Lost Income and Earning Capacity

The terms "lost income" and "lost earnings," which are used synonymously, refer to a pacific amount of money that the claimant either has not received or will not receive as a result of injuries sustained in the incident in question. These can be past lost earnings or future lost earnings. "Past lost earnings" includes money lost up to the time of trial, while "future lost earnings" means the amount that will be lost after the trial.

The term "loss of earning capacity" refers to the reduced ability to make money, or the diminished earning power, which may result from injuries sustained in the incident in question. This loss invariably refers to future consequences as opposed to past results of the incident. In some jurisdictions, this is categorized as "general damages" while in others it is its own category, a distinction that is important when the jurisdiction has a statutory limit on the amount of damages that can be recovered.

Such injuries can be bodily, emotional, psychological, temporarily disabling or permanently disabling.

All such losses must be proved as required by the standards imposed by the applicable jurisdiction (for example, "more likely than not" or 51% likely is the standard in many jurisdictions).

Who can recover lost income

Am adult or child who is disabled or disfigured may have any or all of the losses above described.

What "lost income" includes

"Lost income" includes the various forms of compensation that a person was entitled to receive:

How to prove the amount of the loss

It is fairly easy for a wage earner to prove the amount of the loss. The victim's work supervisor writes a letter that includes the following: It is difficult for a non-wage earner to prove the amount of loss. Such people include real estate brokers, doctors, store owners, actresses and many other good people who work for a living, but whose income fluctuates and generally is less certain than that of a wage earner. Because there are so many different kinds of non-wage earners, here are some examples of how to prove their loss of income:

The proof of loss of earning capacity can be difficult, especially if the victim is a child. It can take several witnesses to testify as to the present cash value of earning capacity reasonably certain to be lost in the future by a disfigured child as a result of disfiguring injuries which she sustained in a dog attack.

The nature and extent of the injury, including its permanence, can be specified by the testimony of the victim's physicians and surgeons. Then the nature, degree and psychological and sociological effects of her disfigurement can be based upon the testimony of her psychologist.

The method of estimating what an injured child would have earned over the course of her lifetime had there been no injury can be based on her demographic and familial characteristics, including her race, sex, age, religion, type of schooling, student characteristics, probable educational attainment, environmental factors, family structure, parental characteristics such as educational attainment, income and occupation, and family background and demographic variables.

From these and other data, the probability distribution over alternative levels of of her expected educational attainment can be estimated, and her expected lifetime earnings stream can be generated using a number of methods, including the estimated probit equation, the age-earnings cycle, the average earnings of relevant statistical cohort groups, Current Population Survey census data, National Longitudinal Survey of Youth, the New Worklife Expectancy Tables and other commonly accepted methods. At that point, the present cash value of the loss can be determined.

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This page last changed on 12/26/06