This is an action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (“FELA” or the “Act”), 45 U.S.C. §§ 51-60 (1988). The defendant Long Island Railroad (“LIRR” or “Railroad”) appeals from (1) a judgment for plaintiff James Sinclair, an employee of the LIRR, entered after a jury trial in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Leonard D. Wex-ler, Judge), and (2) an order denying LIRR’s motion for judgment as a matter of law after trial or a new trial on all the issues.
The LIRR contends that the district court erred when it (1) imputed notice of a defective condition to the LIRR as a matter of law, (2) refused to instruct the jury on the requirement of notice, and (3) erroneously charged the jury on damages. We agree on all points and, accordingly, reverse and remand for a new trial.
BACKGROUND
In 1986, while walking in a dark train tunnel, Sinclair fell over a depression in a bent trap door covering a manhole. Sinclair immediately experienced “sharp low back pains” and could not stand straight or walk normally. He was out of work for almost three weeks, during which time he was treated and examined twice by a private physician and three times by LIRR physicians.
Sinclair returned to work but, during 1987, was often given light duty because of his back pain. From July to December 1987, while continuing to work, Sinclair was treated by a chiropractor. At Sinclair’s request, LIRR then placed him on its own “Work Hardening” program, a physical therapy regimen, which he attended three times a week through January 1988. Between February 1988 (when he left the program) and July 1988, Sinclair did not receive any treatment for his back.
On July 5, 1988, Sinclair was lifting a 120-pound third-rail drill with two co-workers when he felt back pain. According to Sinclair, this pain was no sharper or different than the pain he had felt constantly since 1986. He immediately stopped working and reported this incident to a LIRR supervisor. From July 7, 1988 until early 1989, an orthopedist treated Sinclair with medication, physical therapy, and a back brace. Sinclair continued to work and to visit the LIRR Medical Department when he was unable to work.
In February 1989, a neurosurgeon began treating Sinclair. From March 1989 to November 1989, Sinclair did not work, but did attend physical therapy three times a week. At the direction of LIRR physicians, Sinclair stopped that therapy and resumed the “Work Hardening” program. In November 1989, the LIRR instructed Sinclair to return to work, which he did, working from November 1989 to June 1990.
In May 1990, a Magnetic Resonance Image test ordered by his neurosurgeon revealed a herniated disc and Sinclair underwent a laminectomy on August 30, 1990. Except for a two-week attempt in June 1991, Sinclair never worked after June 1990 but again engaged in physical therapy and attended the “Work Hardening” program. At the time of his March 1992 trial, Sinclair was still employed by LIRR and receiving sick pay.
Sinclair commenced this FELA action in September 1989, alleging a single theory of liability: the LIRR breached its duty to exercise reasonable care in providing a safe workplace. The claim was limited to the September 1986 incident with the manhole cover, and the parties agree that, as a matter of law, the LIRR was not liable for any negligence relevant to the third-rail drill accident of July 5, 1988.
The only unsafe condition alleged in his complaint was the defective condition of the manhole cover of which Sinclair claimed the LIRR had notice. He fine tuned this claim in his answers to LIRR’s interrogatories:
(a) Actual notice is claimed in that the [LIRR], its agents, servants and/or employees created the conditions complained of.
(b) Constructive notice is claimed in that the condition complained of existed for an unreasonably long period of *76 time prior to the occurrence at issue. It is not presently known how long the condition existed prior to September 11, 1986.
At the close of the case, the LIRR moved for judgment as a matter of law based on Sinclair’s failure to prove notice. The district court denied this motion without comment; then the court ruled that an instruction on notice requested by the LIRR was unnecessary, “in view of the fact this happened exclusively on railroad property and it was a metal door that was out of line within a tunnel and enclosed property of the railroad, and there is no proof whatsoever that some stranger or trespasser had anything to do with it.... ” The court also refused to instruct the jury that foreseeability of harm is an essential element of a FELA claim.
The jury returned a $1,025,000 verdict for Sinclair to be reduced, however, by the 25% attributable to his own fault. The LIRR moved for (1) a judgment as a matter of law, arguing that there was no proof from which a jury could reasonably find that the LIRR had actual or constructive notice of the manhole condition, or (2) in the alternative, a new trial, because of the court’s refusal to instruct the jury on the requirement of foreseeability and notice in FELA cases. The LIRR also contended that the verdict was excessive and speculative and, moreover, that the district court erred in failing (1) to charge the jury not to award economic damages in the form of future lost earnings, and (2) to define “permanent disability.”
Denying LIRR’s post-trial motion, the district court determined “that notice to defendant can be imputed where plaintiff alleged, and the jury found, that he tripped over a set of trap doors.... Therefore, it was unnecessary to charge the jury on the question of notice.” The court also rejected LIRR’s contentions that the jury should have been specifically instructed that its award for “permanent disability” should not include compensation for future lost earnings, and that the damage award was excessive.
DISCUSSION
The LIRR argues that the district court erred in denying its trial motion for judgment as a matter of law and its post-trial renewal of that motion. Its core point is that Sinclair never proved that the LIRR had actual or constructive notice of the bent trap door.
Even if it is not entitled to judgment, it urges, alternatively, that a new trial is required because of the district court’s failure to instruct the jury on notice as required in FELA cases. The Railroad also seeks a new trial on the issue of damages which it claims were the result of misleading jury instructions.
Liability
We have held that “FELA is not an insurance program.”
O’Hara v. Long Island R.R.,
While there is “a considerably more relaxed standard of proof” for determining negligence in FELA cases,
Lang v. Metro-North Commuter R.R.,
Here, Sinclair sought to impute notice to the LIRR, as a matter of law, simply because the Railroad “exclusively owned, operated, maintained and controlled” the train tunnel. The district court adopted Sinclair’s sweeping notion of liability and gave no instruction on notice. After the verdict, in denying LIRR’s post-trial motions, the district court apparently concluded that some kind of notice had to be proven; it found the requisite notice by virtue of the Railroad's duty to inspect and maintain the tunnel in a reasonably safe condition. This was error.
We have held that “whether the railroad used reasonable care in furnishing its employees a safe place to work is normally a question for the jury.
Ragsdell v. Southern Pacific Transp. Co.,
Although this error is fundamental and requires reversal, we reject LIRR’s argument that we should reverse with instructions to dismiss the complaint because “there is a complete absence of probative facts to support the conclusion reached by the jury.”
Lavender v. Kurn,
Damages
The LIRR also assails the verdict as tainted by the district court’s refusal to tell the jury that any award for “permanent disability” should not include future lost earnings. We find that the district court improperly instructed the jury that future lost earnings are not recoverable in this case.
The evidence established that Sinclair’s back injury was severely disabling. Indeed, the medical experts for both sides agreed that Sinclair was totally disabled from doing any “laboring work.” Sinclair’s expert characterized this as a “permanent disability.” No one, however, went so far as to state that Sinclair was utterly and permanently unemployable in any capacity.
Sinclair’s economist testified about future economic loss, but limited it to “future lost wages” only, and assumed that Sinclair would not earn another penny for the rest of his life. The economist never addressed the issue of “impairment of earning capacity” at all. After permitting this testimony, the district court indicated that it would not charge the jury on “future lost wages” because they are not recoverable. Yet, after making this ruling, the court permitted Sinclair’s counsel to sum up to the jury on the issue of damages, in which he ignored the distinction between “future lost wages” and “future lost earning capacity.”
The district court then instructed the jury,
if you find that plaintiff is entitled to recover, ... [t]he plaintiff is entitled to recover a sum of money which can justly and fairly compensate him for all harms and losses resulting from the injuries he sustained including, one, past pain and suffering; two, future pain and suffering; three, permanent disability.
Following the charge, the LIRR requested that the jury “be instructed that they cannot award future loss of earnings” and that the court explain to the jury that the term “permanent disability,” as used in the charge, means “permanent physical disability” only. The district court declined to charge either point. The jury then returned a non-itemized award, which nearly matched the projection of “future economic loss” made by Sinclair’s economist, who had testified extensively about future lost wages.
The jury should have been instructed that, if Sinclair sustained his burden of proof, it could make an award for future lost earnings.
See
Leonard B. Sand et al., 4
Modern Federal Jury Instructions (Civil)
§ 89.04, at 89-58 (1991) [hereinafter
Jury Instructions]; see also Chesapeake & O. Ry. v. Carnahan,
CONCLUSION
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is reversed, and the case is remanded for a new trial on all issues.
