delivered the opinion of the court.
Counsel for appellants advance and argue certain propositions which will be considered in their order.
First, the court erred in refusing the peremptory instruction as to the whole case, and also as to the second and third counts of the declaration. At the close of all the evidence each of the appellants moved the court to exclude all the evidence from the jury, and to instruct the jury to find it not guilty, and presented an instruction to that effect; and each of them also moved the court to instruct the jury to find it not guilty on the second count of the declaration and also on the third count of the declaration. A separate motion was made as to each of said second and third counts. The court overruled all of said motions and refused to instruct as requested. We gather from the argument of counsel for appellant, and from what they said to the trial court, on making their motions as to the 'second and third counts, that» the motions were based on the theory that the evidence failed to-show that the ear was suddenly and violently started, before the appellee had a reasonable opportunity to board the same, and that it was suddenly and violently started while the appellee was a passenger. The evidence tends to prove that the car was stationary, for the purpose of receiving passengers, when the appellee was attempting to board it, and that it started with a jerk while she was so attempting, and therefore the question, whether the car was suddenly and violently started, when the appellee was attempting to board it, was a question for the jury, and the court properly refused appellant’s motions and instructions as to the second and third counts. But even though there were no evidence that the car was suddenly and violently started, there ivould be no error in the ruling of the court on the motions as to the second and third counts; because the first count is merely for negligent management of the car, resulting in injury to appellee, and the appellee’s evidence is admissible under that count. Swift & Co. v. Rutkowski, 182 Ill., 18.
A motion to take the whole case from the jury, by excluding all the evidence, or by instruction to find for the defendant, or defendants, as the case may be, can only be allowed when there is no evidence fairly tending to support the plaintiff’s case, or no evidence of some element so essential to a recovery that, without proof of it, there could be no recovery. Roberts v. C. & G. T. Ry. Co., 78 Ill. App., 526, 529-30, and cases cited. In Met. El. Ry. Co. v. Fortin, 203 Ill., 454, 456, the question on a motion of defendant to take the case from the jury, is thus stated: “Such motion presents to this court a question of law and not one of fact, and is in the nature of a demurrer to the evidence; that is, admitting the evidence in favor of the plaintiff to be true, does it, together with all legitimate conclusions to be drawn therefrom, fairly tend to sustain the plaintiff’s cause of action? If it does, then, as matter of law, the plaintiff is entitled to have his case passed on by the jury.”
The conductor of the car in question, called as a witness by appellants, testified that he was in the front end of the car facing north, the car moving south on Robey street, and saw appellee standing on the crossing of Potomac avenue and Robey street, waiting to get on the car; that the car came,to a stop at Potomac avenue, and he held it until appellee got on and then started it.
George Bixly, witness for plaintiff, testified that he was in the front seat of the car facing the front; that he first saw appellee when she attempted to board the car; that the car started forward as she had placed her foot on the running board and threw her back, and he reached out and caught hold of her, and with his assistance, she boarded the car. He also testified that immediately after he helped her on the car she looked very pale. The appellee testified, substantially, that she put her left foot on the running board, and took hold with her left hand, when the car started with a jerk and threw her around backward, twisting her back, in which she felt a severe pain; that she then became faint, and didn’t remember who assisted her into the car until she came to her senses; that, afterward, the conductor came to her and said that he didn’t see her; that, after recovering from her faintness, she experienced pain in her back, shooting up into the back of her head, and numbness in her left side and limb; that she stayed on the car till it reached Van Burén street, when she alighted, with the assistance of two gentlemen, and that a lady assisted her onto a Van Burén street car, on which she rode to Washtenaw avenue, when the conductor of that car assisted her to alight; that then she walked about a block to 1160 Jackson boulevard, the house of Miss Hannah, her friend, where.she remained until after dark, when Miss Hannah assisted her to board a Western avenue car, on which she rode to Potomac avenue, where the conductor assisted her to alight, and she walked thence to 164 Potomac avenue, where she lived. Appellee then proceeded to relate the ailments and suffering which she attributes to the accident, and which will be referred to hereafter.
Miss Hannah testified that May 5, 1901, she saw appellee in front of the house, 1160 Jackson boulevard, about four o’clock; that appellee rang the bell, and she, witness, went to ' the door; that appellee said nothing when she came'in, hut-sat down in a chair and remained silent three or four minutes before she could speak; that she stayed there two and a half or three hours, and that witness stayed with her and helped her to get on a car.
There is other evidence fairly tending to support appellee’s case, and we think it clear that appellants’ motions to take the case from the jury were properly overruled.
Second. It is objected that the court admitted improper evidence as to the damages.
April 1, 1903, and December 10, 1903, appellee underwent surgical operations. Dr. Moore, appellee’s attending physician, was present at both operations, and Dr. Henrotin performed the operations. Dr. Moore testified that at the first operation there were removed a cyst as large as a large orange from appellee’s left ovary, a degeneration of that ovary, three-fourths of the right ovary, in which degeneration had taken place, and part of the left Fallopian tube; that at the second operation a cyst about the same size as the former one, and the remainders of the right ovary and of the Fallopian tube were removed.
Dr. Henrotin testified that at the first operation he removed from the right ovary a cystic tumor the size of a large fist, also the Fallopian tube and ovary, which last was completely diseased, also a small tumor from the body of the uterus; that at the second operation he removed a cyst which had grown to quite a large size, which was between the walls of the broad ligament and the location of the first operation, on the right side, as he thinks, and also removed what remained of the ovary from the former operation, and the left Fallopian tube.
The appellee testified to the performance of the two operations, but, naturally, did not describe them.
The argument in support of appellants’ contention is that the evidence of the physicians who testified in the cause shows that the cysts, etc., removed were not caused by the accident, but no objection was made, or exception preserved, so far as appears from the abstract, to the admission of the evidence as to the operations, or what conditions were found, and, therefore, appellants are not in a position to claim here that the evidence was improperly admitted.
At the close of appellee’s case the appellants moved to strike out all evidence in regard to tumors of the ovary and fibroid tumors of the womb, and all evidence relating to the two operations in which tumors, the ovaries and Fallopian tubes were removed, and all evidence of neurotic pain resulting from the condition of the pelvis which preceded the operation, or followed as a consequence of it, on the ground that the evidence established no connection between the accident and the conditions mentioned, or either of them.
At the close of all the evidence, counsel for appellants, apparently for greater caution, divided the foregoing motion into four parts, and made four motions to strike out evideuce, each motion being a part of the foregoing motion. Appellants also asked the court to give the following instruction :
“1. The court instructs the jury that the plaintiff has failed to prove hy a preponderance of the evidence that the tumors and ovarian and womb troubles were caused by the accident complained of, and in considering and deciding this case you should wholly disregard all the evidence introduced in this case as to such tumors and ovarian and womb troubles, and also as to the surgical operations she underwent as a result thereof, and also as to any nervous condition which resulted from such trouble or from said operations.”
The court overruled all of said motions and refused the instruction.
We are of opinion that all the evidence with regard to the physical condition and health of appellee from the time of the accident, and with regard to surgical operations performed on her, was competent and material, and that it was a question for the jury to decide, under proper instructions, what ailments or pains were caused by the accident, and what, if any, were not so caused. The question as to what caused the injury was a question of fact for the jury. Ill. Cent. R. R. Co. v. Smith, 208 Ill., 608, 617. Therefore, the - court did not err in overruling the motions to exclude evidence, or in refusing the instruction above quoted. The question whether the appellee’s ailments, or any of them, were, as she claimed, or were not, the result of the accident, was submitted to the jury by the following instruction, given . at appellants’ request:
“9. The jurors are instructed, that with respect to the ailments and disabilities claimed for the plaintiff in this case the burden of proof is upon the plaintiff in that respect, as it is with respect to the question of liability, to show by a preponderance of the evidence not only that such ailments really exist, or have existed, but also that such ailments and disabilities are the result of the accident in question. The jury are further instructed that they have no right to guess or conjecture that any ailment complained of by the plaintiff is the result of this accident. The jury are not to understand from this instruction that the court intends to intimate that the plaintiff has such disability as she claims or that the defendants are in any manner liable, or to intimate any opinion upon that or any other, question of fact in this case.”
Third. It is objected that the court erred in admitting evidence that appellee, in the year next preceding the accident, earned about $300, making waists, gowns, etc. We perceive no error in this regard. Aothing is more common in cases of this class than to permit evidence on the part of the plaintiff of his earnings prior to his injury. The evidence was competent, and the general averment in the declaration that the plaintiff was hindered and prevented from transacting and attending to her business and affairs, and lost and was deprived of great gains and profits, is a sufficient basis for its introduction. C. & E. R. R. Co. v. Meech, 163 Ill., 305, 314.
In heading 2 of appellants’ brief it is claimed “the damages are excessive,” but the only argument in support of this claim is that damages based on the evidence which appellants moved the court to strike out should not be allowed. Appellee is married and was twenty-nine years of age at the time of the accident. The evidence is, that before the accident she was healthy and had had no serious illness and no female complaints, and that prior to the accident she did her own housework, including washing, ironing, baking, etc.; that she was active and frequently walked from the business part of the city to her home on Potomac avenue, a distance of four or five miles, and that, in addition to doing all her housework, she was able to earn about $300 per year doing millinery work, and that since the accident she has been and is a confirmed invalid, a mere wreck of her former self, and is not only unable to do the work which she formerly did, but cannot even walk a short distance without suffering pain as a consequence of the effort. We find no evidence of unfairness in the trial, or of passion, prejudice or partiality on the part of the jury, and we cannot, in view of the evidence as to appellee’s physical condition, which is too voluminous for specific reference, hold fhat the sum assessed as damages is excessive. There are quite a number of errors in the abstract furnished, some of them quite material. For instance,, the abstract of Dr. Kolischer’s evidence contains the following: “There are two kinds-of coccygodynia, a spontaneous and a traumatic one. From an • examination of the patient I am unable to tell whether or not it is traumatic or spontaneous.” Turning to the page of the record referred to in the abstract, we find the following: Q. “From the examination of a patient are you able to determine whether coccygodynia is traumatic or of the other class ?” A. “Tes, sir.” The error is important, because the Doctor testified that he examined appellee and found the cocyx and the sacro-iliae joint diseased, and would ascribe the condition to violence or some force, and that it may have been caused by a sudden twisting; also, that, as a rule, patients suffer from traumatic coccygodynia as long as they live. We presume this error in the abstract was owing to inadvertence, especially as it is. continued on page 39 of appellants’ argument.
We find no reversible error in the record, and the judgment will be affirmed.
Affirmed.