72 Mo. 583 | Mo. | 1880
2. damages:harm-loss Grror x n instruction. Appellant also complains that the court declared an improper rale of ^damages. The evidence as to the value of the cow, was contradictory. It was vari- ^ ously estimated at from $30 to $100, and the instruction declared that, if the jury found for plaintiff, “ they should assess his damages at whatever sum they may believe he has sustained by such killing, not to exceed the amount claixned in his statement of his cause of action.” Thei’e was no evidence to warrant vindictive damages, and the jury.should have been instructed, if they found for plaintiff to allow the value of the cow, etc. The instruction was objectionable; but as the evidence introduced of the market value of the cow wai’ranted the jury in finding that value to have been $65, we cannot see that the defendant has been injured by the instruction, and the error will not, therefore, justify a reversal of the judgment.
3. practice: order of argument. Counsel for appellant complains that plaintiff’s counsel, at the trial, waived his opening address to the jury, an<^ defendant’s counsel thereupon claimed the right to close the argument to the jury, which the court refused. It does not appear that plaintiff’s counsel did make the closing ai’gument; but however that may be, it was a matter to be l’egulated by the rules of coui’t, and whether there was any rule of court, or not, on the subject, there was nothing in the action of the court of which defendant has any right to complain. He had only to decline an addi’ess to the jury, to compel plaintiff’s attorney to open the case to the jui’y, or forego his right to a closing speech.
Nor is there any support in the law for the position, that plaintiff' could not recover, without proving that three