126 Mo. App. 613 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1907
Plaintiff, an infant, sues by next friend to recover damages for personal injuries alleged to have been sustained by her in consequence of the negligence of defendant. The jury gave her a verdict for $300. After ineffectually moving for a new trial and in arrest of judgment, defendant brought the case here by appeal. Plaintiff, at the time of her injury, which occurred on September 18, 1904, was between two and three years of age, and was living with her mother on East Eighth street in Kansas City. Defendant was operating a double-track line of street railway along that
As the only claim of error now urged relates to the instruction given for plaintiff on the measure of damages, it is not necessary to go into the subject of defendant’s negligence. That instruction is as follows: “If you find for the plaintiff' you will, in assessing her damages, take into consideration her age, the injuries sustained by her, if any, by reason of her being struck by said car, the physical pain, mental anguish, if any, suffered by her by reason of such injuries and such damages, if any, of the nature above specified as you believe from the evidence she will .sustain in the future as the direct effect of such injuries, and assess the same in such amount as, under all the facts and circumstances shown in evidence, will be just and reasonable compensation to the plaintiff, not exceeding the sum of five thousand (5,000) dollars.”
It is contended by defendant that all the evidence shows conclusively that at the time the cause was tried, plaintiff liad completely recovered from her injuries and, therefore, that the jury should not have been permitted to assess damages for future consequences which might result, but which were not shown to be reasonably certain to follow. The severe nature of plaintiff’s injuries appears from the testimony of the physician who was called in immediately to treat her: “She had a lacerated hand, and very deeply lacerated, requiring three of four stitches, extending clear across — not entirely across the hand, almost across the hand, down as far as the tendons,
Non-professional witnesses introduced by plaintiff pictured the right side of her skull as being “mashed into her brains,” and stated that she did not recover consciousness for two days. She remained under the physician’s care for, perhaps, two weeks, mended rapidly and, at the time of the trial, which occurred in January, 1906, apparently had fully recovered, except in the particulars we are about to note. Her hand still showed effects from the injury but the most serious symptom of physical impairment is disclosed in the testimony of a number of plaintiff’s witnesses who knew her before she was injured and who continued to have her under observation. They agreed that after her apparent recovery she was very nervous, peevish and irritable, a condition which did not become manifest until after the injury.
To authorize a recovery for apprehended future consequences of a personal injury negligently inflicted, it devolves on the plaintiff to produce evidence from which the inference reasonably may be drawn that injurious consequences are reasonably certain to follow. The jury should not be permitted to speculate on what may or may not happen under imaginary contingencies. There must be evidence of a present physical impairment as a resultant of the injury, else there is no foundation on which to build an inference that the plaintiff will
The learned trial judge committed no error in submitting to the jury the issue of future consequences.
From the small amount of the verdict, we would be justified in saying that the jury evidently did not allow any damages of the character under consideration, but we prefer to dispose of the case on the conclusion that the assessment of such damages is supported by substantial evidence.
-The judgment is affirmed.