273 P. 440 | Kan. | 1929
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Grant Beam brought this action to recover from the Farmers Union Mutual Hail Insurance Company, for a loss sustained to a corn crop by a hailstorm on September 15,1926. The jury returned a verdict for plaintiff in the sum of $115, with interest thereon from September 15,1926. The defendant appeals.
The errors assigned are the admission of opinion evidence, the refusal of the court to sustain a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and to instruct a verdict for defendant, the overruling of a motion for a new trial and in the rendition of a judgment for plaintiff for damages and an attorney’s fee.
The policy insured against loss by hail only, that in case of total loss of the crop the amount specified in the policy should be paid, and in case of a partial loss it should be paid in the proportion which the loss sustained bears to the total risk, but that in no case would any claim for a loss under five per cent be allowed, nor for any loss occurring after the crop had been harvested, nor if it was
“The questions asked were objectionable, and the testimony given was inadmissible upon two grounds: First, the questions were objectionable because they did not call for specific facts, but permitted the witnesses to state a mere opinion, giving in the lump the amount of damages thought to be sustained. It is the function of the court or jury trying the case to determine from evidence properly presented what the amount of damages sustained is, and while it might be very convenient for the plaintiff to permit him and his witnesses to give the damages suffered in a lump, it would be a very unsafe practice to allow them to state the amount of damages supposed to be*237 sustained, without regard to the facts or knowledge upon which their opinions were based. It is well settled that the practice is not permissible.” (p. 357.)
In an action upon a policy insuring property against loss caused directly by'tornado, windstorm or cyclone, with a provision that it did not cover loss by snowstorm, and where the principal question in the case was whether the collapse of a building was caused by wind or the weight of snow thereon, witnesses were asked and allowed to answer and give opinions to the effect that the collapse of the building was caused by wind and not by the weight of snow. It was held that the question related to the essential inquiry in the case, that it was error to permit the opinions to be given by the witnesses, that the facts as to the condition of the building before and after the storm, the force of the wind at the time, the quantity of snow which fell thereon could have been shown, and that the issue should have been left to the determination of the jury, citing a number of authorities. (Darling v. Franklin Fire Ins. Co., 122 Kan. 620, 253 Pac. 245. See, also, W. & W. Rld. Co. v. Kuhn, 38 Kan. 675, 17 Pac. 322; C. K. & N. Rly. Co. v. Neiman, 45 Kan. 533, 26 Pac. 22; Upcher v. Oberlender, 50 Kan. 315, 31 Pac. 1080; Telephone Co. v. Vandevort, 67 Kan. 269, 72 Pac. 771; Oil Co. v. Drilling Co., 80 Kan. 261, 101 Pac. 1072.) That the evidence could have been produced to show the extent of the loss due to hail was demonstrated by that offered by the defendant, of farmers and other witnesses whcwent through the fields after the storm and saw the evidence of hail and its effect. In the examination made by them they observed marks of hail, one of them stating that he found that one ear out of fifty showed hail spots. Some of them stated that part of the corn, about one-half, was mature and that in some places the sunflowers and weeds in the field were still green, and they testified that hail effects were seen on these and on somé of the corn that was green. They also testified that ears of ripe corn would be knocked off by the wind, that there had been a heavy rain before the hailstorm which had washed ears of corn into a draw, but that the corn found in the draws was sprouted, showing that it had washed there before the hailstorm, since it could not have sprouted between the time of the hailstorm and that of their examination. A witness stated that in making a test he selected one hundred stalks in different parts of the field, and made a count of the injured corn in each selection. Where he found marks of hail he stripped the ears
It is apparent that the extent of the loss may be shown by witnesses who have examined the fields and made a count of injured stalks in each part where conditions differ and thus give the jury a basis for determining the extent of the damage done, upon facts rather than upon the opinions of witnesses. It may be noted that some of the questions asked for the extent of the loss did not even confine it to that caused by hail, although the evidence shows that some of the injured corn and losses resulted from causes other than hail. While part of the loss was occasioned by hail we cannot hold that the inadmissible testimony, relating as it did to a vital issue in the case, was without prejudice. While defendant filed a demurrer to plaintiff’s evidence and also asked for an instructed verdict in favor of the defendant, at the end of the trial, both of which were refused, we think it is manifest from the record that defendant was not entitled to have either sustained.
Plaintiff suggests that defendant is not entitled to a review of the case because counsel did not appear and orally present the motion for a new trial at a time set for its consideration. A motion was filed which covered the grounds assigned as errors. These grounds, it appears, had been twice argued before the court and authorities cited when rulings were made. It is, of course, the duty of counsel to assist the court by clearly stating objections to rulings for which a new trial is asked (Riverside v. Bailey, 82 Kan. 429, 108 Pac. 796), but the errors had been sharply and persistently pressed upon the court with arguments and authorities so that it was in full possession of the points and, as .counsel says, it was possessed of all the aid which he could give. The fact that counsel did not repeat in an oral argument on a motion for a new trial grounds which had been
For the errors pointed out the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.