I. STATEMENT OF CASE
In this negligence action, the district court, in accordance with the verdict, entered a $9,359.35 judgment in favor of the plaintiff-appellant, Todd E. Sanwick, and against the defendant-appellee, Clark E. Jenson. Sanwick asserts, in summary, that the district court erred in overruling his motion for a new trial on the ground that the verdict is inadequate. We affirm, for (1) the incomplete record Sanwick brought to us presents no evidence that the verdict was inadequate, and (2) even if the record presented were to have shown an inadequate verdict, its lack of completeness makes appellate review impossible.
II. FACTS
The court reporter’s certificate tells us that the bill of exceptions contains all the evidence Sanwick requested, and the reporter further tells us that the document begins with the third witness. As a consequence, it contains Sanwick’s, and only Sanwick’s, description of the collision. But we know that Jenson and another person also testified on the matter of how the collision occurred, because Sanwick tells us so in his testimony.
The partial record does establish that the action arises out of a collision which occurred at an intersection on November 2, 1987, between a vehicle operated by Sanwick on a highway protected by a stop sign and one operated by Jenson on an unprotected road. While Sanwick’s petition alleges the collision *609 was due to Jenson’s negligence, Jenson’s answer pleads that the collision was the proximate result of Sanwick’s negligence and contributory negligence and that such negligence and contributory negligence were of a degree sufficient to bar Sanwick’s recovery.
There is evidence that as a consequence of the collision, the presently 29-year-old Sanwick, who was formerly in good health, now suffers from a chronic back strain; that all available means of conservative treatment have been exhausted and that surgery will not be beneficial; that the condition is painful and permanent; that he has missed work; that Sanwick has in the past needed and will in the future require medication; that Sanwick’s occupation at the time of the collision as a carpenter made it necessary that he lift, bend, and crawl, and that these activities aggravate his condition; that he has been depressed; and that because of his chronic and disabling symptoms Sanwick gave up his soon-to-be-$9-per-hour carpenter job and at the time of trial in May 1991 was working at a less taxing job in a cabinet shop, at which he was earning less than $8 per hour.
There is also evidence that Sanwick incurred approximately $8,000 in medical and hospital expenses, that Sanwick sustained a 20- to 30-percent loss of earning capacity, and that the present value of the economic loss he will sustain over his worklife expectancy, including the wages he has already lost, is $133,000.
However, the record also establishes that Sanwick was symptom-free as of January 18, 1988; that when he was examined on April 18,1990, he demonstrated full and painless back movement; that he had no spasms or shrinking of the back and leg muscles; and that, in short, he suffers no physical defect which can be medically associated with his back injury.
III. ANALYSIS
1. Amountof Verdict
It is true, as Sanwick argues, that where the amount of damages allowed by a jury is clearly inadequate under the evidence, it is error for the trial court to refuse to set the verdict aside. Although
Kearney Conv’n Center
v.
*610
Anderson-Divan-Cottrell Ins., 220
Neb. 319,
Nonetheless, there are instances in which a verdict has been characterized as inadequate notwithstanding the absence of erroneous instructions. For example, in
Bohn
v.
Kruger,
However, where the instructions have not been found wanting, no improper influences were before the jury, and the extent of injury or the amount of damages was disputed, verdicts claimed to have been inadequate have been sustained. For example, in
Nickal
v.
Phinney,
Under this state of the partial record, it cannot be said that the verdict is inadequate as a matter of law, even if Sanwick was guilty of no contributory negligence whatsoever. The law is well established that an appellate court will not reverse a jury verdict on appeal as inadequate unless it is so clearly against the weight and reasonableness of the evidence and so disproportionate to the injury proved as to demonstrate that it was the result of passion, prejudice, mistake, or some other means not apparent in the record, or that the jury disregarded the evidence or rules of law.
Beauford
v.
Father Flanagan’s Boys’ Home,
2. Incompleteness of Record
However, inasmuch as the collision occurred, and thus Sanwick’s cause of action accrued, prior to February 8, 1992, this case is controlled by Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-21,185 (Reissue 1989). See Neb. Rev. Stat. § 25-21,185 (Cum. Supp. 1992). In pertinent part, § 25-21,185 provides that in an action for *612 injuries caused by another’s negligence,
the fact that the plaintiff may have been guilty of contributory negligence shall not bar a recovery when the contributory negligence of the plaintiff was slight and the negligence or act or omission giving rise to strict liability in tort of the defendant was gross in comparison, but the contributory negligence of the plaintiff shall be considered by the jury in the mitigation of damages in proportion to the amount of contributory negligence attributable to the plaintiff; and all questions of negligence or act or omission giving rise to strict liability in tort and contributory negligence shall be for the jury.
It was therefore the jury’s responsibility in awarding damages to comparatively measure the amount of negligence on Jenson’s part to the contributory negligence, if any, on Sanwick’s part by considering all the evidence presented on the issue. C. C.
Natvig’s Sons, Inc.
v.
Summers,
In analyzing the jury’s award of damages, an appellate court must examine the particular facts and circumstances of the case in light of the applicable damages rules. See Cooper v. Hastert, supra.
While the pertinent rule of practice requires the court reporter to include in the bill of exceptions only those portions of the evidence “specified in the request for preparation of” the bill, it also provides that if “the appellant intends to urge on appeal that a finding or conclusion is unsupported by the evidence or is contrary to the evidence, the bill of exceptions must include all evidence relevant to the finding or conclusion.” Neb. Ct. R. of Prac. 5A(2)(rev. 1992).
It was therefore Sanwick’s responsibility as appellant to present a record which supports the error he assigned. See,
GFH Financial Serv. Corp.
v.
Kirk,
*613
In
Ward
v.
Ward, 220
Neb. 799,
In like fashion, the condition of the record presented here prevents us from knowing the entirety of the evidence presented to the jury on the manner in which the collision occurred and thus deprives us of the ability to determine whether there was a basis for the jury to mitigate Sanwick’s damages by virtue of his own contributory negligence.
IV. JUDGMENT
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
