Action for personal injuries, in which plaintiff had a verdict and defendant appealed from an order denying a new trial.
The only question presented by the appeal is whether there was error in the submission of the case to the jury in respect to the measure of damages, it being- conceded by defendant that the evidence made the issue of negligence one of fact for the jury.
It appears that on October 25, 1919, plaintiff was a passenger on one of defendant’s trains running between St. Paul and Avon, this state; she. was accompanied by her three children, one of whom was three months old. Her destination was Avon, where she intended to visit for a time with her parents. On arriving at that point the train on which she ivas riding came to a stop at one end of the station platform where it slopes downward to the ground level. There was no brakeman to assist her to alight, no customary stool for use in stepping- off the car and she mistook the distance between the car step and the sloping platform at the particular point and fell forward landing on her right knee, slightly bruising the leg immediately below the knee joint; her elbow also struck the walk
We are here concerned only in the refusal of the court below to eliminate from the consideration of' the jury on the question of damages the items of miscarriage and deafness. The facts with reference thereto are as follows: The injury complained of was received on October 25, 1919. Some seven or eight months later, or in June or early July, 1920, she became pregnant; there was a miscarriage in September, claimed by plaintiff as the natural and proximate result of the injury, and claimed by defendant to be of artificial production; a dispute not of present importance. Plaintiff also claims that, as a result of her injury, which affected her nerves, she has lost in a measure, not wholly, the sense of hearing-in her left ear; this was controverted by defendant, at least to the extent of contending that the evidence did not show that the deafness complained of was the natural or other result of the accident.
The trial court refused requested instructions withdrawing both items from the jury. In that we think, on the evidence disclosed by the record, there was prejudicial error. As to the miscarriage the point is disposed of adversely to plaintiff by Simonson v. Minneapolis & St. L. R. Co. 88 Minn. 89, 92 N. W. 459, where it was held that the malpresentation of a child at its birth 15 months
That the accident or fall on the station platform so injured or disarranged the internal organs of plaintiff in the case at bar as to render miscarriage more likely to result from pregnancy subsequently occurring, is not shown by any reliable evidence, and the opinion of the medical expert to that effect is altogether too speculative and conjectural to furnish a basis for legal liability against the original wrongdoer. She complained of no such injury following the accident; the fall on the station platform, as described, was not such as naturally would produce a result of that kind, and the suggestion that it may reasonably be attributed as the outgrowth of a nervous condition originating with the accident, is purely .-a matter of theory, unsupported by necessary facts, and insufficient on which to found a heavy award of damages. Johnson v. Great North. Ry. Co. 107 Minn. 285, 119 N. W. 1061. The case would be entirely different had pregnancy existed at the time of the accident; that condition here did not come into being for some eight months later. Morris v. St. Paul City Ry. Co. 105 Minn. 276, 117 N. W. 509.
The same is true in respect to the alleged deafness in plaintiff’s left ear. She suffered by the fall on the station platform no injury to the ear nor to her head, so far as the evidence shows, and whatever deafness she now experiences is, by her medical expert witness, theoretically traced to nervousness brought on as one of lie results of the accident. The opinions of medical experts of conditions naturally to be anticipated and expected to follow from given personal injuries, are, of great value to courts as aids in the determination of questions of that character and entitled to serious at
For the error in submitting to the jury the elements of damage referred to, there must be a new trial. The damages are quite large, having in mind the character of the accident disclosed, and within, the rule stated in Goss v. Goss, 102 Minn. 346, 113 N. W. 690, followed in Johnson v. Great North. Ry. Co. supra, no reduction of the amount should be made in an effort to end the litigation. A new trial will therefore be ordered.
Order reversed.