delivered the opinion of the Court.
Inеz Gloria sued J. D. McIver and A. F. Ramos for damag-es for personal injuries. Gloria alleged, and the jury found, that he was injured in 1939 when a small pick-up truck in whiсh he was riding was negligently struck from behind by a larger truck belonging to McIver and operated by Ramos, Mclver’s employee, within the scope of his employment. Based upon the answers of the jury to special issues submitted, the trial court entered judgment for Inez Gloria for $5,500.00. This judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.
Plaintiff alleged that before his injury he was gainfully employed in the business of farming, and was earning approximately $2,000.00 per year. The evidence showed that plaintiff was a Mexican tenant farmer, unable to speak or understand the English language. He was forty-eight years old at the time of the trial, and had a life expectancy of 23.36 years. He had
Defendants contend that this evidence fails to furnish any data that would enable the jury to reach an intelligent cоnclusion on the value of plaintiff’s lost earning capacity, since it does not show the money value of the crops he raised, or whаt part of them was produced by his own labor. We find no merit in this contention. After a careful investigation of the authorities, we are of the оpinion that the trial court correctly instructed the jury to consider plaintiff’s loss of earning capacity. In a personal injury suit the amount whiсh the plaintiff might have earned in the future is always uncertain, and must be left largely to the sound judgment and discretion of the jury. However, the verdict must be based on something more than mere conjecture. It must be an intelligent judgment, based upon such facts as are available. Even where the injury is of such a serious and permanent nature that loss of earning capacity is the necessary result, proof is required to show the extent аnd amount of the damagés. International & G. N. R. Co. v. Simcock,
In the present case we do not think the jury was left to a mere guess or conjecture as to plаintiff’s loss of earning capacity. The evidence showed that he was an uneducated Mexican farmer, whose only earnings came from manual labor. He is totally incapacitated to earn his living by that means in the future. Although the amounts of his past earnings are not shown with mathemаtical exactitude, the evidence does disclose the nature and extent of his farming operations and the kind and amount of the crops he produced. It is not essential under the circumstances to require him to give an exact account of the profits from his farming and tо calculate what part of such profits, if any, was due to his individual labor, as distinguished from that of the members of his family. Where there is ah absence of any evidence from which the jury could properly ascertain the plaintiff’s future incapacity and loss
The fact that plaintiff was not engaged in farming at the time he was injured does not bar his recovery for loss of earning capаcity, because the measure of his loss is his capacity to earn, not his actual earnings. El Paso Electric Co. v. Murphy, 49 Texas Civ. App. 586,
We hold that the facts shown, together with the jury’s common knowledge and experience and sence of justice, were sufficient to еnable the jury to make a fair estimate of the value of plaintiff’s lost earning capacity.
The other points raised were correctly disposed of by the court of Civil Appeals.
The judgments of the district court and of the Court of Civil Appeals are affirmed.
Opinion delivered March 24, 1943.
