v.
Crescent Coal Company
The subject is now regulated by section 3471 of the Code, providing that: “A father, or in case of his death or imprisonment or desertion of his family, the mother, may as plaintiff maintain an action for the expenses and actual loss of service resulting from the injury or death of a minor child.” In view of the previous state of the law, there can be no doubt of what was intended by this statute or the word “expenses.” It has reference to the reasonable cost incurred for medical attendance, nursing and the like, including that of suitable burial. Cleary v. City Ry. Co., 76 Cal. 240 (18 Pac. 269); 6 Thomp. Neg., section 7093. Statutes authorizing recovery for the wrongful death of a minor child, not specifying expenses, are construed in England and several of the states so as not to include the cost of burial. See Dalton v. Ry., 4 C. B. (N. S.) 296. Consolidated Traction Co. v. Hone, 60 N. J. Law, 444 (38 Atl. 759). These decisions are not in point, and funeral expenses were rightly held recoverable.
It seems well settled that proof, of what has been paid for an article of personal property recently in the open market, or when sold at auction, or when it has no market value and its change of condition is shown, is received as furnishing some evidence of its actual or reasonable value. 3 Chamberlayne on Evidence, sections 2175-1b, 2175-1e. Thus in Bird v. Everard, 4 Misc. Rep. 104 (23 N. Y. Supp. 1008), what plaintiff paid for an overcoat in the absence of other proof was held sufficient to show its value and in Small v. Pool, 30 N. C. 47, evidence of what plaintiff gave for a slave and what he afterwards sold her for was admitted as an aid to the jury in assessing damages.
In Motton v. Smith, 27 R. I. 57 (60 Atl. 681, 8 Ann. Cas. 831), the court observed that “an owner is doubtless usually qualified to state the cost price of ’articles of personal property, and from that, with information as to age and wear, the jury might estimate values.” In Swanson v. Railway, 116 Iowa, 304, the holding was that a witness might testify “to the price paid for land as tending to show its market value.” In Richmond v. Railway, 40 Iowa, 264, the cost of a building was received in evidence, not as the measure of damages, but as a means to aid the jury in arriving at its present value. See McMahon v. City of Dubuque, 107 Iowa, 62; Jones v. Morgan, 90 N. Y. 4 (43 Am. Rep. 131); Sullivan v. Lear, 23 Fla. 463 (2 South. 846, 11 Am. St. Rep. 388) ; Thompson v. Anderson, 94 Iowa, 554.
Other eases might be cited illustrating the application [*556] of the rule indicated. There is nothing here, however, to show for what, the funeral expenses were incurred, or what was paid for the several articles as distinct from services rendered. If the articles were purchased on the open market, the amount paid would be some evidence of their reasonable value. But the question still remains as to the propriety of procuring that which was obtained as reasonably essential to the decent .burial of deceased. See Foley v. Brocksmit, 119 Iowa, 457, where this court exacted a remittitur of all in excess of $150, where $455 had been allowed as funeral expenses. Moreover, it seems quite dear from the authorities that a different rule obtains in proving the value of services rendered or repairs made than in showing what articles of personalty are worth. This is on the ground that no criterion, as that of the open market, is ordinarily furnished the jury by which to estimate the value of what is done. Thus in Hobbs v. City of Marion, 123 Iowa, 726, it was said: “The jury may, and, indeed, must, be left to place its own estimate upon damages for pain and suffering, for they are not measurable by the test of market values; but the value of services and the amount of damages to property are matters concexming which, under ordinary circumstances, direct and competent evidence is available, and without it they shoxxld not go to the jury.”
In Schimpf v. Sliter, 64 Hun, 463 (19 N. Y. Supp. 644), it was adjudged that “to allow proof of the amouxxt paid by plaixxtiff to his physician without showing the value of the services” was error, and this ruling was confirmed by the Court of Appeals in Gumb v. Railway, 114 N. Y. 411 (21 N. E. 993), where it was held to be error to allow the plaintiff to testify to the amount paid for the reparation of a wagoxx without evidence pf the value thereof and also in allowing him to testify what was a physician’s charge for his services without evidence of payment or the value of the services other .than the remark of the physician stating the amount of his bill and that it was small.
[*557] In Wheeler v. Railway, 91 Tex. 356 (43 S. W. 876), the court held that the injured party must prove what would be reasonable compensation to the physician for the services rendered and would be entitled to recover that amount if he had paid or was liable to pay the same, adding: "It was error in the trial court to submit to the jury the question of the medical bill paid by the plaintiff for services rendered to him, because there was no proof that such amount was a reasonable compensation for the services rendered.” In Massena Savings Bank v. Garside, 151 Iowa, 168, and Waltham Piano Co. v. Freeman, 159 Iowa, 567, allowing the jury to take into consideration the amount paid an attorney without proving its reasonable value, was held to have been erroneous. We have held, however, that where the services rendered are of a nature likely to be familiar to the jury and the charge is not questioned, its reasonableness may be safely left for their determination. Lampman v. Bruning, 120 Iowa, 167; Scurlock v. City of Boone, 142 Iowa, 684.
In Sachra, v. Town of Manilla, 120 Iowa, 562, the court instructed that the plaintiff should be allowed for money expended for medical treatment, and this was criticized for not stating instead that he was entitled to recover the reasonable value of the expenses incurred therefor, and the court,, after directing attention to the fact that the evidence indicated that the services of one physician were worth $100',, and that the bill of the other was not over $20, held that this; justified the instruction, citing Flanagan v. Railway, 83 Iowa, 639, where the expenses were shown to be $40 or $50, and the court, after stating it was not "pretended that the expenditure of such a sum was unreasonable or unnecessary, ’ ’ decided that it would not be presumed that the finding of the jury exceeded such amount, and therefore no prejudice was suffered from the instruction.
In Vedder v. Delaney, 122 Iowa, 583, it appeared that the plaintiff after being injured was kept by the officers charged by the law with relief of the poor, and cared for [*558] at the expense of the county, and he testified that he had promised to reimburse the county for the expenses incurred and proved the items and amount of such expenditures. In response to the contention that such evidence was not admissible, the court, after showing that he was entitled to reasonable and fair value of the expenses, observed that: “It has often been held that proof of what the plaintiff has in fact paid for such necessary services is some evidence -of their reasonable value, and is sufficient to justify the submission of the question to the jury” (citing the Lampman and Sachra cases and Colwell v. Railway, 57 Hun, 452, 10 N. Y. Supp. 636), adding: “The fact that the expenses in this case were first assumed or paid by the county, and that thereafter plaintiff undertook or agreed to reimburse the county for the expenditures in his behalf, does not make the rule any less applicable.” The point actually decided seems to have been that stated in this excerpt, and the previous suggestion as to the cost of services, not inconsistent with the Lampman case, to have been made in aid of this conclusion. The decisions of this state, as seen, do not sustain the thought that the amount paid for services of any nature is enough evidence to warrant submitting the issue as to the sum, for in Sachra v. Town of Manilla value was otherwise proven and in Lampman v. Bruning and Scurlock v. City of Boone, this was permissible only where the services and their value were likely familiar to the jury. In Colwell v. Manhattan Ry. Co., 57 Hun, 452 (10 N. Y. Supp. 636), a nurse was paid $100 for nursing the plaintiff six months, and after directing attention to the rule that the price was some evidence of the value of property, the court says: “The price actually paid for personal services, such as those of this nurse, may be considered as some evidence of the value of the work performed, and constitute competent proof sufficient to warrant the jury in considering the item in the assessment of damages.” This was correct as applied to the services of an unskilled nurse (Scurlock v. City of Boone, supra), and [*559] if it related to skilled nurses, any value the ruling may have had as authority, the court being intermediate, was destroyed by the decisions of the Court of Appeals of New York heretofore cited, announcing a different doctrine. Services personal or otherwise are so various and differ so much in their nature and value that general application of the principle pertaining to proof of value o'f property ought not to obtain. It is matter of daily observation that prices paid different persons for like services differ radically. There is no general criterion, such as the open market, by which to ascertain what the rendition of a specified service is worth. This often depends on experience, or environment, and frequently on opportunity. One will exact many times as much as another for precisely the same service, and it is not exacting too much to require something more than mere proof of cost, save in the more familiar employments where supply and demand regulate somewhat as in the open market, or prices are uniform, in order to establish the reasonable value of services rendered. Moreover, if this were not so, as the services rendered were not disclosed, the jury could not, in any event, fix their value.
The general statement of the cost of funeral expenses, in the absence of any other evidence, did not justify the submission of the reasonable expense thereof to the jury.
The plaintiff was entitled to recover the present worth of the probable’earnings of the deceased up to the time he would have become of age, less the probable cost of clothing, maintenance and the like (Benton v. Railway, 55 Iowa, 496), and it is manifest from the figures given that more than this was allowed.
If the plaintiff cares to file a remittitur of enough with the $150 allowed for funeral expenses to reduce the- judgment to $1,000, with interest, within thirty days, it will stand affirmed, with costs; otherwise reversed. Affirmed on condition.