158 Mo. App. 533 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1911
This is a suit for damages accrued to plaintiff on account of personal injuries received through defendant’s negligence. Plaintiff recovered, but the court set the verdict aside on defendant’s motion for a new trial because of alleged error in instruction No. 4 on the measure of damages, and from this order granting a new trial plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.
The only question for decision relates to instruction No. 4 on the measure of damages, and this instruction is as follows:
“The jury are instructed that if, under the instructions and evidence, you find the issues for the*535 plaintiff, you will take into consideration, in estimating and determining the measure of damages in connection with all the facts and circumstances in evidence, the age and situation of the plaintiff, the character and extent of his injury, and whether it is permanent, the extent, if any, to which he will he prevented and disabled by reason of said injury from working and earning a livelihood for himself after he arrives at the age of twenty-one (21) years, and may find for him such sum as in the judgment of the jury, under all the evidence in the case, will fairly compensate him for the injuries received; not, however, exceeding $20,500.”
The point made against the instruction, and because of which the court set the verdict aside, is that it submitted to the jury for consideration' as an element of damage the matter of plaintiff’s diminished earning capacity after he arrives at the age of twenty-one years when there is no averment in the petition of loss of future earnings or diminished earning capacity after plaintiff should arrive at his majority.
It appears from the evidence that at the time of his injury plaintiff was a lad but sixteen years of age in the employ of defendant as a delivery hoy, and as such was earning $4.50 per week. But there is an absence of proof, as there must he in such cases, of his probable earning capacity after arriving at the age of twenty-one years. All of this is unimportant, however, as the question for decision relates alone to the matter of submitting to the jury for consideration the diminished earning capacity of the hoy after attaining the age of twenty-one years in- view of the fact that the petition laid no claim in that behalf by an averment of special damages.
The petition sets forth that plaintiff was a delivery hoy in defendant’s employ at the time of his injury and avers the manner in which the injury befell him on its elevator through defendant’s negligence. It
We conclude, therefore, that in a suit such as this one, prosecuted by a lad of sixteen years who has not chosen a calling or profession for life, a recovery may be had, under a general allegation of damages in a petition counting on a permanent injury, if such is proved, for loss of earnings after reaching his majority or diminished earning capacity thereafter, without laying a claim therefor as special damage. The judgment