Ft. Worth & R. G. Ry. Co. v. Chisholm

146 S.W. 988 | Tex. App. | 1912

Appellee, as plaintiff below, recovered a judgment against the appellant, Ft. Worth Rio Grande Railway Company, for the value of a jack killed by one of appellant's trains.

In submitting the measure of the plaintiff's damage, the court directed the jury to "award him such a sum of money as if paid in cash at this time would compensate plaintiff for his loss, taking into consideration the reasonable cash market value of the jack in question in the neighborhood it was killed, if killed, at the time it was killed." This, under repeated decisions, is not the measure of appellee's recovery. The action is a statutory action, and the measure of the recovery is fixed by the statute at the value of the stock injured or killed, which has often been interpreted to mean the market value. A proper charge was requested and refused.

It is replied by appellee that, since all the evidence related to market value, the charge could not have been misleading. But in view of the fact that under the charge interest could have been awarded as "compensation" (Railway v. Greathouse, 82 Tex. 104, 17 S.W. 834) while under the decisions interest is not recoverable in the statutory action, we have no means of knowing that the jury was not misled by the charge to appellant's prejudice. Besides, the judgment must be reversed for other errors, and we shall not pause to determine whether the particular charge was harmless, since it is erroneous and should not be given on another trial.

The special exception demanding to know the particular train which killed appellee's animal should have been sustained. It might be, and possibly is, very material that appellant should know which train killed the animal so as to procure the testimony of the proper train crew. This, however, becomes immaterial on another trial, since by reason of the trial already had appellant is as fully apprised of the details of the transaction as it could be in response to this exception.

There was error also in refusing to permit appellant to introduce in evidence the original sworn rendition of the property in question for taxes made by the appellee in January preceding the killing, and in refusing to require the appellee while a witness on the stand to answer whether or not he had rendered the jack for that year at *989 the sum of $200. This evidence was admissible as an admission by appellee and by way of impeachment or contradiction of his testimony; he having sworn that the animal was worth $1,200 and that its value was the same in January preceding. Boyer Lucas v. St. L., S. F. T. Ry. Co.,97 Tex. 107, 76 S.W. 441; Hengy v. M., K. T. Ry. Co., 109 S.W. 402; Crystal City U. R. Co. v. Isbell, 126 S.W. 47.

The sixth assignment is also sustained. The written statement signed by J. N. Higginbotham and R. W. Higginbotham, who sold the jack to appellee, to the effect that they considered him worth more than $475, the price received by them for him, was of course hearsay, and their answer that the same was true would not render such statement admissible in evidence. Besides, the deposition of the witness stated that "the animal was cheap at that price to a man who needed him." This was objected to because not the proper measure of damage, and the evidence should have been excluded.

For the errors discussed, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.