Staats v. Fabricating Equipment & Systems, Inc.

359 N.W.2d 345, 1984 Minn. App. LEXIS 3900
CourtCourt of Appeals of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 18, 1984
DocketC6-84-660
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 359 N.W.2d 345 (Staats v. Fabricating Equipment & Systems, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Staats v. Fabricating Equipment & Systems, Inc., 359 N.W.2d 345, 1984 Minn. App. LEXIS 3900 (Mich. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

OPINION

LESLIE, Judge.

Plaintiff brought this action for personal injuries he suffered in a work related accident. ' A jury awarded plaintiff $40,000.00 for pain and suffering and for permanent disability but denied his claim for loss of future earning capacity. Plaintiff appeals the jury’s denial of damages for loss of future earning capacity, and the trial court’s exclusion of certain exhibits from the jury room, its limitation of respondent-insurer’s share of plaintiff’s litigation costs, and its denial of certain taxable costs. We reverse and remand for a new determination of damages for loss of future earning capacity and affirm on the remaining issues.

FACTS

On September 3,1976, the vice jaw securing a six ton beam broke, allowing the beam to swing into Staats, knocking him off a work platform on which he had been working. By the end of September Staats left his employer, Maxson Corporation, due to the severe pain resulting from the back injury he sustained in the accident.

Staats was totally disabled until his lami-nectomy in January, 1977. Staats returned to Maxson in September 1977 with physician’s instructions not to lift more than 25 pounds. Staats left Maxson within the month because his duties required lifting 25 pounds or more, causing him pain.

With the aid of two rehabilitation agencies, Staats applied unsuccessfully to thirty employers over the next twelve months. In April 1979 the Minnesota Division of Vocational Rehabilitation (DVR) found Staats’ highest aptitude in computer technology. Staats, however, failed the entrance exam for computer classes at Brown Institute.

A rehabilitation counselor deposed that Staats could easily do thousands of jobs in the region paying from $6.00 to $9.50 per hour. DVR nonetheless determined no suitable, available jobs existed for Staats, and certified him to a two year orthotics and prosthetics repairperson training course, from which he graduated in September, 1982. Staats contacted some pros-thetics employers but failed to contact others within commuting distance. In any case, the market for prosthetics repairper-sons had declined substantially during the time Staats spent learning the trade. A rehabilitation consultant contacted 20 minimum wage employers on behalf of Staats by July 1984, all without success.

*347 An economist testified that, assuming Staats would have continued as a steelworker but for the accident, and assuming Staats had obtained employment as a pros-thetics repairperson after the injury, Staats suffered future wage losses of $61,871.00. The figure increased when the economist assumed minimum wage employment or unemployment during the post-injury period.

ISSUES

1. Did the modified version of JIG II, 164 S given by the trial court regarding loss of future earning capacity misstate a controlling principle of law?

2. Did the trial court properly exercise its discretion in excluding certain exhibits from evidence after allowing the jury to view the exhibits during trial?

3. Did the trial court improperly assume the jurisdiction of the Workers’ Compensation Division by setting an upper limit for the workers’ compensation insurer’s share of Staats’ recovery and his litigation costs?

4. Did the trial court properly exercise its discretion in denying Staats taxation of certain costs?

ANALYSIS

1. Jury Instruction on Loss of Future Earning Capacity

Staats asserts the trial court’s instruction caused the jury to believe Staats had a duty to return to some type of employment as a condition precedent to the recovery of any damages for loss of future earning capacity. We agree. Using a modified version of 4 Minn.Pract., Civ. JIG II, 164 S (1974), the trial court instructed the jury:

[I]n determining the amount of those damages [for loss of future earning capacity] you should consider that one who is injured has a duty to act reasonably, and to return to some type of employment after an injury. The plaintiff is limited to those damages which he would have suffered if he had acted reasonably in returning to such employment.

This instruction implies Staats either had to return to some employment or make reasonable efforts to return to some employment as a prerequisite to the recovery of any damages whatsoever for loss of future earning capacity.

The instruction should have communicated that Staats could recover the difference between what he would have earned had he not been injured and what he would have earned had he acted reasonably in obtaining gainful employment after the injury. See, Bemidji Sales Barn, Inc. v. Chatfield, 312 Minn. 11, 17, 250 N.W.2d 185, 189 (1977). The law does not require the injured party to find employment before he can recover any damages for loss of future earning capacity as the trial court’s instruction erroneously suggests. See, LeMay v. Minneapolis Street Railway, 245 Minn. 192, 200, 71 N.W.2d 826, 831 (1955); Stenshoel v. Great Northern Railway, 142 Minn. 14, 16, 170 N.W. 695, 696 (1919). The misleading nature of the instruction might explain the jury’s denial of damages for loss of future earning capacity despite its $40,000.00 award for “Pain, suffering, and permanent disability past, present and future” (emphasis added). Accordingly, we remand this case to the trial court on the issue of damages for loss of future earning capacity.

2. Jury Instruction on Exhibits

Staats displayed several charts to the jury during the trial. The charts purported to show his lost earning capacity. When Staats offered the charts into evidence the court excluded them, later instructing the jury: “You must not consider any evidence which the court ordered to be stricken, whether it is exhibits or verbal testimony.” Staats argues this instruction prejudiced him by causing the jury to believe the charts and related testimony were defective.

When a party fails to object to alleged instructional errors either at trial or in post-trial motions, he may not raise them on appeal. Furley Sales and Associ *348 ates, Inc. v. North American Automotive Warehouse, Inc., 325 N.W.2d 20, 28 (Minn.1982); See, Minn.R.Civ.P. 51. Staats failed to object at trial and to specify that error in his post-trial motion. Whether correct or not the instruction is the law of the case and Staats cannot challenge it on appeal. Id.

3. Jurisdiction to Limit Subrogation and Costs

The trial court allocated $28,500.00 of Staats’ recovery to “recoverable damages” under workman’s compensation and declared that Staats’ workman’s compensation insurer had a subrogation interest in only those recoverable damages.

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Bluebook (online)
359 N.W.2d 345, 1984 Minn. App. LEXIS 3900, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staats-v-fabricating-equipment-systems-inc-minnctapp-1984.