88 P. 1003 | Utah | 1907
This is an action for damages for injury to live stock while in transit. The plaintiff (hereinafter called respondent) alleges that he delivered to and that the defendant (hereinafter designated appellant) received from him for transportation from Granger, Wyo., to Chicago, Ill., a certain number of sheep; that the appellant negligently delayed the same while in transit at Schuyler, Neb., for a period of 32 hours, without providing any facilities to feed and water them; that said sheep were confined in the cars of appellant without food or water for a period of 72 hours, by reason of which a large number of lambs died; that the others shrank in weight; that all that did not die were by such negligent delay in transportation affected thereby; and that respondent was compelled to and did sell them for 50 cents on the hundredweight less than they would have sold for if they had been promptly and seasonably transported and delivered at the place of destination. In view of the errors assigned, the pleadings need not be further noticed, except in the following particular: In both the first and amended complaints, the respondent alleged the destination of the sheep to have been Omaha, Neb., but in the second amended complaint alleged the destination as Chicago, Ill. This amendment was allowed by the court upon due notice and argument *103 and a long time prior to the trial of the cause, but the same was allowed over appellant's objection and exception. The cause was, by the consent of the parties, tried to the court without a jury, and the court specifically found that the death of the lambs, and shrinkage in weight, and the loss in price as alleged by respondent were all due to the negligence of appellant in delaying the sheep at Schuyler, Neb., for 32 hours, and in not providing facilities for food and water for the sheep for a period of 72 hours, and in confining them in cars for that length of time without food and water. The court also found the loss and damage to respondent for each item separately; that is, for loss by death, by shrinkage in weight, and for loss in price by reason of the condition of the sheep caused by the negligent delay in transportation and in not providing facilities to feed and water them. On the whole amount of damages as found, the court allowed legal interest, as appears from the findings, from the date on which respondent made demand on appellant for damages for the injury and loss. It is not very clear, however, whether the court intended to allow interest from the date the sheep were delivered at Chicago, the place of destination, or from the date of demand by respondent. In our view, for the purposes of this decision, it makes no difference from what date the court computed interest, because the date from which it was computed, as appears from the record, was subsequent to the date of delivery of the sheep at their destination. The court entered judgment for the amount found as damages, with interest thereon as aforesaid, against appellant, and hence this appeal.
There are but two assignments of error argued — indeed, in the state of the record, no other assignment could be reviewed by this. The first error assigned and argued is the one that the court erred in permitting the second amendment of the complaint changing the place of destination of the shipment from Omaha to Chicago. This second amendment may have been caused by the statement contained in the appellant's answer to the first amended complaint, where-in *104
it denied that the destination of the sheep was Omaha, and alleged that the destination was in fact Chicago, not Omaha. And it may have been due to the fact that the plaintiff alleged Omaha in his first complaint, because that was the end of appellant's line of road. The change made by the amendment was not a change or departure from the original cause of action. (Casady v. Csaady (Utah),
The next and only other assignment of error relates to the allowance of interest by the court on the amount of damages found to have been sustained by the respondent. Appellant asserts that, this being an action for unliquidated damages sounding in tort, therefore interest cannot legally be allowed until the loss or damage is ascertained at the trial. It is further contended that such is the law of this state as appears from the decisions of this court. Before referring to our own decisions upon this question, we shall examine the question in the light of the authorities. While it is true that this is an action for a tort, and that the damages were unliquidated, the cause of action, nevertheless, arose out of a contract for carriage; that is, the reciprocal rights and duties arising out of the relation of carrier and shipper arose by virtue of a contract. Both parties insist on this in their pleadings, and such, in the nature of things, must be so. But, since appellant acted in the capacity of a common carrier, its duties and respondent's rights were governed by law, and, as there is no question presented for review in respect to the modification of the law by the contract, *105 we must treat this case, for the purposes of this decision, upon the law applicable to a common carrier of live stock regardless of any special contract. In view of the law, therefore, applicable to common carriers, where, through their negligence, a shipper suffers injury and damages to his property while in transit, or for negligent delay in transportation and delivering the same at the place of destination, what is the prevailing rule as to the amount of damages and the allowance of interest ?
In the case of New York, etc. Ry. Co. v. Estill,
"It is well settled as a general rule that the measure of damages in a case of a common carrier is the value of the goods intrusted to it for transportation, with interest from the time when they ought to have been delivered" — citing, among other authorities, Hutchinson on Carriers (2d Ed.) section 771, and 1 Sutherland on Damages, 629. And the court then proceeds further: "But when the matter appears to have been regulated by statute in the state, and the statute has been interpreted by its highest court, the regulation of the statute will be followed in the courts of the United States."
This was done in. that case, and interest was not allowed only because the Supreme Court of Missouri, under the statute of that state, held that interest is not permitted in case of unliquidated damages, except in special cases. The rule is also stated by the same court, in the case of Mobile M. Ry. Co. v. Jurey,
"The measure of damages in an action against a common carrier for loss of goods in transit is their value at the point of destination, with legal interest."
In the case of Wilson v. Troy,
"It is difficult to perceive any sound distinction between a case where the defendant converts or carries away the plaintiff's horse and a case where, through negligence on his part, the horse is injured so as to be valueless. There is no reason apparent for a different rule of damages in the one case than in the other."
Quite true that, notwithstanding the court here clearly points out that there can be no distinction in reason, the courts of New York, in deference to early decisions, still cling to the old theory that in certain cases it is for the jury to say whether interest shall be allowed or not. The question, however, is not relegated to the jury in cases like the one at bar, even in New York, as is manifest from the case of Dana v. Feidler,
If we assume the case at bar to be one commonly called a case of pure tort for injury to or destruction of personal property through ordinary negligence, still the respondent was entitled to interest according to the great weight of authority. In 22 Cyc. 1500, the following is stated to be the law upon the subject of allowing interest for torts to property:
"While it has been laid down in many cases that interest will not be allowed on damages recovered for torts to property unless the defendant has derived some benefit from his tort, or has been guilty of gross negligence, the general rule supported by the great weight of authority is that in cases of torts to property interest on the damages will be allowed as a part of the damages and as an approximately uniform *107
measure of compensation." This text is amply sustained by the following authorities: Woodland v. U. P. Ry. Co.,
While the foregoing by no means constitute all the authorities that could be cited upon the proposition, they are quite sufficient to show that the rule has become general, and that the allowance of interest in cases of torts to property is in harmony with the trend of modern authority. It is quite true that there are cases against this rule, but they are not, as we conceive, based on either good reason or good logic. The rule adhered to in the Kansas, and other like cases, as instances where interest is allowed if it appears that the person committing the wrong has to some extent been benefited from it, is, to our minds, manifestly unjust. In such cases interest is not allowed as compensation at all, but upon the sole ground that the person in the wrong must yield up the benefits derived by him to the one to whom they belong by reason of ownership. It is a matter of simple restoration of what has been withheld without adding anything for the use. It is only a mild way of offering a premium to withhold pay in such cases. Is there any reason why a person sustaining injury and damage to his property from the negligent act of another should not receive just what he has lost as nearly as this may be accomplished in a court of justice ? If a person's property is destroyed or damaged, why is he not entitled to be compensated to the full extent of its value in money so that he may replace the same with other property of a like nature ? If on the day of its injury or destruction he restores or replaces it with his own money, why is he not entitled to interest on that money to the date of repayment? *108
If he had loaned the money to some one, he certainly would be entitled to interest, and, if he borrowed it from some one, he would likely have to pay interest for its use. By being awarded legal interest, therefore, he is simply-placed in statu quo, and nothing short of this is full compensation, and that is just what the law aims to accomplish. Is it an answer to say that the damages are unliquidated, and therefore interest is not to be allowed ? This, to our minds, is no reason at all in case of injury to or destruction of property. In all such cases the party sustaining the loss is limited in his recovery to the market or actual value of the property at the time of the injury or destruction. Moreover, he must establish the amount of the loss by some fixed rule or standard, and the evidence must be confined thereto, and either the court or jury must find the value in accordance with the evidence. In the class of cases, therefore, where the damage is complete, and the amount of the loss is fixed as of a particular time, there is — there can be — no reason why interest should be withheld merely because the damages are unliquidated. There are certain cases of unliquidated damages where interest cannot be allowed. In all personal injury cases, cases of death by wrongful act, libel, slander, false imprisonment, malicious prosecution, assault and battery, and all cases where the damages are incomplete and are peculiarly within the province of the jury to assess at the time of the trial, no interest is permissible. But this is so because the damages are continuing and may even reach beyond the time of trial.
There are also other cases where interest is not allowed, such as where exemplary damages are permitted, where the statute fixes a penalty or determines the damages to be allowed. Of the latter class of cases,Oregon S. L. R. Co. v. Jones,
Counsel for appellant, however, rely on the case of Lester v. Min.Co.,
Counsel for appellant also cite some other cases. The California cases, as well as the Nevada case, are all based upon statutes which those courts construe as forbidding interest in the class of cases passed upon. Our statute (section 1241, Rev. St. 1898) is general, allowing interest in all cases at the legal rate, in the absence of an agreement. Moreover, with perhaps one or two exceptions, all the cases cited by counsel are readily distinguishable from the case at bar. In most of them the matter of the amount to be allowed as damages was not controlled by either a fixed time or by known standards of value, and are thus decided in accordance with the principles adopted by us in this case.
The true test to be applied as to whether interest should be allowed before judgment in a given case or not is, therefore, not whether the damages are unliquidated or otherwise, but whether the injury and consequent damages are complete and must be ascertained as of a particular time and in accordance with fixed rules of evidence and known standards of value, which the court or jury must follow in fixing the amount, rather than be guided by their best judgment in assessing the amount to be allowed for past as well as for future injury, or for elements that cannot be measured by any fixed standards of value. The same rule under the same conditions would of necessity apply to actions for breach of contract. This is illustrated by some of the California cases, as well as by the Nevada case cited by counsel for appellant. As the case at bar falls clearly within the rule where the amount is computed as of a fixed time, and in accordance with fixed rules of evidence as to value, the court did not err in computing, on the amount of damages found, interest at the legal rate.
The judgment therefore is affirmed, with costs.
*406McCARTY, C. J., and STRAUP, J., concur.