299 S.W. 687 | Tex. App. | 1927
"That at the time the defendant so took possession of said property and ousted plaintiff therefrom and withheld the possession thereof from plaintiff, the same had a market value for lease purposes upon the same terms and conditions as contained in the lease attached hereto of $3,000 per acre or $150,000 rental, and this plaintiff could have leased said property upon the same terms and conditions as contained in said lease for said sum and price, and could have and would have received said sum and price therefor upon said terms and conditions but for the conversion of same and wrongful acts of defendant as hereinabove shown, and because of said wrongful acts of defendant and its conversion of said property as hereinbefore shown this plaintiff has been damaged in said sum of money, to wit, $150,000.
"That said sum could have been received from a rental of said lands upon the same terms and conditions as are specified in the lease hereto attached, and this plaintiff would have had, in addition to said sum of money, the other rights and privileges and all of same contained in said lease, and is entitled thereto and entitled to have said rights established in him as to all furture uses of said lands as valid subsisting rights and conditions.
"Plaintiff prays that defendant be cited as the law directs to answer this petition, and that on trial hereof he have judgment for his said damages, and that by judgment of the court all rights and privileges contained in said lease be established in him and the full terms of said lease to be made effective as between this plaintiff and defendant as to all future uses of said land, and that said judgment order the payments of said sum of money to plaintiff by defendant, together with an accounting according to the terms of said lease, and that he have judgment *689 for interest, said damages, costs of suit, and for general relief."
This is the second appeal. The opinions upon the former appeal are reported as follows: Kishi v. Humble Oil Refining Company,
"We recommend that the judgment heretofore rendered be set aside and that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals reversing and remanding the cause be affirmed, with direction that the district court ascertain the amount of damages under the measure herein indicated and render judgment accordingly."
On this judgment mandate duly issued in part as follows:
"It is therefore ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals reversing and remanding be affirmed and the cause be remanded to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with the directions as contained in the opinion herein delivered."
When the case was again called for trial in the district court, under the mandate of the Supreme Court, appellant insisted that the remand was general and asked permission to try again all issues made by the pleadings. This request was refused, the trial court holding that the reversal was limited, and that only "the amount of damages" was involved. The evidence was confined to that issue, which was submitted to the jury by the following question, being the only question submitted, and answered as indicated:
"What do you find from a preponderance of the evidence to be the market value per acre, if any, of the plaintiff, K. Kishi's three-fourths undivided interest in the leasehold estate in the land described in plaintiff's petition, on January 23, 1923 ?
"State the amount you so find, if any, in figures."
The jury answered this issue:
"To question No. 1 we answer $562.50 per acre."
On this verdict the trial court determined the amount of appellees' damages by multiplying the value per acre, as found by the jury in the sum of $562.50, by 50 acres, the amount of land in which appellee owned an undivided three-fourths interest. Interest was allowed on this sum at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum from the date of the trespass to the date of judgment, making the total award $35,437.50, with interest thereon at a per cent. per annum from date of judgment.
The mandate of the Supreme Court did not leave open the issue of "proximate cause." The Supreme Court directly held and affirmed the holding (
"The entry made upon this land was unlawful, not because the company had no right to make entry, but because the entry made was in denial of Kishi's right. The character of the entry made was unlawful, and was thesole cause of the injury complained of. * * * This wrongful act destroyedthe value of Kishi's property, and the company should be required torespond in damages for the injury resulting from its unlawful act." (Italics ours.)
The Supreme Court withdrew its original judgment rendering judgment for Kishi on the basis of three-fourths of $1,000 per acre, as found by the trial court, on the ground that a three-fourths undivided interest might not be worth three-fourths of the value of the entire interest. On this trial appellee introduced the witnesses Lee Woodworth and E. E. McFarlane to testify as to *690 the market value of the leasehold interest in question. Beyond controversy these witnesses were qualified to testify as to the market value of the leasehold interest as a whole on the 50 acres in controversy. Appellant objected to the testimony of these witnesses on the ground:
"Because it does not appear that the witness was qualified to answer the question as to the market value of the undivided three-fourths interest in the property owned by plaintiff; further, because the question is not limited to the particular time in question; and further, because such is the mere opinion of the witness, not based on knowledge of sales of such interest."
On the issue of value of a lease on a three-fourths undivided interest on the land in controversy, the witness Woodworth testified:
"Prior to that time, or at the time, or about the time that this well came in, I don't think there was an undivided interest being sold in the Orange field in a lease where the owner of the other undivided interest was in possession and drilling a well on it."
Over appellant's objection as just given, this witness was permitted to testify that, in his opinion, the market value of a lease on a three-fourths undivided interest was:
"For three-fourths, I would say $2,200 or $2,300 for a three-quarter interest, per acre."
Over the same objection, the witness McFarlane testified:
"An undivided three-fourths interest, I estimate the value at $1,200 or $1,100; that is, per acre."
McFarlane's qualification on the issue of the lease of an undivided interest was as follows:
"I knew of a sale of a lease in the Orange oil field prior to that time, on 5 acres — Kishi-Lang. I believe that was an undivided interest. Yes; an undivided interest in 5 acres. I had the lease at one time, and it was sold after I gave it up, and I believe that was an undivided interest. I believe the royalty provided for was one-eighth on pumping wells, and one-sixteenth on flowing wells. I don't know the terms, only the price and acreage. As to whether that is the only sale of an undivided interest in a lease that I know of, well, I heard of that one that was testified about a few minutes ago by Mr. Woodworth. When you suggest that you are talking of my own knowledge — well, not in that vicinity at that time."
The testimony of these witnesses was admissible. On this issue, the rule is thus stated by 22 C. J. 698:
"A witness who is competent on real estate values as a whole may state the value of an undivided interest, although he is without experience in the sale of such interests."
See, also, In re Smith,
These authorities are not needed to sustain the ruling of the court, as this evidence was admissible under the opinion of the Commission of Appeals reversing and remanding this cause for new trial. It was there said (
"There is no proof in the record showing the value of this interest other than that the leasehold estate as a whole was the value of $1,000 per acre. From the proof of this value, we think the trial court could have inferred that an undivided three-fourths interest was three-fourths of the $1,000 per acre, and, had the trial court so found, we think this finding would have been binding on the appellate courts."
This is a direct holding that the trial court on proof of the value of a leasehold interest on the land as a whole could have found the value of a leasehold on an undivided three-fourths interest. If the trial court could make this conclusion on evidence relating to the value of the leasehold interest as a whole, then an expert witness, qualified to speak as to the value of the leasehold interest as a whole, could testify as to the value of a three-fourths undivided interest therein. Humble Oil
Refining Company v. McLean (Tex.Com.App.)
The court did not err in excluding the testimony offered by appellant, to the effect that the land was not of uniform value. The witnesses offered testified that they knew the location and situation of the 50 acres, its surroundings, and its possibilities as oil-bearing property, the development of the surrounding property, and other facts qualifying them to testify as to market value. That the land was not of uniform value was an element entering into its value as a whole, which was the issue before the jury. The evidence offered by appellant would have been without weight and could not have aided the jury in answering the question submitted, unless appellant's witness had gone further and fixed the value of the leasehold interest in question. The fact that the land was not of uniform value was a circumstance to be considered by an expert witness in fixing the value of the leasehold interest as a whole.
The court excluded evidence offered by appellant as to the relative value of the leasehold interest as a whole and an undivided interest therein. This ruling was not error for these witnesses did not propose to fix the value of a three-fourths undivided interest in the leasehold in question, nor did they relate their testimony to the relative value of the three-fourths undivided interest, as *691
compared with the whole interest. As presented, this evidence was nothing more than a circumstance to be considered by the expert witnesses in fixing' the value of the leasehold interest in question. But apart from that, the bill of exceptions does not show error. It goes no further than to show that the evidence was offered and excluded on appellee's objection, without showing the objections urged. This is insufficient. American National Insurance Company v. McKellar (Tex.Civ.App.)
The price paid for specific property in the Orange oil field was not admissible on the issue of market value of the leasehold interest in question, and that without reference to the relation that such specific property and its sale price bore to the property in question. Market value cannot be established by showing the sale price of other property. 10 Texas Southwestern Dig. Evidence, 113(5)(8). In Railway Company v. Scholz (Tex.Civ.App.)
"Nor is the value of lots in the same neighborhood admissible to show the value of the lot in question. But, if the witness testifying knows the value of surrounding property, he may consider the same in forming an estimate of the value of the property in controversy; and he may be questioned on cross-examination as to property in the same neighborhood similarly situated, to test his knowledge and judgment as to the value."
See, also, Crass v. Adams (Tex.Civ.App.)
The verdict of the jury was not ambiguous. Under the submission as made, the trial court properly ascertained appellee's damages by multiplying the value per acre of the undivided interest by the number of acres in controversy.
The trial court erred in allowing appellee interest on the damages found by the jury from the date of trespass to the date of judgment. This issue was not involved in appellee's petition. He stated a cause of action for interest only from the date of the judgment. By his pleadings he fixed the value of the leasehold estate destroyed by appellant's wrongful act at $150,000. Under this allegation, had the jury found the value of the leasehold interest to be in the sum pleaded, that is, in the sum of $150,000, the judgment could not have exceeded that sum, since that was the full measure of the relief prayed for, and there would have been no allegation upon which the trial court could have added interest to that sum. The rule is thus stated in Southern Gas Gasoline Engine Co. v. Adams Peters (Tex.Com.App.)
"When interest, as damages, is sought, it need not be specially pleaded to be recovered, but `the damages claimed in the pleadings must be laid in a sufficient amount to cover the loss at the time of the accrual of the cause of action, and the interest * * * from that date to the time of trial.' S. A. A. P. Ry. v. Addison,
In St. Louis Southwestern Ry. Co. v. Seale Jones (Tex.Com.App.)
"It is the well-settled law of this state that this item of interest between October 24, 1917, and April 18, 1921, is not interest eo nomine, but, if recoverable at all, can be so recovered only by way of damages. See Pecos N. T. Ry. Co. v. Rayzor,
In the absence of a special plea for interest as damages, the appellee in claiming his damages should have fixed a sum in excess of the alleged actual value of the property destroyed sufficient to include interest; that is, in addition to claiming the $150,000 actual damages, he should have claimed a sum sufficient to cover the interest. Had he done so and then prayed for interest as he, in fact, did, his petition would have sustained a judgment for interest from the date of the trespass. But as he had no such plea, his petition is insufficient to support the judgment for interest from the date of the trespass to the date of the judgment.
But had the pleading been sufficient, the judgment has no support in the jury's verdict. The jury fixed appellee's damages at $562.50 per acre. Under the mandate of the Supreme Court, "the amount of damages" was the only issuable fact. The trial court, with the consent and acquiescence of appellee submitted that issue to the jury in a form that excluded interest. It was the duty of appellee to request a charge submitting to the jury "the amount of damages" suffered by him. If he claimed interest from the date of the tort, he should have requested the submission of that issue. Having litigated the issue as to the "amount of damages," and having had a submission to the jury and a verdict thereon, it must be held that appellee waived the issue of interest from the date of the tort to the date of the judgment. This proposition was directly held, with the approval of the Supreme Court, in Southern Gas
Gasoline Engine Company v. Adams Peters, supra; Railway Company v. Seale Jones, supra; and Morriss v. Hesse (Tex.Com.App.)
Appellant has briefed, with much care and ability, propositions based upon the trial court's refusal to reopen the case on all issues involved in the pleadings. By these propositions, it asserts that under the evidence tendered (a) appellant committed no actionable wrong; (b) its acts were in good *692 faith and not tortious; (c) the facts proved did not constitute a trespass nor slander of title; (d) a written contract passing title to land does not become effective until delivered, and as appellant held a lease on the land under appellee which had not, in fact, lapsed, all its acts were justified and within the terms of its written lease; and (e) the damages claimed were not the proximate result of the wrongful acts alleged. These propositions, together with many others advanced on this appeal, were all involved on the former appeal and decided against appellant, both by us and the Commission of Appeals. Under the mandate of the Supreme Court, both the trial court and this court are without jurisdiction to entertain appellee's propositions. If error has been committed, it cannot be corrected by us, but only by the Supreme Court itself or the Commission of Appeals under authority of the Supreme Court.
From what we have said, the judgment of the trial court must be reformed and affirmed.
It is our order that the judgment of the trial court be reformed, and that appellee recover his damages in the sum of $28,125, the value of his undivided three-fourths interest in the leasehold estate on the 50 acres, with interest thereon at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum from the date of the judgment, and as so reformed the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.