Powell v. Rousseau

94 A. 867, 38 R.I. 294, 1915 R.I. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 9, 1915
StatusPublished

This text of 94 A. 867 (Powell v. Rousseau) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Powell v. Rousseau, 94 A. 867, 38 R.I. 294, 1915 R.I. LEXIS 59 (R.I. 1915).

Opinion

Sweetland, J.

This is an action of the case brought to recover damages for the death of the plaintiffs’ minor ■daughter; which death is alleged to have been caused by the wrongful act and neglect of the defendants.

The case was tried before a justice of the Superior Court .sitting with a jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs for two thousand dollars. At the conclusion of the plaintiffs’ testimony the plaintiffs were nonsuited by said justice .as to the defendant, Henry Rousseau. No exception was taken to this ruling and the case proceeded against J. Bouvier Rousseau as the sole defendant. After verdict the defendant •duly filed a motion for a new trial. In his decision on said motion the justice presiding refused to disturb the verdict upon the question of liability, but held that the damages .awarded were excessive, and granted a new trial unless the plaintiffs would remit all of said verdict in excess of thirteen hundred dollars. To this decision the plaintiffs excepted; .and have brought said exception to this court. The defend.ant also excepted to said decision and has brought to this ■court said exception and other exceptions taken by him •during the trial.

Upon the question of liability the evidence was conflicting; the jury found for the plaintiffs; and that finding has been •approved by said justice. After an examination of the *296 evidence and the briefs of counsel, supplemented by the very thorough analysis of the testimony in the oral argument of counsel, we find no sufficient reason for setting aside the verdict in that regard.

The defendant excepted to the refusal of said justice to charge the jury as follows: “You are further charged that if you come to the question of damages, the only question for you to determine in a case of this kind is what would have been the pecuniary value of the child’s services from the time of the accident which resulted in its death to the time when it would have reached the age of majority had the injury not been sustained, less the child’s proper support- and maintenance, and that after the net result is reached in this way it is necessary to reduce this net result to its present value.”

(1) Said justice had already charged the jury in accordance with the rule as to the measure of damages, in actions, brought by a parent to recover for the death of a minor child caused by wrongful act, or neglect of another, which this court laid down in Schnable v. Providence Public Market, 24 R. I. 477. The defendant’s request to charge states the rule in the Schnable case with an addition. To said rule the defendant has added the matter contained in the last clause of said request. The purpose and effect of this request is to combine with the Schnable rule a portion of the rule as to damages laid down in McCabe v. Narragansett Electric Lighting Co., 26 R. I. 427, and in Reynolds v. Narragansett Electric Lighting Co., 26 R. I. 457. The McCabe case and the Reynolds case were actions to recover damages for the death of an adult caused by the wrongful act or neglect of another. In-the McCabe case the court said: “It is obvious, too, that the loss sustained by the plaintiff here is the present-value of the net result remaining after his personal expenses are deducted from his income or earnings. To ascertain this it is, of course, necessary to ascertain first the gross amount of such prospective income or earnings, then to deduct therefrom what the deceased would have to lay out- *297 as a producer to render the service or to acquire the money that he might be expected to produce, computing such expenses according to his station in life, his means and personal habits, and then to reduce the net result so obtained to its present value.”

This statement of the mode of computing damages might be open to the criticism that although under the rule there-stated the jury would be directed to find the net result of the income of the deceased and then to reduce the net result so-obtained to its present value, the rule fails to state as of what date said net result should be considered as payable and hence for what period the deduction should be made for the anticipated payment. If said net result should be considered as payable at the termination of the period of the expectation of life of the deceased, a deduction because of payment-anticipated from that date would be manifestly unfair to the beneficiaries; for the benefit to them of the life of the deceased would be continuous during that life and would not be deferred until its termination. Instead of directing a jury to first find the gross amount of the prospective income of the-deceased during the period of his expectation of life and from that gross amount to deduct the gross amount of his expenses, for that period and then to find the present value of the net result, perhaps it would be better and more in accord with the intention of this court to direct the jury to find the net-balance of income over expenses for each year, and for the periods in which the jury find that such yearly balances are-constant to treat such balances as an annuity payable to the-beneficiaries, and to find the present value of such yearly balances. Thus it appears that the logical application of the requirement that the plaintiffs shall recover strictly the present value of the pecuniary benefit arising from the life of the deceased, is not without difficulty and complication when the action is for the death of an adult. In the Reynolds- case the court again states the rule of the McCabe case requiring the jury to find the present value of the net balance of gross earnings over gross expenses for the whole period. *298 of the expectancy of life. The court, however, ruled in the Reynolds case that annuity tables were admissible in evidence; and that the annuity tables might be applied in the ascertainment of the present value of said net balance. As the only use of annuity tables in that case would be to assist the jury in finding the present value of certain yearly payments, we must believe that the court did not intend the strict •effect of its language in the statement of the rule of damages; but meant to say that the value to the beneficiaries of the life in question should be regarded as a yearly benefit and that the jury should find the present value of such yearly benefit considered as an annuity.

The instruction to the jury which the defendant requested, is open to the criticism that it does not state of what date the jury should consider said net result of pecuniary benefit as accruing to the parents, for the purpose of ascertaining its present value. We are of the opinion however that, in such a case as this, any strict instruction to the jury to find the present value of the different items of damage arising from the child’s death, which would involve the use of annuity tables and mathematical calculations, would only tend to further complicate what from its nature must always be a most difficult problem hardly admitting of an exactly correct solution.

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Bluebook (online)
94 A. 867, 38 R.I. 294, 1915 R.I. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/powell-v-rousseau-ri-1915.