The suit was for a personal injury to Mrs. Powell, and the jury rendered a verdict for.$7,500 damages; The court, upon motion-of the defendant, granted a new trial on the sole ground that the damages were excessive. There were divers other grounds embraced in the motion, all of which were presented in the Supreme5 Court by a cross-bill of exceptions. We shall dispose of the questions raised without much explanation-as to- the machinery by which-they were evolved. ■ ■ '
■3.. Except in a mind disappointed, by the verdict, there could be no possible doubt of the legitimacy of the jury. It was legally selected and organized. Whether, on a. new trial in a civil case, the-jury shall be taken from the grand jury, or the traverse juries, or partly from each, is matter of discretion with the presiding judge. Acts of 3884-5, p. 93; Code, §§2925, 3932; 68 Ga. 433; 72 Ga. 635. No-abuse of the discretion appears in this case.
2. To insist on a prosecution for felony, in order to open-the way to a recovery for the civil injury, is to walk backwards. The old law on the subject has been left behind. Prosecution for felony is not a condition precedent to the recovery of damages (actual or punitive) for a personal injury. Code, §2970 ; 74 Ga. 857.
3. The testimony of Mrs. Powell, the plaintiff, was taken.. *198by interrogatories. One of the cross-interrogatories, inquiring as to her ability to attend court, was not answered in express terms either way. But the answer she gave clearly implied an affirmative response — so clearly that there could be no rational doubt of its meaning. Where a cross-interrogatory, such as, “ Are you not able to attend the court in person ?” is clearly answered in the affirmative by implication, the failure to answer expressly will not oblige the court to suppress or exclude the direct interrogatories and answers.
4. It was suggested, but I believe not argued, that as Mrs. Powell resided in the county and was not unable to appear and testify in person, her evidence, taken by interrogatories, could not be read. A female witness, though a party to the suit, and residing in the county, is not obliged, as a general rule, to attend court in order to testify. The Code, §3878, in enumerating those whose testimony may be taken by interrogatories “ at the instance of either party,” specifies as one class -£ all female witnesses.” Being a party does not hinder the examination of a witness by interrogatories at his own instance, on other grounds recognized by statute. Cutcher vs. Jones, 41 Ga. 675. And we see not why being a party should take away the privilege of a female witness. Doubtless, for special reasons shown to the court, personal attendance might be required, but the present instance- stands on the general rule.
5. The evidence of Mrs. Davis objected to was contained in answers to interrogatories, and these appear in the record, but neither from the motion for a new trial nor from tho bill of exceptions can we ascertain what particular part or parts of this evidence were pointed out to the court below as objectionable. Certainly the whole of it was not inadmissible. This being so, the objection was probably too broad, comprehended too much, and for that reason might have been overruled. Unless all the evidence of a witness is objectionable, the particular part which is objectionable should be specified in the motion for a new *199trial or in the bill of excéptions. This may be done either by quotation or by reference to the brief of evidence; but. if by reference, it should be definite and distinct, so that this court could know where to begin and where to stop. The reference which we have now is to the whole of Mrs. Davis’s evidence, or the whole of certain answers, but as neither of these wholes is, as a whole, bad, we cannot say that the court erred in overruling the objection.
6. The questions objected to as leading were not well formulated, but considering the sex and age of the witness, and the nature of the subject-matter, their form neither led nor misled her, in all probability We mean she would, most probably, have testified as she did had the questions been faultless. It is not good practice, however, to put questions wilh a single alternative, when it can be avoided without too much circumlocution.
The witness being a matron forty years of age, such questions as whether or not the plaintiff suffered an abortion? and whether or not flooding was caused thereby? are not so leading as to require the exclusion of the answers.
7, 8, 9. Medical evidence of the condition of the injured party after the. suit was brought, as well as'before, is admissible to show the nature and effects of the injury, and whether temporary or permanent.
If the injury resulted in abortion, evidence touching the consequences of abortion upon the mother’s future health is evidence relating to the past injury, and not to future injuries.
A question put to a medical witness thus, “ How would those troubles affect the nervous system ?” does not inquire for dicta or opinions of the profession at large, but for the individual opinion of the physician under examination. ■ And though not confined to the nervous system of this particular woman, the question is relevant as an inquiry concerning a pathological law to which her system, as being that of a woman, is or may be subject. ■
*200These propositions, I venture to say', carry'the evidence of their truth upon their face. None but a zealous advocate, whose case has suffered from their application, would think of disputing them. Brief as they are, they rule several grounds of the motion for a new trial.
10. Where there is evidence tending to show that the state of impaired health and diminished ability to labor attributable to the injury may endure through'life, the mortuary tables are admissible in evidence to aid the jury m dealing with the element of time involved in their computation of the damages.
There was such evidence in this case, and the tables were, therefore, relevant. One who is to live long in pain is more damaged than one who has to endure suffering but for a brief term. Test this by applying it to two cases and contrasting them, the first in which pain is to last only for a day, and the second for twenty years. It may be thought that the loss of ability to labor is not pain, but this is a mistake. There is no greater blessing of life than ability to labor, even though the - proceeds may belong to another. It is better for happiness, as well as for virtue, to work for nothing- than to be idle.- A physical injury that destroys the power of a human being to labor is one of the most serious injuries that it is possible to inflict; True, it is not to be measured by pecuniary earnings where the suit is' by a married woman; for such earnings, as a general rule, belong to the husband, and the right of action for their loss is in him but the wife herself has such an interest m her working capacity as that she can recover something for its destruction and what she is to be allowed ought to be more or less according to the length of time (luring which her privation is likely to continue. Such privation may well be classed with pain and suffering, especially where it involves the breaking up of established habits. To man or woman' accustomed to work, enforced idleness is torture.
11. What the plaintiff’s father said several days after the *201alleged injury was not evidence against her. The special facts did not warrant any departure from the general rule, that what one person says is not to be heard to affect the interest of another. The father’s presence at the time of tlie injury has no relevancy to the question. He was competent to testify but not to talk. Though the plaintiff"s father was present when she received the injury, his declarations, made several days afterwards, áre not evidence for the defendant, even under the special circumstances of the present case.
12. On the question whether the court ought, to have delivered specific instructions to the jury touching the loss of the unborn child, as an element of damage to the mother, we have examined the general charge as given; and if the jury understood it, and we take it for granted they did, they were by it guarded' from any danger of going wrong on that subject. The charge brought to their attention such matters as they were to consider in assessing damages, and this was not in the list. Under the charge as given, it was' not at all necessary to caution the jury against allowing damages for disappointed maternal hopes and anticipations.
18. This was a second verdict for the plaintiff, and on her right to recover, the evidence is no less satisfactory to us than it was to the court below. As to the mere right of the plaintiff to recover, the verdict is not contrary to law, to evidence, to the weight of evidence, or to the principles of equity and justice; to the extent of settling the right, the verdict should stand as' final and conclusive. .
11. The second verdict was for more than twice the amount of the first. In amount only was the latter unsatisfactory to the judge who presided at the trial.- He thought the sum awarded was too much. We do not know whether it was or not, but we do know that both verdicts gave heavy damages.' In neither of them were the damages nominal, or anything like it. Two juries differed, and differed .substantially on, the mere question of dollars, and *202cents, each of them recognizing the right to recover a large sum. Two verdicts finding heavy damages for the alleged injury, having been rendered, the second for more than twice as much as the first, the wide difference between them in amount may, in the light of the whole case, justify the judicial mind in suspecting bias or prejudice, and the presiding judge having ordered a new trial because the second finding was excessive, and this court not being thoroughly convinced that there was error in so doing, affirms the judgment, with the qualification and direction that the plaintiff’s right to recover stand and remain established, and that the new trial be had upon the question of amount, and that .only. Let the damages be assessed again, as speedily as practicable, by another jury.
We exercise the power, of direction under the Code, §§218, par. 2, 4284. This we do without overlooking the case of Savannah Railway vs. Harper, 70 Ga. 120. .We deem the powers of this court, under the Code, much more ample in the matter of awarding direction than are those of the superior court to shape what may be termed special proceedings or results without direction from this bench.
Judgment affirmed.