70 Conn. 563 | Conn. | 1898
There is error on the plaintiff’s appeal. In any case where it is established that a party is entitled to recover damages for an injury done to his property without malice, the quantum of damages is to be computed as of the day the injury was done. In this case, it being conceded by the default that the plaintiff was entitled to have some amount of damages, the only question on which the court could decide was, how much? In respect to the ice, this question could be answered by ascertaining the number of tons there were in the houses on the day the fire took place, and its market price on that day. The court found the price to be, on the day of the fire, eighty cents per ton. But in ascertaining the number of tons for which the plaintiff is to be paid, the court, instead of taking the number of tons then in the houses, has taken only the number of tons which it estimated would remain on hand at the end of the next summer. This is error. The plaintiff is entitled to be paid for all the ice then in the ice-houses—less what was saved, if any—at its then market price. Parrott v. Housatonic R. Co., 47 Conn. 575; Regan v.New York & N. E. R. Co., 60 id. 124, 143; Hurd v. Hubbell, 26 id.* 389; Cook v. Loomis, ibid. 483; Oviatt v. Pond, 29 id. 479; 2 Sedgwick on Damages, 368. The defendant, having destroyed the plaintiff’s property on a certain day, cannot justly be exempted from payment by alleging, or even showing, that if it had not destroyed the property the plaintiff subsequently would have lost it in some other way.
The only assignment of error on the defendant’s appeal, though stated in various forms, is that the court erred in holding that the Act of 1897 (Chap. 220, Public Acts of 1897) applied to this case, and ordering the notice filed by
That Act, in its second section, provided that the judges of- the Superior Court should make such rules as to the manner of filing the notice required to be given, and as to the form thereof, as they should deem proper. At the time the trial of this cause was had no such rules had been made. And although, so far as the legislature was concerned, the Act went into effect on the 15th day of July, 1897, it was not operative, so far as to affect an action pending, for the reason that the rules had not then been made. We think, therefore, that there was a nominal error in ordering the motion filed by the defendant to be expunged.
There is error on the plaintiff’s appeal and a new trial is granted. There is also error in the order expunging the notice filed by the defendant; the order is reversed, and the notice should be restored to and be made a part of the files of the case.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.