Government, however, failed to present any evidence to support such a reduction.
The Government’s second objection similarly fails. The gist of its objection is that after it reduces a plaintiff’s life expectancy, due to its negligence, the plaintiff is only entitled to recover lost future earnings for that shortened life expectancy. We find no support in case law for such a proposition. Under Georgia law, which seems to be well reasoned, the plaintiff is entitled to recover for all the wages the plaintiff would have earned, but for the injury.
Central Container Corp.
v.
Westbrook,
. In
Stein v. Reynolds Securities, Inc.,
. This statutory interest rate is a discount rate, i.e., it is used for the purpose of determining the price of an annuity that, for example, would compensate a party for the earnings he would receive over a given period of time.
. That the court used this 5% figure is implicit in the court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law, which it dictated into the record at the conclusion of the trial. Though neither party had urged the court to discount its award for future medical expenses and lost earnings to account for the interest the award would earn, the court did so on its own initiative. The court obviously took judicial notice of the 5% interest rate prescribed by Georgia statutory law, because it held that the interest rate it used was offset by the inflation rate — which had been established by the proof at 5%, as indicated in the text infra.
.This conclusion is implicit in the district court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law; the court, in adjusting the award for future medical expenses, offset the 5% interest rate and the 5% inflation rate.
. Culver v. Slater Boat Co.,
. The evidence referred to is the Georgia statutory interest rate, of which the court took judicial notice, see supra n. 4, and the actuary’s opinion concerning the inflation rate.
. Federal Rule of Evidence 201 “requires that a judicially noticed fact be one ‘not subject to reasonable dispute' in that it is capable of ‘accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned’ or is generally known.”
United States v. Pabian,
. The Government's sole witness, however, Doctor Louis O. Manganiello, testified that the life plan for appellee, including all the equipment and care she claimed she needed, was "an excellent plan. It is probably too excellent, but it provides for everything, probably more than is needed."
. In showing that a damage award is excessive, it is appropriate to compare the award with awards in similar cases.
Johnson,
. The Government erroneously contends that appellant had the burden of proving the trade-in value of the equipment; in fact, the Government had the burden of proving the trade-in value of the items included in the damage award.
See City of Atlanta v. State Farm Fire & Casualty Co.,
. The Government points to one case,
National Papaya Co. v. Domain Industries, Inc.,
. It should be noted that at no time did the Government seek leave of the district court to augment the record so as to establish the trade-in value of the depreciable medical equipment or the existence, and fair market value, of the residence appellee was occupying at the time of the trial.
