McCaffrey v. Schwartz

132 A. 810, 285 Pa. 561, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 488
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 1926
DocketAppeal, 406
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 132 A. 810 (McCaffrey v. Schwartz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCaffrey v. Schwartz, 132 A. 810, 285 Pa. 561, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 488 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

Thomas P. McCaffrey sued Adolph E. Schwartz in trespass, for personal injuries, and recovered a verdict on which judgment was entered; defendant has appealed, complaining (1) of the trial court’s refusal to enter judgment in his favor n. o. v., asked on account of the alleged contributory negligence of plaintiff, (2) of certain rulings denying defendant the privilege of cross-examination, (3) of alleged errors in the charge, particularly (a) when dealing with the subject of awarding damages for impairment of earning capacity, (b) in omitting instructions on the necessity of reducing any monetary award which anticipated future losses to the present worth of the money involved; and this last complaint raises for discussion the general subject of the admissibility in evidence (c) of standard tables evaluating anticipated payments, and (d) of other tables estimating expectancies of life. All matters above indicated will be considered by us, and, since errors connected with -some of them require that the case be tried again (as will be *566 shown in the course of this-opinion), we add another heading for consideration (referred to in argument for appellant, though not covered by any assignment of error), viz, (4) the obligation• of plaintiff to reduce his damages by submitting to the usual surgical treatment appropriate to his physical condition.

The facts of the case, necessary to-an intelligent consideration of the several points before us, may be briefly stated from plaintiff’s testimony thus: At about six p. m. • on December 27, 1923, a foggy, snowy evening, Mc-Caffrey, while crossing a street in West Philadelphia, was knocked down by the automobile of defendant, which the latter was driving; plaintiff suffered a dislocation of -his right shoulder and other subordinate injuries; at trial, the chief claim for damages was based on the impaired physical condition of plaintiff due to the shoulder dislocation and its consequent harmful effect on his earning capacity; these, defendant then claimed, and now insists, could have been, and still can be, greatly relieved and reduced by plaintiff submitting to the usual surgical treatment appropriate to his condition, which he, thus far, has failed to follow in certain particulars, to be hereinafter mentioned.

On the first of the above-stated questions, it is sufficient to say that, as the case was presented at the trial under review, both defendant’s negligence and plaintiff’s contributory negligence involved issues for the jury.

As to the second question, the interrogatories ruled out on cross-examination, if objectionable at all, were such in form alone, — not in substance or on the score of irrelevancy; it is not to be anticipated that they will again be put in the same form, therefore it is unnecessary to consider ithem at this time further than to say that a trial judge should always be liberal in such matters, and the present rulings show an attitude rather to the contrary.

On the third question involved, first directing our attention to subdivision “(a)” thereof, the charge was as *567 follows: “You will consider and recompense him for any loss in wages up to the present time and any loss that he may experience in the future. Consider his expectancy of life, which doesn’t control you but only guides you;.....consider his age, his health, his habits, his sex, the condition of his health before the accident and the condition of his health at the present time.” These instructions are both wrong in law and inadequate in substance. To begin with, this court has more than once said that, in cases like the one before us, the standard of compensation is not “loss of wages” which one injured “may experience in the future,” but loss brought about by impairment of earning capacity; and these two, as pointed out in our cases (see Piper v. Adams Express Co., 270 Pa. 54, 61; Reitler v. Pa. R. R., 238 Pa. 1; McLane v. Pitts. Rys. Co., 230 Pa. 29. 37; Goodhart v. R. R. Co., 177 Pa. 1; McLaughlin v. City of Corry, 77 Pa. 109, 113), are essentially different things. In the second place, it was wrong ,to tell the jury, in the meager way the trial judge did it, that plaintiff’s expectancy of life was not, controlling on them. If the instruction as phrased in the charge was intended to convey the thought that the standard tables were not controlling, ;that would be correct (as we shall show at greater length in considering points “c” and “d”), but this is very different from saying that plaintiff’s expectancy of life, after the jurors determined that question from a consideration of all the relevant evidence on the subject, was not to control them in estimating ¡his future losses due to impaired earning power. These two mistakes present errors of law, and, in addition thereto, the í part of the charge now under consideration contains a third fault, which, though perhaps not more than an inadequacy, should be noted. The trial judge entirely failed to instruct the jurors that-it was their duty to determine, from the evidence, whether plaintiff’s impairment of earning power would last until the end of Ms life expectancy, or, if not, how soon it would prob *568 ably change for the better, and to adjust their award of damages on that score accordingly; it would have been error to refuse such instructions had they been requested, and to omit them, even when not requested, was at least an inadequacy in charge, which ought to. be avoided - on another trial. (We shall discuss the point in hand at greater length, later on, when dealing with the last question enumerated in the first paragraph of this opinion). While, since the Act of 1923, P. L. 439, 440, amending the Act of May 11,1911, P. L. 279, a mere inadequacy of charge may be assigned as error under a general exception (Peterman v. Enggasser, 280 Pa. 528, 531), — which is all that appears on the present record, —it is still the; rule that, ordinarily, we will not reverse on such assignments alone. The above-quoted instructions, however, are not only inadequate, but also, as we have indicated, they contain errors of law, and these latter faults cannot be overlooked or accounted harmless under the circumstances of this case.

As to subdivision “ (b) ” of the third question involved, this court, in Hockenberry v. Newcastle Elec. Co., 251 Pa. 394, 399, definitely said, “We have repeatedly held the failure......to instruct the jury......to find the present worth of future payments......, to be anticipated and capitalized in the verdict, eyen where no special requests for such instructions had been made, is reversible error,” and this principle has been followed and approved in several subsequent cases 1 ; though in other cases 2 judgments were affirmed where the award of the jury was so small that it was clear the absence of such instructions had done no harm. After deliberate *569

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 810, 285 Pa. 561, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccaffrey-v-schwartz-pa-1926.