110 Mo. App. 689 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1905
— This is a suit for damages resulting from personal injuries. The verdict and judgment were for plaintiff. Defendant appealed. On August 12, 1903, plaintiff was a passenger upon a car propelled by electricity which defendant was running for the carriage of passengers upon its line of railroad in Jasper county. The car collided with another. Plaintiff testified that as a result thereof he was thrown violently from the car against an adjacent fence from which he rebounded to the ground.
It is not to be inferred defendant would not have been entitled to a more definite statement had he by proper motion sought to be informed of the nature of the injuries* claimed. Without filing such motion defendant answered putting in issue the fact of any injury. In this condition of the record the objections, made for the first at the trial, came too late. [Seckinger v. Mfg. Co., supra; Grove v. Kansas City, 75 Mo. 672; Spurlock v. Railroad, 93 Mo. 530; Bowie v. Kansas City, 51 Mo. 454.]
But one instruction was asked and given on plain
' In this instruction the jury was directed to consider “the extent if any to which he has been prevented and disabled by reason of said injuries from working.” The petition charged 'that plaintiff ‘ ‘ during all said time has been absolutely unable to perform any labor and is disqualified from performing his ordinary avocations of life. ’ ’ Plaintiff introduced evidence of his occupation-farm labor — and over defendant’s objections was also permitted to introduce evidence of loss of time and earnings. It is the rule that damages of this kind not being such as necessarily and naturally result from injury to the person, must be specially pleaded in the petition. [Mellor v. Railroad, 105 Mo. 462; Slaughter v. Railroad Co., 116 Mo. 274.] The averment, though indefinite, was sufficient to warrant the admission of evidence of loss of time and the value thereof. [Mabrey v. Gravel Road Co., 92 Mo. App. 602; Gerdes v. Iron & Foundry Co., 124 Mo. 360; Mellor v. Railroad, supra; Brake v. Kansas City, 100 Mo. App. 611; Smith v. Railroad, 119 Mo. 253; Gurley v. Railroad, 122 Mo. 151.]
.Plaintiff’s instruction also directed the consideration of “his necessary expense for medical attention in endeavoring to be cured. ’ ’ The petition stated that plaintiff “had paid out and expended and become liable for large sums of money for medical attention.” Two doctors called by plaintiff to' treat him for his injuries made charges for their services which they testified were reasonable and for which they rendered bills. Plaintiff was under legal obligation to pay for these services, and this liability gave him the right, notwithstanding non-payment, to include the amount thereof in his recoverable damages. [Mirrielees v. Railroad, 163 Mo. 492; Robertson v. Railroad, 152 Mo. 391; Muth v. Railroad, 87 Mo. App. 432; Murray v. Railroad, 101 Mo. 240.]
Complaint is made that the evidence is insufficient to support damages for permanent injuries. Plaintiff’s instruction requires the jury to consider “whether they are permanent in their character. ’ ’ The verdict was for
“I am still bothered with vomiting. Yesterday I threw up every meal that I ate. For some period of time back I have averaged from one to two meals per day with the exception of a period of about two weeks when I only threw up three or four times, then it commenced again and has been keeping up ever since. It seems that there is only now and then one meal a day which don’t bother me. ... I was able 'to do any kind of work before my injury but since that time can do nothing that requires special strength. I can go out and hitch up my horse, or something light of that kind, but can do no lifting. ... I remember when Doctors Ketcham and Steele came out to see me. I was on the farm about three-quarters of a mile north of where I live at the place where I got my mail. I went up for the mail several times a week; generally rode; that day I walked. ... It was a rather windy day they were there,- had been drizzling rain in the morning. I was in my shirt sleeves when they met me; the wind had turned and was coming from the north and was real chilly. .... I told them the 'trouble was with my stomach; they pumped it out and found a lot of watermelon. ... I had no special food of any kind prepared only of a morning at my aunt’s; she generally gave me toast or something of that kind. The other meals I ate at the table with the balance. At the restaurants I had simply the ordinary meal.”
Two physicians, Chester and Thomas, were witnesses for plaintiff, both of whom had treated him for
Plaintiff offered no other expert evidence relating to the permanency of his injuries. The burden was upon plaintiff to show the existence of a permanent condition of injury. This he might do either by expert evidence or by the nature of the injuries themselves. His expert evidence was against him. One doctor expressed the unqualified opinion that his injuries were not permanent; the other would not venture an opinion, saying that they might be or might not be. Both of these witnesses by reason of their profession and their treatment of the case possessed superior means of knowledge concerning his condition to that which a court or- jury could receive from evidence. They saw nothing in the nature of his injuries to lead them to the conclusion that he would not recover; and yet the jury was turned into the field of conjecture to speculate and guess. The size of the verdict proclaims the result of the prognosis made.
To entitle a plaintiff to enhance his damages with compensation for future consequences resulting from the permanent condition of his injury he must perform the primary duty of showing by evidence the reasonable certainty of the existence of such conditions. Notwithstanding the adverse opinion of his medical experts had his injuries themselves been of such a nature as to make their permanency apparent to a person of ordinary intelligence, the plaintiff would have been entitled to have
Consequences which are contingent, speculative or merely possible are not to be considered. To justify a recovery for apprehended future consequences, there must be such a degree of probability of their occurring as amounts*to a reasonable certainty that 'they will result from the original injury. To say of a thing it is permanent means that it will continue regardless of contingency or fortuitous circumstance. [Schwend v. Transit Co., 105 Mo. App. 534, 80 S. W. 40; Watson on Damages for Personal Inj., sec. 302, et seq.; Joyce on Damages, sec. 244; Strohm v. Railway, 96 N. Y. 306; Smiley v. Railway, 160 Mo. 636; Gerdes v. Foundry Co., supra; Rosenkranz v. Railway, 108 Mo. 9; Chilton v. City, 143 Mo. 192; Bigelow v. Railway, 48 Mo. App. 373.]
Plaintiff under the evidence would have been entitled to have the question of future consequences considered had he properly restricted his instruction. But there was no evidence upon which to predicate the assumption that the effects of his injuries will continue to remain with him during his natural life.
Because of the failure of proof in this respect the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.