In attempting as a passenger to get on one of appellant’s passenger trains at Brownsboro, Mrs. R. J. Nib-lack suffered injuries to her person as the proximate result of appellant’s act in negligently moving its said train. By her suit commenced against appellant she sought to recover damages on account of injuries so suffered by her. Before a trial of the ease was had she died, intestate, and appellees as her heirs at law, alleging that there were no debts against her estate and no necessity for an administration thereon, and further alleging that her death was not caused by the injuries she had so sustained, made themselves the parties plaintiff in the suit and continued its prosecution. As the result of a trial they recovered a judgment against appellant for the sum of $750. From that judgment appellant is prosecuting this appeal.
The court instructed the jury, in the event they should find for appellees, to take into consideration, in determining the amount of *621 their damages, not only the nature and extent of the injuries suffered by Mrs. Niblack and the mental or physical pain suffered by her as the direct result of such injuries, but also “any impairment of the earning capacity of said Mrs. Niblack up to the date of her death as the direct and proximate result of such injuries.”
An assignment questioning the correctness of the court’s action in so instructing the jury is the only one presented in appellant’s brief. In support of the assignment it is insisted that the evidence failed to “disclose facts which would enable the jury to reach an intelligent conclusion as to the amount of loss sustained by reason of any impairment of the earning capacity of Mrs. Niblack,” and that therefore it was error to submit such an issue to the jury.
In their petition appellees alleged that Mrs. Niblack “was by profession a nurse, and was strong and able-bodied, and capable of earning and did earn $2 per day, and that by reason of said injuries . . . she was, up to the time of her death, incapacitated from following her said profession or performing any kind of work, and her earning capacity was entirely destroyed.” From the evidence it appeared that before she suffered the injuries complained of Mrs. Niblack, though then 73 or 74 years old, enjoyed good health and was as strong and active as an ordinary woman usually is when only 35 years old; that she frequently walked from her home to the postoffice—a distance of three or three and a half miles—and back, and often accompanied younger people on fishing trips to a creek about a mile from her home. It further appeared from the evidence that she was by profession a midwife; that as such she was paid for her services, and that she “more than made a living.” It further appeared from the evidence that among the injuries sustained by Mrs. Niblack was a broken rib and a hernia or rupture in the left groin; that she was confined to her bed and treated by a physician during the five or six weeks immediately following after the time she was injured; that off and on thereafterwards until her death, as the result of the injuries she had received, she was under treatment by the physician, and that during most of the time she was confined to her bed or to the house in which she lived.
In Texas & P. Ry. Co. v. Bowlin,
In Houston & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Bird,
In St. Louis S. W. Ry. Co. v. Smith, 38 Texas Civ. App., 507, plaintiff had alleged that as a result of injuries complained of he had lost the use of one of his eyes. He so testified on the trial. It further appeared from the evidence that he was 25 or 26 years old, that before he sustained the injuries he had been a farmer and had worked as section hand on a railroad, and that after he received the injuries he did not seem to be as “peart” as he was before he received them. The Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth District, in sustaining an assignment based on the refusal of the trial court to instruct the jury not to take into consideration plaintiff’s diminished capacity to earn money, and on the court’s charge authorizing the jury to consider, in ascertaining plaintiff’s damages, such diminished capacity^ said: “While the evidence shows that appellee had worked on a farm and on a railroad section, it does not show or tend to show what was his earning capacity in either employment. So far as disclosed by the record, he was only employed by the day or month to work on the farm, and the evidence does not show the. amount he received, or the value of his- services, either as a farm laborer or section - hand; nor were sufficient facts proven from which the value of such services could reasonably be inferred. It was not essential that the value of such services or the extent to which appellee’s earning capacity had been affected should be established with exactness; for in the assessment of damages of this character the amount must necessarily be referred, in a measure, to the sound judgment and discretion of the jury. This does not mean, however, that their verdict may be the result and expression of a mere guess or conjecture. Although the plaintiff is not required to prove the amount, he is required to prove the facts from which the jury can determine intelligently the amount that will fairly compensate him for the loss sustained. The mere proof of previous avocation and the character of his injuries will not suffice. Houston & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Bird,
In St. Louis S. W. Ry. Co. v. Acker, 44 Texas Civ. App., 560, the plaintiff was a farmer and tomato grower. Whether as such he owned or rented land, and whether he cultivated one or a number of acres did not appear. One of the injuries he had suffered was to his arm, stiffening it at the elbow, etc. In sustaining an assignment complaining of the action of the trial court in instructing the jury to consider the plaintiff’s diminished capacity to labor in determining the amount of his damages, the Court of Civil Appeals for the First District said: “There was no evidence to show what the plaintiff’s earning capacity was before the injury, and any amount which the jury might fix as compensation for the diminution of that capacity would be purely speculative. In a case in which it is impossible to show definitely what the earning capacity of the injured person is no such proof would be required, but it is incumbent upon a plaintiff seeking to recover damages of this kind to show the nature and character of his business or employment with that degree of certainty of which the case is susceptible, and this is not done by the evidence in" the instant case.”
In Dallas Con. Elec. St. Ry. Co. v. Motwiller,
We have quoted at such length from the opinion of the courts in the cases cited, as illustrative of the fact made evident, we think, by a consideration of them that adjudicated cases in this State furnish little aid in determining the question made on this appeal; and as emphasizing, perhaps, the statement of the Supreme Court that it is not practicable to lay down a general rule in such cases. It will be noted that the facts in the Bowlin case did not appear to be materially different from those in the Smith and Acker cases. In each of them there was evidence showing the plaintiff’s avocation in life and the infliction of injuries on him which in any avocation reasonably could be expected to so operate as to more or less diminish his capacity to earn money. In each of them there was an absence of any other evidence entitled to weight in estimating the damages he had suffered on account of such diminished capacity to earn money. Yet in the one a recovery was allowed, while in the other a recovery was denied. It also will be noted that the facts in the Bird case, where a recovery for such damages was denied, were not materially different from those in the Motwiller case, where the Supreme Court held it not to be error to submit to the jury an issue as to the plaintiff’s lessened earning capacity. In neither the Bird nor the Motwiller case was there any evidence showing the earning capacity of the plaintiff either before or after the injury. It is true that in the Motwiller case it appeared that as the result of injuries incapacitating her from walking without difficulty it became necessary for the plaintiff to ride on street cars to and from her work, and so incur an expense she was not subject to before she sustained the injuries, and the Supreme Court seems to have given controlling weight to this fact in answering the certified question. But it occurs to us that such expense should not be taken into account on an issue as to diminished earning capacity. It created an additional demand on the plaintiff’s earnings, but may not in the least have diminished the sum she was capable of earning.
¡Recurring to the case before us, it is clear, we think, that if the reasoning which controlled in the disposition made of the Smith and Acker cases should be applied to its facts the judgment now before us for review should be reversed. For here, as in those cases, the evidence may. be said to go no further than to show the age and the previous avocation of the plaintiff and the character of her injuries. On the other hand, if the reasoning in the Bowlin and Motwiller cases should be applied, the judgment in the instant case should be affirmed. For here, as in those cases, while the evidence failed to show the plaintiff to be entitled to recover any specific amount as damages on account of a lessened capacity to earn money in her avocation as a nurse, it was sufficient to show that her capacity to earn money in that or any other avocation, in a general way, had been diminished. We are of the opinion that the reasons which allow are more satisfactory than those which deny a right of recovery in such case. A lessened capacity to earn money is recognized by the law as a basis sufficient for the recovery of such damages. To support a finding of a specific sum as representing such damages resulting to the plaintiff *627 in a particular avocation, it doubtless is correct to say that there should be other evidence than that which merely shows the avocation of the plaintiff and the character of his injuries. But when the injuries suffered are shown to be of such a nature as fairly to justify the conclusion that the plaintiff’s capacity to earn money in any avocation has been thereby lessened, it seems to us that the right to a recovery of some amount as damages should be held to have been sufficiently established. Whether, in the event of a recovery, the amount allowed should be held to be supported by such testimony is another question. But on such evidence the plaintiff should, we think, be held to be entitled to recover at least nominal damages, and in the absence of an assignment attacking the verdict in such a ease as excessive, we think it should be presumed in support of the judgment, that the jury found only nominal damages. The evidence in this case we think was sufficient to support a finding that Mrs. Nib-lack’s capacity to earn money had been lessened as a result of the injuries she had suffered, and therefore was sufficient to support a finding in plaintiff’s favor for nominal damages. An assignment attacking the verdict as excessive not having been presented on this appeal, we will presume in support of the judgment that if the jury found in plaintiff’s favor on account of Mrs. Niblaek’s lessened earning capacity, they found only nominal damages. The judgment therefore will be affirmed
Affirmed.
Writ of error refused.
