44 Fla. 557 | Fla. | 1902
This-cause was referred by the court to two of its commissioner®, Mless. Maxwell and Glen, who report that the judgment ought tó be reversed unless a remittitur is entered for the sum of $25.00.
Defendant in error sued plaintiff in error in the Circuit Court of Marion county, obtained a verdict for $75.00 damage and $25.00 attorneys’ fees, upon which judgment was duly entered, from which this writ of error was taken. / '
The first error assigned questions the pi*opriety of the ruling upon a demurrer to the declaration. The abstract, which was npt excepted to-, states that “the declaration in this cause was in damages for the negligent killing by plaintiff in error, of a cow belonging to defendant in error of the value of $100; that written demand had been made on J. H. ’Congleton, the stock claim agent of the said corporation, for the value of said cow at $100, which amount has never been paid, together with a prayer for reasonable attorney fees incurred in collecting same by suit, to the plaintiff’s damage $350*” The only contention ■ made here in support of this assignment iis that the declaration shows that the court had no jurisdiction over the subject-matter, of the' action, for the reason that the plaintiff’s demand does no exceed $10!0. The .declaration does not claim double damages on account of the failure of the defendant to fence its tracks as required by statute, but simply the value of the cow by reason of the alleged negligent killing and attorney’s' fees. This value is alleged in the declaration to be $100, and reasonable attorneys’ fees were also claimed. The two items mentioned exceed in
The twelfth assignment is based upon the ruling denying defendant’s motion in arrest. This motion was based on the ground that upon the face of the declaration the Circuit Court liad po jurisdiction because the amuont involved did not exceed $100, and upon the furthler ground that it appeared from the evidence that the court had not jurisdiction because the amount involved did not exceed $100. What has been said as to the first assignment is applicable here, and it is only necessary to add that according to the evidence the cow was killed March 20, 1896, was proven to be worth $100, and the value of the attorneys’ fees claimed was $50, The trial was had in the latter part of 1896. The jury evidently found
The second assignment is based upon the action of the court in admitting evidence as to the amount of a reasonable attorney, fee to be allowed plaintiff. In- this the court below was in error. The cause of action alleged was a negligent killing. The ¡declaration did not allege, nor did the proof show, whether the defendant had or had not complied with the provisions of Chapter 4069, acts of 1891, entitled “an act requiring railroad Companies to fence their tracks, and providing remedies ar^hinst them for' failure to do so.” This act requires railroad companies and persons operating railways to fence their tracks in the manner therein pointed qut, and on their failure to do ¡so, or to maintain them after being constructed, authorizes recovery of ¡double damages and attorneys’ fees against them by the owners of live stock horses and cattle killed by railway engines or cars. They are required to fence at least one twenty-second part of their ¡entire lines of road each and every month after sixty days from the passage of the act. Section 6 provides that “where any. railroad company, person or persons owning or operating the same are complying with the provisions- of this act "shall only be liable for actual value of all stock or cattle or horses that may be killed or. injured by the operations of its engines or cars, including all costs, expenses and reasonable attorney’s fees, which sums 'shall be a lien and collectable as provided in this act.” It is claimed by defendant in error that this section authorized the recovery in this ease, but we do not so construe it. Under the legislation in
The third assignment of error is based upon an alleged motion to strike certain testimony. No such motion appears from the abstract to have been made or ruled! upon.
The fourth assignment of error is based upon the rub. ing admitting in evidence over objection a copy of an ordinance of the city of Ocala, certified by the city clerk. The cow was killed within the limits of that city, and the ordinance prohibited the running of locomotives or trains of cars within the city limits at a greater rate of speed than four miles per hour. Only two of the objections mjade to the introduction of this document are here urged. They are, first, because the paper offered was not the best evidence'; secondly, because not relevant to the issues. The argument under these objections is that the ordinance could be provided only by production of the original, or the book in which it was registered, and that there was no allegation in the declaration that the accident Wais caused by running the train at a rate of speed prohibited by city ordinance. As to the latter branch of the argument it is sufficient to say that it does not appear from the abstract that the declaration did not set forth the city ordinance and allege that the negligence consisted in running the train at a rate of speed prohibited thereby. As to the first branch of the argument, the court is of opinion that the ordinances of. municipal corporations are public records (Rev. Stats. Sec. 674; Thompson on Corporations, Sec. 7734; St. Louis Ohs
The fifth assignment of error complains that the court admitted in evidence a copy of a written notice to the de fendanfs stock claim agent of the killing of the plaintiff’s cow demanding $100 as her value. The action being based upon the defendant's common law liability for a negligent killing, and not upon the liability imposed by the fence statutes, this evidence was irrelevant, but it was not objected to on that ground. The objection made was that the original was the best evidence. This objection was untenable. Pensacola & Atlantic R. R. Co. v. Braxton, 34 Fla. 471, 16 South. Rep. 317.
The sixth assignment of error is based upon the denial of a motion made by defendant at the conclusion of the evidence and before argument, to direct the jury to render a verdict in favor of defendant. This motion was renewed at the conclusion of the argument of counsel and denied, and this ruling is assigned as the seventh error The grounds of this motion questioned the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support a verdict for plaintiff. Section 1088 Revised Statutes requires trial judges to charge the
The eight and ninth assignmients of error are predirated upon the action of the court in giving and refusing •certain charges. These instructions though set forth in the abstract are not accompanied by a statement of the substance of the testimony upon which they were based,
The only questions sought to be raised under the re; maining assignments of error relate to the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict. These questions can only be*considered when all the evidence is presented by an evidentiary bill properly made up, and abstracted, where the case is determined upon abstracts as is the case here. As before stated, the abstract does not purport to contain the substance of an evidentiary bill, but only of the ordinary bill, and, therefore, these assignments can not be' considered.
It only remains to determine the character of the judgment to te entered. We have determined that the court avrs in error only in allowing the recovery of attorneys’ fees. These fees are fixed by the verdict and the judgment at twenty-five dollars. The judgment to that extent is erroneous. Following the rule announced in Florida Ry. & Nav. Co. v. Webster, 25 Fla. 394, 5 South. Rep. 714; Arnau v. First Nat. Bank, 36 Fla. 395, 18 South. Rep. 790, and Turner v. Adams, 39 Fla. 86, 21 South. Rep. 575, we will give the defendant in error the option to retain his judgment if’he Ay ill enter in the Circuit Court a remittitur of twenty-five dollars as of the ¡date of the judgment. The order will be that the judgment of the Circuit Court stand as of the date it was rendered if the defendant in error enter the remittitur indicated, but failing to do this within thirty days after the mandate of this court is received by the clerk of the Circuit Court, the judgment is reversed and a new trial granted. Defendant in error miust pay the costs of this court.