This is a forcible detainer case. The appeal is by Mrs. Hunt from a judgment of the County Court at Law, upon a special issue verdict, in which Mrs. Weems recovered possession of a two-room apartment, located at 2002 Red River Street in Austin, and a money judgment for $250 damages against Mrs.' Hunt and the sureties upon her appeal bond from the justice to the county court.
The judgment of the County Court is final in so far as it awarded possession of the premises to Mrs. Weems. Consequently issues raised affecting that portion of the judgment will not be considered. Art. 3992, R.C.S.; St. Matthews Methodist Church v. Watrous, Tex.Civ.App.,
Mrs. Weems made no claim for rents or damages in the justice court. In the County Court she sought damages for $250 attorney’s fees and $750 for deprivation of the use of the property pending appeal to the County Court under Rule 752, Texas Rules Civil Procedure (former Art. 3990, R.C.S., without here pertinent change in wording), which authorizes judgment against appellant and sureties upon the appeal bond “for withholding * * * possession of the premises during the pendency
This instruction was objected to upon the ground (inter alia) that mental pain and suffering was an improper element of damages for withholding possession. We sustain this objection. No physical violence was involved, and no injury other than the retention of possession of the property. Only actual damages were alleged or shown. In his class of cases it has been uniformly held in this state that mental pain and suffering do not constitute a proper element of actual damages. A case on all fours, in principle, with that at bar, is Williams v. Yoe,
This case has been cited and followed upon this point many times, and the holding has never been questioned.
Mrs. Weems is entitled to recover upon the appeal bond her actual damages of the character specified in Rule 752, within the jurisdictional amount of the County Court. See Scroggins v. Hammond, Tex. Civ.App.,
The rule expressly authorizes recovery of reasonable expenses of prosecuting the cause in the County Court. Attorney’s fee is a proper item of such expense. Shotwell v. Crier, Tex.Civ.App.,
In view of another trial we will not discuss the evidence, or the elements which may be included within the recoverable actual damages. The general rules regarding such damages for wrongful withholding possession of real property, where no physical violence is involved, apply.
The trial court’s money judgment is reversed and the cause remanded. The award of possession to Mrs. Weems is undisturbed.
Reversed and remanded in part and in part undisturbed.
