Williams v. Clark County
This text of 143 Iowa 328 (Williams v. Clark County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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On the question of the measure of the plaintiff’s recovery, the trial court instructed as follows:
In ascertaining the amount of plaintiff’s damages, you should give him such an amount as would fairly and reasonably compensate him for the injury received. In so doing you have a right to take into consideration the personal-injury suffered, the wounds and hurts received, the physical pain, mental anguish, and humiliation already suffered, and any which you may find he may suffer in the future in consequence of such injury, and his expense incurred for medical attendance and nursing. If the jury find from the evidence that the injury of the plaintiff is permanent, that prior to the injury he was capable of earning and did earn his living by farming, and that said injury has in whole or in part incapacitated him from performing the manual labor incident to such occupation, then you may take into consideration such facts in determining plaintiff’s damages. And in this connection the plaintiff’s admitted expectancy of life may be considered by you; but regard should be had as to the probable time during- such expectancy of life that plaintiff might reasonably be expected to be capable of performing manual labor on account of his age. In determining plaintiff’s earning capacity as a farmer, the profits of such farming operation should not be considered. Only that should be taken into consideration of which plaintiff has been deprived by reason of the injury received.
[330]*330The appellee concedes that the instruction was erroneous, but says that the error therein was cured by a subsequent instruction, in which the trial court said to the jury as follows:. “And in determining any of the questions of fact presented in this case you should be governed solely by the evidence introduced before you. You should not indulge in any speculations or conjectures as to what might have been shown to be true, and all conclusions drawn by you should be based solely upon the evidence before you, and not upon conjecture or speculation.” This instruction does not in our judgment cure the error complained of. It in fact goes no further than to say to the jury that it must be governed by the evidence in determining questions of fact. It in no way calls the jury’s attention to the fact that the plaintiff could be allowed only such future damages as were reasonably certain from the evidence. The instructions, considered together, are, in substance, the same as the instructions condemned in Sanders v. O’Callahan, supra, and in Ford v. City of Des Moines, supra.
We need not go into the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to support a verdict for the plaintiff. It is argued at'great length in the briefs of both counsel; but it is sufficient for us to say, in view of a new trial ‘of the case, that the evidence is amply sufficient to support a finding for the plaintiff on all fact issues presented. Whether the present verdict is excessive we do not determine.
For the error pointed out, the judgment must be, and it is, reversed.
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143 Iowa 328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-clark-county-iowa-1909.