50 Iowa 34 | Iowa | 1878
II. It is claimed by the appellant that the actual damages allowed are excessive. We think the evidence abundantly sustains the 'action of the jury in this respect. Indeed, we think the preponderance of the evidence would have justified the jury in finding higher actual damages than they have allowed.
III. Objection is made to the concluding part of the seventh instruction, which is as follows: “It is also proper for you to consider what the earnings of plaintiff’s husband would have been since October 16, 1874, but for intoxication on his part, habitual or otherwise, during that period, to which, defendant contributed, if you find such intoxication, and that defendant did contribute to it. ” The objection to this instruction is that there is no evidence of the value of the earnings of plaintiff’s husband to which the instruction can apply. It is true there is no evidence of the value of the earnings of plaintiff’s husband as a day laborer. The evidence shows, that he was not a day laborer, but that he cultivated a small farm of forty acres, which he owned. Proof was introduced
We discover no error in the record.
Affirmed.