Mahoney v. Pearce

265 P. 446, 38 Wyo. 151, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 35
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1928
Docket1410
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 265 P. 446 (Mahoney v. Pearce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mahoney v. Pearce, 265 P. 446, 38 Wyo. 151, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 35 (Wyo. 1928).

Opinion

Blume, Chief Justice.

On June 2, 1922, plaintiff, a truck-driver, and Mrs. Ma-honey, wife of the defendant, had an automobile collision on the streets of Casper. On June 4, 1922, the plaintiff, according to his testimony, went to see the defendant in reference to the expenses of repairing defendant’s car, injured in the collision, claiming that he should not be responsible *155 for all of the expenses. This was at the garage of one Van Sant, plaintiff’s attention having been called to the fact that defendant was in the place. Upon meeting, the latter committed a battery npon the plaintiff, as a result of which one of plaintiff’s teeth and the left jaw was broken. The testimony shows that he underwent three different operations. At one of the operations an aluminum plate was fitted into his mouth and was cemented and wired into his jaw in an effort to hold the two portions of the jaw bone together, so that they would knit. After the wiring was done, necrosis of the bone set in and a large part of the jawbone was eaten away. The two pieces of the jawbone were afterwards united by a soft cartilage. Plaintiff was in the hospital on two different occasions, the first time for approximately fourteen days and the second time for approximately three days, during which time a nurse or nurses attended him. For more than two months plaintiff was fed only liquid food through a tube, and for approximately three months the mouth was washed with an antiseptic solution through a tube in the opening of the jaw, to irrigate and cleanse the mouth. Where irrigation did not reach the pus it was necessary to use a probe or swab. Plaintiff was continuously under the care of a physician from June 4 until November, 1922, and during the treatments he underwent considerable suffering. As the direct and indirect result of the injury, he lost two teeth, in addition to the tooth which was broken by the defendant. The bones of the jaw have never grown together, leaving quite an interval which, instead of being rigid is merely filled by a soft cartilage which permits the jaw to wobble, distorts his face, impairs his speech, and gives very little, if any, power of pressure. The injury is permanent in its nature. Some other facts will be mentioned herein later, but the foregoing statement is sufficient to indicate in a general way the character of the injuries sustained by the plaintiff as a result of the battery above mentioned. Defendant admitted the battery, but claimed that it was in self defense. The ease *156 was tried to a jury, who returned a verdict in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $8505.85, upon which judgment was rendered. Prom this judgment defendant has brought this case here by petition in error.

1. It was shown by the testimony that plaintiff was a truck-driver, driving his own truck; that the amount of his earnings depended largely on his individual exertions, and that work for truck-drivers was plentiful in the summer of 1922. Over the objection of the defendant, it was shown that the wages of the ordinary truck-driver was from $8.00 to $10.00 per day. Plaintiff was asked, and was permitted to state, over objection, what his earnings would have been during that summer, if he had not been injured, and other witnesses were permitted to state, over objection, what the earnings generally were of truck-drivers with a truck similar to that of plaintiff. The admission of this testimony is assigned as error.

It is not argued that it was improper to show the profits and earnings, so as to aid the jury in arriving at the value of the plaintiff’s loss of time, and we need not discuss that point, but it is contended, as we understand it, that plaintiff could not testify as to what his earnings would have been during the summer of 1922, without showing his earnings previous to the time of his injury, and we are cited to Turner v. Ry. Co., 15 Wash. 213, 46 Pac. 243, in which it was held that the plaintiff in the ease, a lawyer, was improperly permitted to state his own opinion or estimate of his loss of time without stating the facts upon which it was based, namely, his earnings of the past. That the earnings of the past furnish the proper basis for estimating the value of lost time in such case is also held in Sedgwick on Damages, Section 180; and see Bonneau v. Ry. Co., 152 Cal. 456, 93 Pac. 106, cited in defendant’s brief. Counsel for defendant claims that the case at bar is similar to the Turner case, in view of the testimony that plaintiff’s earnings depended largely on his own exertions. We can accept that view only partially, and must recognize the fact that the *157 occupations are dissimilar, making the rule of the Turner case inapplicable here. A truck-driver might be able to find plenty of work, while a lawyer would be anxiously waiting* for clients. In a number of cases a plaintiff, in an action for personal injury, has been permitted to state his opinion and give his own estimate of the value of his lost time, as for instance, where a plaintiff was a farmer: Delano v. Pierce, 225 Fed. (C. C. A.) 976; a bartender: Schlumerecht v. City Ry. Co., 153 Ill. App. 25; a housekeeper: St. L. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Horn, (Tex. Civ. App.) 130 S. W. 1025; a trader in cattle: G. C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Bell, 24 Tex. Civ. App. 579; a merchant: Howard v. McCabe, 79 Neb. 42. In fact, some of the courts have gone much further and have held that in many cases the jury may fix the value of lost time from their own knowledge. Thus it is said in Sutherland on Damages (4th Ed.) Sec. 1348, page 4719:

“In the case of an ordinary laborer the jurors may be presumed to be reasonably familiar with the value of his services, and they measure it by their knowledge and experience. The same rule has been applied to the value of the services of a nurse, to the earnings of a peddler who supported his family by his sales, of a merchant, of a farmer, though the cases are not in accord; and to those of a housekeeper. ’ ’

We need not approve or disapprove this rule, but we have mentioned it to show that some courts have been rather liberal in fixing the method of determining the value of a man’s time. The practice of a professional man is apt to be built up slowly, but when once established, it very frequently, and perhaps generally, brings in a steady income. The same thing applies in some other lines of occupation. It is for that reason that past income is held to be the best method for determining the value of lost time of men thus engaged. The reason of the rule fails, or at least is apt to fail, in eases like that at bar. The testimony shows that there was no or little work for truck-drivers in the winter; that such work is more or less seasonable, starting up some time. *158 after the spring rains. One of the main factors, and, perhaps, the most vital one, to be considered is whether truck work was scarce or plentiful. The income of the plaintiff in the month of May, 1922, would not at all measure the value of his lost time in the following months, unless the conditions were similar. This may also be said as to the previous summer. We do not know whether or not this was true and we cannot, accordingly, say that the plaintiff should have shown these earnings in order to aid in determining the value of his lost time in the summer of 1922. According to the testimony there was plenty of work for truck-drivers during that summer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
265 P. 446, 38 Wyo. 151, 1928 Wyo. LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahoney-v-pearce-wyo-1928.