19 S.W. 1073 | Tex. | 1892
This case was before the court at a former term, and will be found reported in
Defendant pleaded a general denial and plea in reconvention, which was afterward withdrawn. The case was tried by a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment for plaintiff for the sum of $1329.94, and for a recovery of the land and privileges occupied by the defendant.
The appellant assigns as error the charge of the court upon the measure of damages, and particularly as to the damages from the 1st day of March, 1886, to the 20th day of February, 1887, upon which latter date the plaintiff re-entered, in legal contemplation, and put an end to the contract by the institution of suit, as was expressly decided upon the former appeal.
The appellant also submits in this connection the following assignment of error, viz.:
"The court erred in refusing the special charge of defendant, as follows: The jury are instructed not to consider any question of damages for breach of the contract, plaintiff not having shown himself entitled thereto. You will exclude from your consideration any rents or damages between March 1, 1886, and February 20, 1887."
The court charged the jury, in substance, that if the defendant had failed to fill the tank as required, to find damages in plaintiff's favor for breach of the contract, and that the measure of damages would be the value of the use and occupation of the land and privileges held by the defendant, from March 1, 1886, to February 20, 1887, and you will find as damages in his favor whatever said use and occupation is shown by the evidence to be worth, not to exceed the sum of $1000. That plaintiff was also entitled to recover his land, and further, the value of the use and occupation of the land and privileges, whatever the evidence shows the same to be worth, from February 20, 1887, up to the present time, not to exceed $1250.
"The privileges held by the defendant," in addition to the use of the *179 land, included the right to obtain water for its engines, etc., out of a pool of water belonging to the plaintiff, and which seems to have afforded the only permanent water accessible to the defendant in that locality. The jury rendered the following verdict: "We, the jury, find for plaintiff, and assess his damages at $800 from the 10th day of February, A.D. 1886, to the 20th day of February, A.D. 1887, and assess rents at $200 per year from the 20th of February, 1887, up to the present time. " The trial occurred below on the 15th day of October, 1889.
When this case was before the Supreme Court upon the first appeal by the present appellant, Judge Henry, in delivering the opinion, among other things, said:
"The institution of this suit was equivalent to such re-entry, but there having been none before, we do not think the plaintiff was entitled to recover for the use and occupation of the land before that date. The court erred in not sustaining defendant's exception to plaintiff's petition, insomuch as it sought a recovery for the use and occupation of the premises before suit brought, and in the charge given on the same subject. The defendant having agreed with plaintiff that it would, in consideration of his conveyance to it of the land and privileges in controversy, during the time it held them, fill his tank with water every seven days, not to exceed 5000 gallons, and to surrender the land and privileges when it ceased to do so, must be held liable in this action for the entire obligation. The agreement plainly provides that the filling of the tank should be the compensation paid for the use of the property conveyed, so long as the contract remained inforce. Upon the failure of the defendant to comply with the condition subsequent, we know of no reason why plaintiff should not, in pursuance of the terms of the contract, re-enter into possession of the land, and also recover damages for the failure to fill the tank as agreed up to the date of such re-entry, or to the institution of this suit."
We are of the opinion that the charge of the court below upon the measure of damages is not in entire harmony with the views of the Supreme Court upon that subject which we have just quoted. The charge is materially erroneous, as we conceive. The plaintiff was not entitled to recover "the value of the use and occupation of the land and privileges held by the defendant," under the contract prior to the 20th day of February, 1887. The contract was in force until that date, and the parties, in legal contemplation, were proceeding under it until the plaintiff elected to put an end to it at that time, as he had the right to do, on account of the breach thereof by the defendant. Until then, the defendant had the right to use and occupy the premises and privileges, and would only be liable for the contract price, or damages resulting to the plaintiff on account of its failure to discharge the consideration as fixed by the contract. The measure of damages prior to the institution of the suit upon the 20th day of February, 1887, would therefore be such actual *180 damages as the plaintiff may show that he sustained on account of the failure of the defendant "to fill his tank with water every seven days, not to exceed 5000 gallons," and which were the proximate result of such breach of the contract, in view of the surrounding circumstances of the case.
As to the measure of the damages after the the termination of the contract by the institution of the suit, we think that the court gave the jury the correct criterion for their guidance. This point was not expressly decided upon the former appeal, but the language of the opinion leaves no doubt that such was the conclusion of the Supreme Court. We fully coincide with that view of the subject. After the contract was terminated, the defendant held the premises and privileges without any legal right, and at its peril, and could not thereafter confine the plaintiff to the value of the original consideration. The defendant thereupon became bound to pay the reasonable value of the use of the premises and privileges, whatever that was, as shown by the evidence.
But upon the first point, as we have seen, the measure of damages would be different, because we can not assume that the value to the plaintiff of having "his tank filled," etc., "from the 10th day of February, 1886, to the 20th day of February, 1887," would be exactly the same as or equivalent to "the value of the use of the premises and privileges held by the defendant" during that time. It is true that the plaintiff granted these privileges for that consideration, but their real value may in fact have been worth a great deal more or a great deal less. A party can not sue upon an express contract and recover as upon a quantum meruit. If A rents B a dwelling house at $10 a mouth, which B fails to pay, A will be confined to the contract price, and can not recover a different sum upon proof of the market or reasonable value of the rent. 3 Suth. on Dam., 110.
The verdict of the jury did not specify the items of the first finding; but as they had been misdirected upon the point by the charge of the court, they were doubtless misled thereby as to the proper criterion for assessing the damages; and the error of the court became specially prejudicial to the defendant, in view of the evidence offered by the plaintiff of the value of the enjoyment of the land and privileges before suit.
We do not think that the court erred in refusing to allow the special instruction of the defendant, quoted above, in the shape in which it was presented, but it was sufficient to have called the attention of the court to the error in the general charge.
It is also assigned as error, that the court should not have admitted so much of the following testimony as involves the opinion of the witness as to value, over the objections of the defendant, viz.:
"Plaintiff testified to the failure of the defendant to comply with the condition requiring the tank to be filled once a week. During the years *181 1886 and 1887 the defendant used from 20,000 to 30,000 gallons of water per day. Since that time they have not used so much, probably 10,000 to 15,000 gallons per day. The years 1886 and 1887 were very dry, and water was a great object with everybody. The streams over which the railroad runs were all dry, from Goldthwaite on the east to my place, and from my place to Ballinger on the west. Knowing the amount of water taken and used by the company and all facts surrounding their use of the land and water privileges, I think that the reasonable rental value of same was $1000 per annum for the year 1886, and the rental value of the same was reasonably worth $1000 per year for each year since that time up to the present time. The land taken up by the house, pump, and coal shed of defendant amounts to about three-quarters of an acre, and their pipe is laid from the pump across my field about 1500 feet to the company's tank on the railway track. I do not know of any market value of said water privileges, as this is the only case of the kind I know of."
Cross-examination: "Hord's Creek, that runs through my place, and on which the tank is located, runs dry sometimes and stands in pools, but the pool at which the tank is located never goes dry. It is fed by underground springs. The water that was pumped from the pool would not bring it lower than two or three inches, which would fill again in a few hours."
The above extract is from the brief of the appellant. The appellee has not appeared in this court by brief or argument. The testimony of the plaintiff in reference to the value of the rights and privileges in question was objected to by counsel for defendant, upon "the grounds that no market rental value had been shown, and that in the absence of a market rental value, the witness was not entitled to give an opinion." We think that the court did not err in overruling the objections and admitting the evidence, under the facts and issues in this case. Gonzales College v. McHugh, 21. Texas, 257; Carroll v. Welch,
Where the article, privilege, or property in question has no market value, or is not shown to have any, then other means or standards, in the very necessity of the case, must be resorted to in order to ascertain its real value — the intrinsic qualities of the thing, its uses, and any facts which would naturally affect the mind of the party buying or selling in determining the price to be asked or given, and relevant to the question of value; and the authorities just cited sustain the proposition, that a nonexpert witness may give his opinion upon subjects which do not require special skill and learning, and especially so when he has first stated the facts upon which he predicates his opinion. His opinion, however, is admitted only as such, and the jury are to determine how much weight it is entitled to, in view of the other evidence adduced. Abb. Tr. Ev., 307; 2 Suth. on Dam., 375, 378, 798. *182
"Where the amount of rent or compensation for the use has not been fixed by the agreement, it is a quantum meruit claim; the landlord is only entitled to what it was reasonably worth, and this must be ascertained by the jury upon evidence. * * * The opinions of witnesses having knowledge of the particular subject are generally held admissible on questions of value." 3 Suth. on Dam., 110, 112; Railway v. Maetze, 2 Willson's C. C, sec. 636. The witness was conversant with the land and privileges and all of "the facts bearing upon the value of their use." Railway v. Maetze, supra. Of course, the proof of the value of the use and occupation prior to the termination of the contract, as already explained, ought to have been excluded, had it been objected to on that ground.
The judgment as rendered in the court below may perhaps admit of the construction, as claimed by the appellant, that it awards to the plaintiff "the steam pump and boiler and iron pipe," etc., erected by the defendant upon the land in dispute. Of this part of the judgment the appellant complains as a fundamental error, as the issue was not mooted in the court below.
In view of another trial, we need only to say, that whether the plaintiff should recover the structures or appliances which the defendant has placed upon the land, will depend upon the character of their use and annexation to the soil, which will be a mixed question of law and fact. If there has been no permanent annexation, they would still be removable fixtures and not a part of the land. Tied. on Real Prop., sec. 2; Moody v. Aiken,
On account of the error in the court's general charge as before indicated, the judgment should be reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed and remanded.
Adopted June 7, 1892.