63 N.Y.S. 30 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1900
Judgment and order appealed from reversed, and new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event. Held, that the damages were excessive; that plaintiff was not entitled to recover anything beyond nominal damages for loss of earning capacity, and yet it may well be that the jury, under the charge, understood that they might go beyond nominal, and award substantial, damages for loss of past and future earning capacity. All concurred, except McLENNAN, J., who concurred in the result only, in an opinion.
I cannot concur in the conclusion reached by a majority of the court, that the size of the verdict alone establishes that it was excessive, or that, under the allegations of the complaint and the proofs, the plaintiff is entitled to recover even nominal damages for loss of “earning capacity.” I concur in the result, that the verdict and order appealed from should be reversed, but solely upon the ground that the learned trial justice committed error prejudicial to the defendant in charging the jury, as to the measure of damages. The action was brought to recover damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff through the negligence of the defendant. The plaintiff, at the time of the accident, was. 58 years of age, and during the greater part of his life had been engaged in boating upon the canal. At the close of navigation, in the year 1897, he left his canal boat at the village of Brewerton, in the county of Onondaga, N. Y., for the winter, and on the afternoon of the 22d day of November, 1897, started, with a pair of mules hitched to a two-wheeled cart, to drive to his home, in the village of Constantia, in the county of Oswego, a distance of about 12 miles. He took the “Swamp Road,” so called, leading north from the village of Brewerton, and had proceeded a distance
Upon all the evidence, it was, concededly, for the jury to determine: (1) Was the defendant guilty of negligence which caused the accident? (2) Was the plaintiff free from contributory negligence? and (3) What was the extent of the plaintiff’s injuries, and the amount of damages sustained by him in consequence thereof?
Those questions were all answered favorably to the plaintiff, and the jury awarded damages in the sum of $1,200. Their verdict
We think, howevei, that the judgment in this case should be reversed, and a new trial granted, but solely upon the ground that the learned trial justice committed error prejudicial to the defendant in charging the jury as to the measure of damages.
First, it should be said that there is no allegation in the complaint that the plaintiff lost any time; that he was prevented from laboring, or that his earning capacity was in any sense impaired, by reason of the injuries which he sustained; and no damages are demanded on account thereof. The only allegation as to damages contained in the complaint is as follows, viz. “thereby causing plaintiff serious bodily injuries and much bodily suffering, to his damage
“If you find that the plaintiff is entitled to recover, then you will come to the question of damages; and that means a fair compensation for the pain and suffering which he has endured, for loss of earning capacity up to the date of this trial, and for such future suffering and loss of earning capacity which you believe the testimony establishes to a moral certainty. Remember the damages are merely compensatory here. Nothing punitive; nothing in the nature of smart money. Simply a fair, reasonable compensation is all the law permits.”
At the close of the charge the defendant’s counsel said:
“I desire to except to what your honor has said to the jury on the subject of the plaintiff’s right to recover for loss of services. By the Court: I did not say ‘services’, — ‘loss of earning capacity.’ By Defendant’s Counsel: Well, ‘loss of earning capacity.’ I desire to except to that; and I ask the court to charge the jury that there was no evidence in this.case that the plaintiff had any earning capacity. By the Court: Denied. By Defendant’s Counsel: Give me an exception. I ask the court to charge the jury that there is no evidence in this case that the plaintiff earned any amount per day. By the Court: I so charge that. By Defendant’s Counsel: Then I ask the other proposition. By the Court: No; it appears that he had been engaged in business. By Defendant’s Counsel: Yes, sir; but that is another proposition. Give me an exception to the refusal to charge.”
Thus it will be seen that the jury were instructed, without qualification, that they were at liberty to award damages to the plaintiff “for loss of earning capacity up to the date of this trial,” and for loss of “such earning capacity” in the future as they believed the testimony established. The proposition as charged was duly excepted to, and the court was then asked to charge the jury that there was “no evidence in the case that the plaintiff had any earning capacity.” The request was denied, and an exception duly taken.
“The court had charged, in a case where no value oí lost time had been shown, and no facts on which an estimate of such value could be founded, that compensation for such lost time could be awarded by the jury. The exception was aimed at that precise proposition, and the ground upon which it was claimed to be erroneous was definitely pointed out.”
The error was pointed out in that case precisely as in the case at bar, by calling attention to the fact that there was no proof of the value of plaintiff’s services. In that case the defendant’s counsel said nothing about nominal damages, did not ask to have the recovery limited to that, and, notwithstanding, the court held that the error complained of was available.
In Page v. Canal Co., 34 App. Div. 618, 54 N. Y. Supp. 442, which was an action for negligence, the trial judge charged:
“If injured upon that occasion, it is your duty to award to him (the plaintiff) a sum sufficient to compensate him for proper and necessary medical expenses from the time he was injured until the present time, and, if you believe from the evidence that there is a reasonable certainty that he will require medical attendance in the future, to compensate him for that prospective future expense.”
To this charge the defendant’s counsel excepted, and, in connection with the exception taken, asked the judge to charge as follows:
“That there can be no recovery for medical attendance in the past or in the future without some evidence as to what the medical attendance was, and the amount of it.”
In the case of Staal v. Railroad Co., 107 N. Y. 625, 13 N. E. 624, the only question presented was as to the charge of the court in relation to the question of damages. The trial judge charged as follows:
“That the plaintiff is entitled to recover, as damages in this action, compensation — First, for the pain and suffering that he has encountered; second, as this injury is to some extent, at least, permanent, he is entitled to compensation for the results which will flow in the future from this injury, — that is, for any suffering and inconvenience he will have in life resulting from this injury, and for pecuniary loss on account of the injury caused by the diminution in his ability to earn a livelihood. There is no hard rule to be laid down to you in this ease. You must say, under all the circumstances, considering what pain he has suffered, what his loss has been in his circumstances in life, the chances of what money he would make, and his age, considering the injury and the results of that injury, what would be a fair compensation. All that is left to the good sense of the jury.”
Defendant’s counsel excepted to the charge as follows:
“To that part of your honor’s charge in which you say that the jury may allow him his pecuniary losses resulting from his disabilities owing to this accident.”
And he requested the court to charge that:
“The jury should take into consideration the great age of the plaintiff, as affecting future continuance of life.”
The judge replied:
“X charge that; and I will say further, that in this case there is no proof of loss shown by what his income was up to that time. What the court, therefore, told you as to pecuniary losses was in connection with the future.”
To that the defendant’s counsel excepted, and requested the judge to charge that the jury could not make “further allowance to the plaintiff for expenses of treatment or care for the past or future.” In reference to this request the judge said:
“I charge that for the past. For future expenses the jury have a right to consider the expenses of this injury, if they find this renders the plaintiff to any extent helpless, and also to consider to what- expenditures, to make him comfortable, he will have to go.”
And to that the defendant’s counsel excepted. The court of appeals, in passing upon that charge and the effect of the exception taken to it, says:
“This is the entire charge relating to the damages, and, that it may be appreciated, it, must be stated that immediately after the injury the plaintiff was taken to a charity hospital, where he remained about three months; that he then went to another charity hospital, where he remained several months; and that he then went to the county almshouse, where he remained until the time of the trial, not having at any time been subjected to any personal expenses. There was proof that the plaintiff was a fresco painter, and that for some time before his injuries he had been employed by a person who was engaged in the business of painting. No special damages, and no pecuniary losses, past*36 or future, were alleged In the complaint. There was no proof whatever as to the plaintiff’s circumstances in life, except that before the injury his general health was good. There was no proof touching his age, habits, capacity, ability to work, skill in his trade, his wages, or his earnings, or the compensation he was able to earn, or his chances of getting work. There was not even any proof that he had earned, or that he was able to earn, a livelihood.”
Upon that proof the court of appeals held that the charge was erroneous, and that the rule laid down was in conflict with the decision in Leeds v. Gaslight Co., 90 N. Y. 26, and there was no suggestion in that case that the error was cured, or that it was not available to the defendant, because defendant’s counsel had failed to request that only nominal damages might be recovered, and the broad rule was again reiterated: “Before damages for future pecuniary loss can be awarded, there should be some proof such as a party can always give of his circumstances and condition in life, his earning power, skill, and capacity.” Wood v. City of Watertown, 58 Hun, 298, 11 N. Y. Supp. 864; Munk v. Same, 67 Hun, 261, 22 N. Y. Supp. 227, opinion by Martin, J.
The instructions to the jury by the learned trial justice as to the damages the plaintiff was entitled to recover were clearly erroneous, and it cannot be said that they were not prejudicial to the defendant. “The reception of illegal evidence is presumptively injurious to the party objecting to its admission, but when the presumption is repelled, and it is clearly beyond rational doubt that no harm was done to the party objecting, and that the illegal evidence did not and could not affect the result, that error furnishes no ground for reversal.” Anderson v. Railroad Co., 54 N. Y. 334, 341. We think, under the facts and circumstances disclosed by the evidence in this case, it cannot be said that “it is ¿learly beyond rational doubt that the illegal evidence did not and could not affect the result.”
It follows that for the error committed by the learned trial justice in charging the jury as to the measure of damages the judgment should be reversed, and a new trial ordered, with costs to the appellant to abide the event.