This is а civil action to recover damages for assault and battery. Plaintiff recovered a verdict for $1,250. Defendant appeals. It is conceded that the evidence is sufficient to sustain a verdict in some amount. The errors assigned bear more or less directly upon the amount of damages. , ¡I
1. The trоuble started on a sidewalk of a street in Wilmont. The parties clinched, or at least defendant clinched plaintiff, and they rolled off the sidewalk and under or against a portable grain elevator standing near by. When the affair was over, plaintiff had a mark or abrasion on his right thumb, an injury apparently inconsequential, but which, by reason of subsequent infection, proved serious. Plaintiff testified that this was caused by defendant biting his thumb. Defendant denied this.
Plaintiff later testified that the injury to the thumb consisted of two marks as though “something sort of sharp had been kind of cramped down on there and cut through the skin and sort of ‘ divided the skin both ways.” Then оccurred the following: “Q. From its general appearance could you tell what caused this cut? A. Yes, sir. Q. Well,
We think the reception of this testimony was not error. It was opinion testimony of nonexpert witnesses. The principles governing the reception of this class of testimony are well settled. Where the truth must ultimately rest in inference or opinion and it is impossible by description to reproduce the things seen by the witness so as to enable jurors who have not seen them to comprehend them as they are comprehended by one who has had the benefit of personal observation, it is proper to receive opinion evidence. Evans v. The People, 12 Mich. 27, 35; Commonwealth v. Sturtivant,
2. Plaintiff suffered a permanent disfigurement of the thumb. In charging the jury on the subject of damages the court instructed them as follows: “If you find * * * that he has bеen permanently * * * disfigured * * * you have a right to take * * * into account * * * the humiliation of being disfigured hereafter-” This is assigned as error. The decisions are in hopeless conflict as to whether or not in a personal injury ease humiliation or mortification to arise in the future on account of disfigurement of person is a proper element of damage. A respectable minority hold that such element of damage should not be taken into accоunt. Southern Pac. Co. v. Hetzer,
The question may be regarded as unsettled by previous decisions of this court. In Johnson v. Forrestal,
The decisions that have denied the propriety of this element of damage have urged as reasons, that such mental suffering is too vague, intangible and indefinite to be susceptible of proof (Southern Pac. Co. v. Hetzer, 135 Fed. (C. C. A.) 272,
It is well settled that in an action for personal injury mental suffering reasonably certain to be endured in the future may be taken into account in estimating damage. Johnson v. Northern Pac. R. Co.
3. Defendant asked the court to instruсt the jury as follows: “If you find in this case that the injuries to plaintiff’s thumb complained of by him in this action, were inflicted by defendant in the fight testified to by the witnesses, but that the injury therеto was afterwards aggravated by the carelessness and neglect of the plaintiff to properly care for and treat the same or to hаve the same properly treated or attended to, defendant cannot be held liable in this action for any damages or injuries thereto, cаused by, or resulting from, such carelessness and neglect on the part of the plaintiff.” The court declined to do so. The instruction asked embodied prоpositions of law correct in the abstract, but we are of the opinion that they had no application to this case. No finding of negligence on the part of plaintiff could be sustained on the evidence in this case. The' assault occurred on Monday. Plaintiff lived on a farm. After arriving home he dressed his thumb with home remedies. The next day it was numb and was swollen a little. It became gradually ;worse. Plaintiff and his wife applied from time to time peroxide, liniment, turpentine, bread and' milk poultices, such remedies as a farmer usually has at hand, until Thursday, three days after the assault. Then conditions grew worse; they cоnsulted a doctor. It cannot be said that plaintiff did not act as a reasonably prudent person would under the same circumstances.
There are other assignments of error. They have been carefully considered. We do not consider any of them well taken or as requiring special mention.
Order affirmed.
