79 Neb. 550 | Neb. | 1907
It is claimed by Mrs. Nixon, the appellee, that while she was in the act of entering a street car at Sixteenth and Leavenworth streets, in the city of Omaha, the car suddenly started forward, and she was thrown from the step of the car upon the pavement, sustaining the injuries of which complaint is made. The trial resulted in a judgment in her favor for $500, to reverse which this appeal is taken.
On her examination, she testified that after being-thrown to the pavement she arose and again boarded the car, which had stopped for her at a distance of about 30 feet from where she had fallen. She stated that after she had boarded the car she gave the conductor her transfer slip within a short time, and the following question was asked her: “Now, you may state what, if anything,
Objections were taken to the thirteenth instruction of the court which is in the following language: “You are instructed that if you find for the plaintiff you will assess and allow her damages at such sums as will compensate her for the injuries which she is shown by the evidence to have sustained. In determining the amount of such damages, you should carefully consider from the evidence the nature, extent and character of the injuries sustained by the plaintiff, and should determine whether or not such
In Chicago, M. & St. P. R. Co. v. Lindeman, 143 Fed. 946, it was held that “the liability for future damages for the wrongful infliction of a personal injury is strictly limited to compensation for such pain and other evil effects as are reasonably certain to result from it. Possible, even probable future effects are too remote and speculative to form the basis of legal recovery.” In Hardy v. Milwaukee Street R. Co., 61 N. W. 771 (89 Wis. 183), the court said: “A charge which allows damages for the pain and suffering which plaintiff ‘may endure hereafter’ and for the loss of such time as the evidence shows ‘she will be likely to suffer hereafter’ is erroneous, as allowing the jury to go into the field of mere probability.” The same principle is announced in Chicago, R. I. & P. R. Co. v. McDowell, 66 Neb. 170, where it is said: “In an action for personal injuries com
It is urged by the plaintiff that by the first paragraph of the instruction the jury were limited in allowing damages to those which “naturally and directly” resulted from her injuries. All damages are ordinarily limited to such as are the natural and direct result of the defendant’s wrong. For such suffering and pain as the party may endure in the future, the rule is that they are limited to such as are reasonably certain to result from the injury. There is an important difference between damages which naturally and directly result and such as are reasonably certain to naturally and directly result from the wrongful act of the defendant. It would hardly be possible to determine how much the plaintiff may suffer naturally and directly as a result of her injuries, and the jury, in awarding damages, must limit the amount to such as they find to be reasonably certain to be suffered by the plaintiff from future pain and suffering.
Because of the error in the thirteenth instruction, we recommend a reversal of the judgment and remanding the cause for another trial.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing
Reversed.