Shaw v. Southern Pacific R.R. Co.

107 P. 108, 157 Cal. 240, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 253
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 25, 1910
DocketSac. No. 1737.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 107 P. 108 (Shaw v. Southern Pacific R.R. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shaw v. Southern Pacific R.R. Co., 107 P. 108, 157 Cal. 240, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 253 (Cal. 1910).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

This is an action for damages for bodily injuries to the plaintiff, alleged to have been caused by the negligence of the defendants. The defendants appeal from the judgment and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.

The complaint alleges that by reason of the improper and negligent operation of its cars by the employees of the defendants, while the plaintiff was lawfully in one of its freight cars occupied in loading the same with boxes of grapes, the said boxes were caused to fall upon the plaintiff, “crushing, bruising and wounding him,” and that “by reason of said injuries plaintiff has become and is unable to do or perform any labor, and has become sick, bruised, sore and disabled, . . . and has suffered and is now suffering great bodily and physical pain, *242 . . . and has been permanently crippled and will continue to suffer from said injuries during the remainder of his lifetime.” The damages thus caused are alleged to be in the sum of ten thousand dollars.

Upon the trial the plaintiff testified that before the accident his physical condition was good and that he was able to do the work.that he was engaged in doing, and all parts of it. Over the objection of the defendants he was then permitted to testify that his business was that of loading railroad cars with fruit, doing the work by contract on a large scale and having from ten to twenty-five men in his service, that he was a good hand at the work, that prior to the injury he was able to give his full time to the work and to do all parts of it himself and made from one hundred and fifty dollars to three hundred dollars a month on his contracts, that after the injury he did not make any money out of it because he was unable to superintend it correctly and do the work, that he was now working on a salary of from eighty dollars to one hundred dollars a month, and that if he was able to perform labor as before he could get a larger salary.

If this evidence had been allowed to go to the jury for the purpose of establishing, as the measure of the damages to the plaintiff, the loss of the profits he would have made if he had continued in the business in which he was engaged prior to the injury, it would have been outside of the issues. A loss of profits does not always result from such an injury. Damages from such loss of profits are special in their nature and the facts must be particularly alleged in order to admit evidence thereof and justify a recovery therefor. (Treadwell v. Whittier, 80 Cal. 579, [13 Am. St. Rep. 175, 22 Pac. 266].) The complaint does not allege a loss of profits. The allegation is merely that he was rendered unable to labor and was permanently crippled.

But the evidence was properly submitted to the consideration of the jury for a different purpose. In Treadwell v. Whittier, 80 Cal. 579, [13 Am. St. Rep. 175, 22 Pac. 266], the allegation was similar, although not so specific. It was there decided that it was proper to instruct the jury to consider the loss arising from the fact that the injury received rendered the plaintiff less capable of attending to his business than before, and that such loss was not special damage, but was *243 provable and recoverable under general allegations of permanent disability. It is practically conceded in the ease at bar that under such allegations it would be proper to prove the business or occupation in which the plaintiff had been previously engaged, and its nature, and that the injury rendered him less capable, or wholly incapable, of continuing such occupation or business. The authorities are in practical unanimity to that extent. The real point of the objection, therefore, is, that while the jury may consider the work the plaintiff previously did and was able to do, or the business he was able to and did carry on, they may consider it only in a general way, and that when they come to determine what his financial loss has been from the deprivation of his former bodily ability and vigor, they must rely on their common knowledge as to the value of such occupation or business, to a man of his strength and capacity, and that they cannot have the aid which would come from proof of the amounts he had been accustomed to receive therefrom. Evidence of what a plaintiff had usually earned before his injury, either as wages, or in business on his own account, would be the most accurate, satisfactory, and valuable data from which to determine the value of the time and labor he has lost by being rendered unable to continúe such occupation or business. For example, if he had previously made five thousand dollars a year by his personal efforts, and afterwards by reason of his injury could make no more than one thousand dollars, his damage from the deprivation of bodily strength would be much greater than if he had previously been able to make only two thousand dollars a year. The rule contended for would drive the jury from the actual facts of the case to their own surmises and experience as a criterion for decision as to the value of his time and labor. The authorities sanction the more accurate method. In Chicago, etc. Ry. Co. v. Posten, 59 Kan. 453, [53 Pac. 466], the court says: “In order that the jury may intelligently estimate the loss the plaintiff has sustained, it is necessary that they should be informed with reference to his business affairs, and while they may not, as compensation for the loss of his time, include speculative profits, or profits on invested capital, it is for them to say what loss has resulted to his business because of his being incapacitated from attending to it, and to award him as damages the value of his time and labor to himself in *244 the transaction of his own business. This is the same compensation, and for precisely the sáme reasons, that a clerk or agent doing the same work for wages might recover for his loss.” In International etc. Ry. Co. v. Irvine, 64 Tex. 533, the court says: “If the hand of a carpenter'or other mechanic be cut off by the negligence of another, it would surely be admissible, in an action to recover damages therefor, for him to state what his business was, what he was accustomed to make in its pursuit, and the effect which the hurt had upon his capacity to pursue that business.” And it was said that the same rule applied where plaintiff was in mercantile business on his own account, in order “to show how far the hurt had disabled him to follow his ordinary occupation.” In New Jersey Co. v. Nichols, 83 N. J. L. 437, [97 Am. Dec. 722], upon this question the opinion declares that “evidence of the nature and extent of the plaintiff’s business and the general rate of profit he has realized therefrom, which has been interrupted by the defendant’s wrongful act, is properly received, not on the ground of its furnishing a measure of damages to be adopted by the jury, but to be taken into consideration by the jury to guide them in the exercise of that discretion which, to a certain extent, is always, vested in the jury.” In Sedgwick on Damages, section 180, the rule is thus stated: “The most trustworthy basis of damages, in such a case, is the amount which the injured party has earned in the past.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 P. 108, 157 Cal. 240, 1910 Cal. LEXIS 253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shaw-v-southern-pacific-rr-co-cal-1910.