Plаintiff John DeChico appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut, Ellen Bree Burns, J., entered after a jury trial, finding Metro-North Commuter Railroad liable for $40,000 in an action under the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (FELA), 45 U.S.C. § 51 et seq. Appellant claims that the district court erred in refusing to instruct the jury to take inflation into account when computing the present value of his lump-sum award for pain and suffering and in refusing to allow the jury to consider impairment of future earning capacity as an element of his damages. The Railroad cross-appeals, assigning error to portions of the court’s instructions on contributory negligence and to the court’s refusal to give certain instructions relating to negligence. For reasons stated below, we affirm the judgment of the district court with respect to liability but reverse on the question of damagеs and remand for a new trial limited to the latter question.
I.
In February 1983, while engaged in his duties as a shop superintendent employed by the Railroad, DeChico slipped and fell on a wet concrete ramp in the Railroad’s Harmon Shop in Croton-on-Hudson, New York. As a result of his fall, apрellant dislocated his kneecap, suffering an osteochondral fracture to the articular surface of his right patella. Soon after, appellant filed this FELA action against the Railroad, attributing his injury to his employer’s negligence and failure to provide him with a safe place to work and seeking $400,000 in damages. The jury returned a verdict in favor of appellant and awarded him $40,000. No contributory negligence *859 was found. This appeal and cross-appeal followed.
II.
Appellant’s first claim is that the district court erred in refusing to instruct the jury to take inflation into account in reducing any award for future pain and suffering to рresent value. Past and future pain and suffering were the only elements of damages that the court permitted to go to the jury. In the written requests to charge that appellant submitted prior to trial, he proposed the following instruction:
Inflation should be considered in estimating presеnt value of lost future wages. Although no particular rate is required when considering inflation, in estimating present value of lost future wages, it is suggested that two percent discount rate would normally be fair to both side, [sic] Doca v. Marina Mercante Nicaraguense,634 F.2d 30 (2d Cir. 1980).
Apparently, neither party had offered any evidence relating to the proper discount rate or to an adjustment for inflation; there is also no indication that appellees would have objected to the use of the 2% interest rate authorized by Doca had the judge been willing to give such an instruction.
The court’s charge, however, did not mention inflation. The court instructed the jury to reduce any award for future pain and suffering to its present value
by taking first the interest rate or return which the plaintiff could reasonably be expected to receive on investment of the lump sum payment together with 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 the amount would be 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, that is, the reduced worth of the total anticipated future damage.
At the close of the charge, appellant took exception to the court’s failure to instruct the jury to use a discount rate adjusted for future inflation. The court declined to charge the jury further on that point, although it gave a supplementary charge on other matters. The court’s view was that while such an instruction might be appropriate when compensating for lost future earnings, it was not proper when an award was “for an intangible loss such as pаin and suffering.”
Relying on
United States v. Salas,
The proper measure of damages in an FELA case “must be settled according to general principles of law as administered in the Federal courts.”
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. v. Kelly,
Discounting without regard to inflation charges the plaintiff for that portion of the prevailing cost of money that represents the lenders’ anticipation of inflation without allowing the plаintiff an offsetting addition for inflation, either by increasing the sum to be discounted or reducing the discount rate____ ... [Sjince discounting future lost wages to present value uses an interest rate that reflects inflation, the issue is not whether inflation is too speculative to be considered at all; it is whether inflation, as a component of interest rates, should be considered for the defendant (by discounting at the prevailing interest rate) but ignored for the plaintiff (by rejecting any compensating adjustment for inflation).
Id.
at 37-38. Indeed,
Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp. v. Pfeifer,
The district court’s rejection of appellant’s proposed instruction was based upon the court’s conclusion that inflation may be considered when an award compensates for lost future wages, but not when the award comрensates for future pain and suffering. This view is contrary to the law in this circuit. A lump-sum award for future pain and suffering, like an award for lost future wages, must be reduced to its present value because “[irrespective of the type of injury involved, the advantage of the present use of monеy is the same and should be taken into account in arriving at the proper amount of damages.”
Chiarello v. Domenico Bus Service,
Doca
authorized district courts to account for inflation by using an adjusted discount rate of 2% in present value calculations, a rate based upon the apparently stable relationship between inflation and interest rates.
The approach authorized by
Doca
remains viable in the wake of
Jones & Laughlin.
In the latter case, the Court examined a variety of ways a trier of fact seeking to discount the estimated stream of a plaintiff’s future earnings could adjust its calculations to account for the effects of future inflation. While not particularly enthusiastic about the real intеrest rate approach sanctioned in
Doca, see
In this case, the district court was apparently willing to use the 2% real interest rate approach authorized by Doca, and suggested by appellant with no objection by appellee, but refused to give any instruction on inflation because of an erroneous view of the law. Accordingly, we believe that the judgment must be reversed. Appellee argues that the court’s refusal to give the requested instruction was harmless error since the jury might well have drawn upon its collective knowledge and experience and recognized on its own the need to account for inflatiоn in present value calculations. For the reasons pointed out in Doca, we do not agree that the error was harmless.
Appellant also contends that the district court erred by refusing to allow the jury to consider impairment to future earnings capacity as an element of his damages. Appellant was able to return to his jоb as shop superintendent following his accident and eventually received a raise in salary in that position, so that he is now earning as much or more than he was at the time of the accident. Nevertheless, appellant argues that he is still entitled to damages for an impairment to his earning capacity if there is evidence indicating that he has permanent injuries that will restrict his future employment possibilities and make it more difficult for him to compete in the open labor market.
There may well be cases in which the likelihood that a plaintiff with a permanent injury will eventually leave his present job and be forced to compete in an unreceptive labor market is sufficiently great to allow that plaintiff to seek compensation for the limitations placed upon his economic horizons.
See Wiles v. New York, Chicago & St. Louis, R.R.,
Anello v. Murphy Motor Freight Lines,
III.
On the Railroad’s cross-appeal, it claims that the district court erred in instructing the jury that plaintiff had not assumed the risks of his employment. This instruction is a correct statement of law, since 45 U.S.C. § 54 plainly eliminates assumption of risk as a defense in FELA actions.
See Tiller v. Atlantic Coast Line R.R.,
The Railroad also argues that the judge erred in the instruction on contributоry negligence by stating: “The plaintiff’s negligence may have been too slight or inconsequential to be regarded____” This quotation, however, distorts the meaning of the entire sentence from which it is taken:
The plaintiff’s negligence may have been too slight or inconsequential to be regаrded, if you find that the injury would have happened whether or not the plaintiff had been negligent, his negligence would not be a cause of the injury.
This sentence appears merely to state the unassailable rule that a causal connection must be shown between plaintiff’s negligеnce and his injury before contributory negligence can be found. 2 F. Harper & F. James, The Law of Torts § 22.2 at 1199 (1956). Certainly, when placed in the context of the court’s entire instruction on contributory negligence, the language complained of did not constitute reversible error.
Finally, the Railroad maintains that the district court erred in failing to instruct the jury that defendant was not required to furnish its employees with the “latest, best or most perfect place within or upon which to work” and that defendant could not be held responsible for injuries resulting from the mere existence of ice and snow. We disagree. The central liability question in this case was whether the Railroad had taken reasonable precautions to ensure that unavoidable accumulations of ice, snow and water would not create hazardous conditions inside the shop where De-Chico was working. The district court was justified in refusing to give instructions that might tend to deflect the jury’s attention from this question.
For the reasons stated above, the judgment of the district court is affirmed with respect to liability, but reversed with respect to damages; the case is remanded for a new trial limited to the question of damages.
