This is an action to recover damages ' for a personal injury sustained by plaintiff while in the employ of defendant company. The accident oc- . .curred July 27,1906, plaintiff. being at the time twenty-one years of age. He had been' in defendant’s employ 'about-three months and was working most of the time on what was called a drop-hammer. The implement . was also called, a power hammer, but we gáther from the record that, at the time of plaintiff’s injury, it was
It is further contended that the court erred in instructing on the measure of damages, in permitting a verdict for the loss of earnings which plaintiff had or would sustain in consequence of his injury. On this contention the argument is, too, that there was no evidence that his earning capacity was diminished. Plaintiff, as stated, ivas a young man twenty-one years old at the time of the accident, and as far as appears he made his living by work similar to that he was doing when hurt; he was not a mechanic, but a common laborer. He testified that he had done no work from the date of the injury to the time of the trial; that prior to said time he had been earning nine dollars a week, and in his opinion he was unable to do the same kind of work he had been doing theretofore. We think it is a matter of general knowledge that a laboring man who has the thumb and forefinger of his right hand mashed has suffered a diminution of earning power. Many kinds of labor at which he could earn money with two good hands, he would be less fit to perform with the thumb and finger of his right hand off; for instance, using a pick, a hammer and many other tools. The court properly permitted the loss of earnings to be taken into consideration in assessing damages.
