This is an action by a railroad worker against his employer under the federal Safety Appliance Acts. A jury returned a general verdict for $150,000.00. The defendant appeals raising four points concerning the amount of the verdict, the manner in which it was reached, and the elements of damage submitted to the jury.
1. Defendant’s first and primary claim of error is based on the fact that the trial court gave the jury no tables or mathematical formulae for reducing lost future earnings to present worth, as the court’s instructions required it to do. The issue was raised below only after defendant had rested and after court and counsel had settled on the instructions to be given. At that time defendant requested the court to take judicial notice of and submit to the jury certain annuity tables proffered as exhibits by counsel. The trial court denied the request.
We cannot fault the trial court for rejecting the exhibits, particularly considering the time they were offered. Whether to permit defendant to reopen its case at that stage to offer this additional evidence was within the discretion of the trial court. See,
e.g., City of Wichita v. Unified School District No. 259,
On appeal defendant shifts its ground somewhat. Rather than rely on the rejection of its exhibits as error, defendant now claims the trial court was required to include their equivalent in its instructions; i.e., to give the jury a specific formula for reducing future earnings to present worth. The instruction given required the jury to “reduce to its present worth, the amount of the anticipated future loss, by taking (1) the interest rate or return which the plaintiff could reasonably be expected to receive on an investment of the lump-sum payment, together with (2) the period of time over which the future loss is reasonably certain to be sustained; and then reduce, or in effect deduct from the total amount of anticipated future loss whatever that amount would be *83 reasonably certain to earn or return, if invested at such a rate of interest over such future period of time; and include in the verdict an award for only the present-worth — the reduced amount — of the total anticipated future loss.”
The appellant contends that federal law requires the giving of a more specific instruction on the means of calculating present value when it is requested. There are two problems with this argument. First, while federal law does govern the substantive rights of the parties under FELA actions including the right to proper instructions on damages, the law of the forum controls procedural and evidentiary matters. See,
Ches. & Ohio Ry. v. Kelly,
So, in this case, if defendant had laid a proper foundation for the admission of its tables, and then made a request for an appropriate instruction on their use, the trial court might properly have given a more detailed instruction. The instruction given was *84 not clearly erroneous, and on the state of the record we cannot find error.
2. In its second point, defendant claims error in refusing to receive testimony from the jury foreman that the jury did not in fact reduce lost future earnings to present worth. Quite apart from defendant’s violation of Rule No. 181 (
The two cases cited by the railroad for the proposition that verdicts in violation of the instructions must be set aside do not support the reception of the kind of juror testimony offered here. In those cases, it was apparent from the verdict itself that the jury had misunderstood or disregarded the instructions. In
U. P. Rly. Co. v. Hutchinson,
3. In its third point, defendant asserts error in submitting the damage element of future medical expenses when they were not
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specially pleaded or specifically mentioned in the pre-trial order. The element came into the case, as it were, by mutual consent and acquiescence. (See K.S.A. 60-215[fc];
Moore v. Bayless,
4. The final claim is that the verdict was excessive. The verdict was general, so there is no way of telling how much was attributable to lost future earnings (defendant’s chief complaint) and how much was for past and future pain and suffering, or any of the other elements submitted. As plaintiff points out, the injuries here are quite similar to those in
Ketner v. Atchison, T. & S. F. Rly. Co.,
Affirmed.
