95 Me. 103 | Me. | 1901
Action under the statute of 1891, c. 124, for the exclusive benefit of Roland E. Oakes the child of plaintiff’s intestate.
First. Defendant excepts to the admission of the testimony of Mrs. Clark as to the amount of wages which the deceased was receiving when employed as a milliner some eleven years before her death.
The damages in this class of cases can never be the subject of precise mathematical demonstration or calculation. They are based upon the probabilities of the future which can only be shown by the facts of the past. Evidence is received in regard to many matters which in other actions for personal injuries are irrelevant or immaterial. The age, health, occupation, means, habits, capacity, education, temperament, character and other similar facts relating to the deceased, were admissible as tending to show her probable pecuniary usefulness to the beneficiary. The earning capacity of the deceased was an important consideration, and this necessarily included not only her physical ability to labor, but the probabilities of her being able to obtain profitable employment. She was a milliner, and the spring and fall immediately preceding her marriage worked at her trade for Mrs. Clark. After her marriage from time to time she did some millinery work at her own home, but her labor for Mrs. Clark was her last employment
Second. The jury returned a verdict for $3500, and the defendant claims that the damages are excessive.
The principles applicable to the assessment of damages in this class of cases have been so fully and recently set forth by this court in McKay v. New England Dredging Co., 92 Maine, 454, that it is unnecessary to repeat them here. The beneficiary was a healthy child five years old at the time of his mother’s death. His father, thirty-four years old, is living, but in poor health and only able to work a part of the time. The deceased was thirty-five years of age, in good health, a good milliner, a prudent and industrious woman and affectionate mother, possessing a fair education. The expectancy of life of herself and the beneficiary, the probability of her surviving her husband and being the sole support of her child, the length of time that might reasonably be expected to elapse before the boy would be able to help his mother and care for himself, the possibility that in time she in her turn might become dependent upon him for her support, the loss of a mother’s training and good influence which would tend to make him a better man and capable of acquiring more money, — all these are proper considerations in determining the amount of the pecuniary injury resulting to the
Exceptions overruled.
New trial granted unless plaintiff will remit all above $2500 within thirty days after filing of the rescript.