delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff in error originally instituted this action before a Justice of the Peace, from the judgment of whom, in her favor for $90.00, she appealed to the County Court of Mesa County. At the trial in that court, at the conclusion of her evidence, a non suit was entered, from which judgment she brings error.
The facts in the case, as nearly as they can be determined from the defective record and the unsatisfactory brief of plaintiff in error, appear as follows: The plaintiff is the owner of a tract of land in Mesa County, upon a part of which was located a vineyard. A fire was started upon the land of the defendant, immediately adjoining, by the defendant, or her servants, which fire was alleged to have been permitted negligently to escape in the wake of a strong wind to'the vineyard of plaintiff, where it destroyed and injured the vines upon approximately two and one-half acres.
• At the trial, the negligence and liability of the defendant were prima fade established, but the court rejected or struck out the testimony of all the witnesses by whom the plaintiff sought to prove damages, on the ground that the witnesses were not shown to be competent to testify as to
The plaintiff sought to establish two elements of damage: First, the value of the crop of grapes that was destroyed by fire; and second, the permanent injury to the land occasioned by the fire. The correct measure of damage for the first element was the value of the crop at the time and place of destruction. Colo. Con. L. & W. Co. v. Hartman,
In the case at bar, the plaintiff established the number of vines that had been destroyed, and an estimate of the average yield per vine, with the approximate market value of other grapes upon maturity that same year, evidently in an effort to follow the third method of proof mentioned in the Hartman case, supra. But there was an entire absence of any proof of the cost of maturing, harvesting and marketing. In addition, there was testimony that, subsequent to the fire, and prior to the time of maturing, some of the grapes and vines which were not injured by the fire had been destroyed by frost. It was not shown whether the burned portion would have suffered the same fate, in all probability, had it escaped the fire, but the testimony resulted in leaving the question as to the probability of the crop maturing at all in a decidedly uncertain state. Under these circumstances, the only value the jury could have determined from the evidence before them was the value of the destroyed crop at maturity, which would not have been the proper measure of damages, as seen in the cases cited above.
As to the second element of damage, the plaintiff herself and three other witnesses were introduced to establish the value of the land immediately before and immediately after the fire, the difference between which values was a proper element in the measure of damages. Mustang Co. v. Hissman,
' The rule as to the competency of witnesses to state an opinion concerning the value of property is stated in Butsch
As in that case, it is clear that no one of the witnesses called by plaintiff for this purpose, qualified as an expert, and it is equally clear that the testimony of all three of them on this 'point was incompetent, as not being based upon an adequate knowledge of the property in. controversy or its valúe, or the means of forming an intelligent opinion.
It is said in Rimmer v. Wilson,
In the case of Insurance Co. v. Ross Lewin,
It is quite evident that the trial court, in excluding the testimony of the witnesses as to the value of the land, did not abuse the discretion vested in him, and this court, consequently will not disturb his ruling.
It may well be said in this case as in Tripp v. Fiske, supra: “So meagre and unsatisfactory is the evidence
Judgment affirmed.
Garrigues, C. J., and Denison, j., concur.
