delivered the opinion of the Court,
Nearly a century ago,'a Texas attorney argued that the rule at issue hi this case made it “cheaper to kill a mare in Texas than it is to cripple her.”
American Alternative Insurance Corporation (AAIC) says no and the court of appeals below agreed. Relying upon holdings of other Texas courts of appeals and cases from this Court, they contend that Texas law distinguishes between partial destruction and total destruction of personal property, allowing loss-of-use damages for the former but not for the latter. J & D counters that this distinction belies common sense and is out of step with the majority trend in other jurisdictions permitting loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases.
We agree with J & D and, therefore, reverse the court of appeals’ judgment and render judgment for J & D.
I
The relevant facts are undisputed. J & D is a towing company owned by Robert Davis in Huntsville, Texas. In 2011, J & D owned only one tow truck, a 2002 Dodge 3500 purchased in April 2011 for $18,500. On December 29, 2011, Davis went to repossess a vehicle. As he drove down Highway 75, a car struck the passenger side of his truck. Both parties in this case stipulated that the negligence of the driver of that car, Cassandra Brueland, was the sole proximate cause of the accident. The parties also stipulated that the accident rendered the truck a total loss.
After the accident, J & D began to negotiate a settlement with Brueland’s insurer. On January 12, 2012, Brueland’s insurer offered to settle. J & D’s property-damage claim for $10,299.12 if J & D retained the truck or $16,715.61 if the insurer retained the truck. Believing the truck was worth between $19,000 and $20,000 at the time of the accident, J & D refused to accept the settlement offer. On February 29, 2012, Brueland’s insurer settled with J & D for $25,000, the policy limit for property damage. Around March 8, .2012, J & D used that money to purchase another truck and resumed its business.
J & D then,filed a claim with AAIC under an underinsured-motorist policy issued by AAIC, requesting compensation for the loss of use of the truck. He claimed that the funds from the settlement with Brueland’s insurer were insufficient to comрensate him for these damages, rendering Brueland an underinsured motorist. At the time of the accident, the AAIC policy provided:
We will pay damages which an “insured” is legally entitled to recover from the owner or operator of an “uninsured motor vehicle” because of “bodily injury” sustained by an “insured” or “property damage” caused by an “accident”. The owner’s or operator’s liability for these damages must arise out of the ownership, maintenance or use of the “uninsured motor vehicle”.
AAIC denied the claim and cancelled the policy.
J & D thereafter sued AAIC to recover “any and all loss of use damages to which [it] may be entitled.” J & D presented to a jury various calculations of the loss-of-use damages J & D claimed it incurred between December 29, 2011, and March 8, 2012. Aggregating the totals of those calculations, J & D asked the jury to award
AAIC presented no evidence at trial. Instead, AAIC challenged the availability of loss-of-use damages in its motion for summary judgment and motion for an instructed verdict. AAIC’s argument may be summarized as follows: (1) its underin-sured-motorist policy only offers to pay J & D damages that J & D is “legally entitled” to recover; (2) Texas law does not permit recovery of loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases; (3) it is undisputed that J & D’s truck was. totally destroyed; therefore, (4) J & D is not legally entitled to recover loss-of-use damages; and (5) AAIC is not obligated to pay under the policy. The trial- court denied both motions.
At the conclusion of the trial, the only question submitted to the jury concerned the proper amount of loss-of-use damages. AAIC again objeсted on the ground that Texas law does not permit loss-of-use damages in total-destruction- cases, and the trial court, overruled that objection. The jury awarded J & D $28,000. After the jury returned its -verdict, the trial court held a brief hearing to determine the amount of the credit to which AAIC was entitled in light of the settlement with Brueland’s insurer. The court concluded that J & D’s truck was worth $19,500 at the time of the accident, and thus AAIC was entitled to a credit of $5,500 — the amount of the settlement with Brueland’s insurer that did not cover the value of the truck but instead partially compensated J & D for its loss-of-use damages. AAIC filed a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, not dispúting the amount of the damages award, but raising only the same legal arguments it made -in its prior motions. The trial court denied that motion and entered judgment for J & D in the amount of $22,500 plus interest and court costs.
AAIC appealed and raised three issues: (1) whether Texas law on total-destruction cases permitted the trial court to submit the loss-of-use-damages question to the jury; (2) whether the trial court correctly denied AAIC’s JNOV motion; and (3) whether J & D could recover under the policy “where its legally recoverable damages do not exceed the limits of [Brue-land’s] liability coverage.” Aside from its position that it is not obligated to pay any amount of loss-of-use damages, AAIC did not challenge the amount of damages awarded- to- J & D. AAIC’s arguments under each of the issues presented distilled down to AAIC’s position that Texas law does not permit loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases. The court of -appeals agreed, holding that the trial court abused its discretion in submitting the question- to the jury and erred in denying the JNOV motion.
J & D then appealed to this Court, raising an argument that sounds in fairness and common sense: Texas law permits loss-of-use damages in partial-destruction cases, and the same should be true in total-destruction cases. The court of appeals’ distinction,'J & D claims, is not only illogical but is also against the great weight of jurisdictions that have eliminated that archaic distinction. For its part, AAIC reprises the purely legal argument it made to the court of appeals: Because J & D’s truck was totally destroyed and
We reverse and render judgment for J & D.
II
We begin with first principles. Compensation is the chief purpose of damages awards in tort cases.
Actual damages may be either direct or consequential.
Loss-of-use damages are often appropriately couched in terms of consequential damages.
Where personal property has been only partially destroyed, Texas law is clear as to direct and loss-of-use damages. The default rule for measuring direct damages is “the difference in the market value immediately before and immediately after the injury- to such property at the placé where the damage was occasioned.’'
A
The caselaw of this Court bears the indelible mark of the story of Texas. It is a story of grit and perseverance. A courageous but ill-fated stand at the Alamo,
This Court disagreed with the defendant and affirmed the judgment, explaining that the plaintiff could have recovered those damages under the initial pleading. The Court began by attributing “all the embarrassment thrown around this case” to “an attempt to engraft the common-law forms of action upon our system, when it is so clear, and has been so often announced in judicial opinions, that [these forms are not] known to our forum.”
After Pridgin, the Court frequently revisited the principle of full and fair compensation through loss-of-use damages. For example, in Craddock v. Goodwin, we repeated the maxim that “[t]he thing to be kept in view is that the party shall be compensated for the injury done.”
We think no more equitable rule can be adopted in determining the plaintiffs’ actual damages than to allow in any event, if plaintiffs made out a case for actual damages, an amount not less than the value of the property, with interest to the time of trial; but the jury should also take into consideration the value of the'use or hire of the animals seized for the whole time of which the plaintiffs have been deprived of them, and allow such an amount for actual damages as will compensate the plaintiffs, whether computing it by the rule of interest or that of hire or value of the use, as may seem to them most adequate to that result.51
More recently, in Luna v. North Star Dodge Sales, Inc., we squarely addressed the measure of loss-of-use damages in the context of a deceptive-trade-practice claim.
. At the brоadest level of abstraction, this line of cases is instructive concerning our approach to loss-of-use damages where personal property has been taken — permitting loss-of-use damages flows directly from the commonsense understanding that adequate compensation for an injury depends upon the nature of the property at issue and the circumstances of the case. These cases, however, do not directly address the more specific question of wheth
Perhaps it is for that reason that AAIC and the court of appeals below invoked our 1950 decision In Pasadena State Bank v. Isaac, which set forth guidance on the proper damages measure in partial-destruction cases.
We reversed and rendered judgment for the Bank for the full amount of $979.39.
That holding, however, is not why AAIC and the court of appeals have invoked
' From that discussion in the partial-destruction context, AAIC and the court of appeals infer a complete bar of loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases.
B
Several Texas courts of .appeals have weighed in on the availability of loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases, however, resulting in divergent decisions. AÁIC and the court of appeals below rightly emphasize that most courts of appeals to consider this question have held that loss-of-use damages are unavailable. The story of the mare that perished at the hand (or pistol) of Panhandle Pete appears to be one of the earliest Texas cases to employ this rule,
The development of that rule has not escaped criticism from other courts of appeals, however. In 1996, the Third Court of Appeals in Mondragon v. Austin referenced in dicta the problem with the assumption that an owner of totally destroyed personal property does not suffer loss-of-use damages because the property can be replaced immediately.
Then, in 2014, the Second Court of Appeals broke rank with the majority of the courts of appeals, holding that “loss of use damages should be available when the claimant under an insurance policy cannot replace destroyed property because of the insurer’s unreasonable delay in paying the claim.”
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We, therefore, find ourselves at a crossroads. We have never expressly permitted or prohibited loss-of-use damages where personal property has been totally destroyed, but our general loss-of-use-damages caselaw emphasizes full and fair compensation, which ostensibly cuts in favor of permitting these damages in total-destruction cases. Conversely, most Tex-as courts of appeals have opted for a prohibition of losS-of-use damages, over the compelling dissenting view that such a prohibition is nonsensical and inequitable. Having concluded that the “exact question presented here has never been decided by this Court” and that the courts of appeals
Ill
ft is abundantly clear from both early caselaw and early legal treatises that a majority of jurisdictions within the United States permitted loss-of-use damages in partial-destruction cases, but prohibited loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases.' Why that prohibition existed is not as obvious, though some courts referenced the common-law action of trover. But regardless of the theoretical underpinnings of the ■ prohibition, recent caselaw and treatises have shifted away from the prohibition. And the reasons for the shift appear to coalesce around one simple point: The owner of totally destroyed personal property may suffer loss-of-use damages to the same extent that the owner of partially destroyed personal property may suffer loss-of-use damages — permitting the damages in the latter'ease and not the former is, therefore, illogical.
A
In the early years of the, United States, the availability of loss-of-use .damages turned on whether personal property, was partially destroyed or totally destroyed. Beginning in the dark era of slavery, that trend grew more pronounced in cases where the destruction of horses and automobiles disrupted their owners’ businesses. Early treatises also followed this trend, -recognizing and supplementing the agreement in the caselaw.
1
The initial .trend of prohibiting loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases spanned virtually every scenario in the United States .where damage to personal property could result in economic damages, from slaves in the antebellum period, to horses, and ultimately, to automobiles. Perhaps one of the earliest, and most deplorable, examples involved a man named Israel. ■ The Scriptures speak of Moses— who would later become a leader of the children of Israel
It is now laid down as the general rule, that where trespass is brought for the destruction of personal property, and no circumstances of aggravation are shown, the action is to be regarded as one of trover; and the value of the property, with interest on such value, furnishes the rule for the measure of damages; because, if the owner of the property gets the vаlue of the property destroyed, and interest, this is, in effect, a sale of the property to the defendant, at the price fixed by the jury.108
In other words, the defendant "would not be liable for the hire” because “he had paid the market price” of Israel.
The prohibition of loss-of-use damages was also on prominent display in cases where workhorses were killed, interrupting their owners’ businesses.
A New York court vacated the loss-of-use award, reasoning that “the legal and natural damages [did] not extend beyond” the value of the horse.
And with the historic shift from horse power to horsepower, it is unsurprising that the prohibition of loss-of-use damages had its most common application where automobiles were totally destroyed.
2
Various treatises in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries recognized this trend permitting loss-of-use damages only in partial-destruction cases. Theodore Sedg-wick’s editions of his Treatise on the Measure of Damages provide a consistent example. In the eighth edition, section 432 states that “the value of the property, with interest, furnishes the measure of damages.”
Where an injury to plaintiffs property which does not cause its total destruction results in his losing the use of it for a time, either because it is rendered unfit for use or because he is temporarily deprived of the possession of it, he may in addition to the deterioration in value recover the value of the use of it during the time he lost the use, and the expense of its maintenance, if he was at such expense. But if the plaintiff recovers the ful value of the property, as for a complete destruction, he cannot also recover the value of the use.134
Therefore, if there were any doubt as to whether Sedgwick’s treatise could be read to permit loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases, section 435a eliminated that doubt.
Sedgwick’s view, in addition to aligning with the caselaw at the time, coincided with the views of many other early treatise authors limiting the availability of loss-of-use damages to partial-destruction cases.
George Field’s 1876 treatise states that where personal property is destroyed, “the measure of damages is the value of the property with interest, and not the profits which might have been made on
Professor Charles- McCormick’s 1935 treatise similarly provides that “[w]hen personal property is wrongfully destroyed, the normal measure of damages is its value at the time of destruction, with interest.”
And even as late as 1961, Professor Howard deck’s treatise dedicated one section to “Deprivation .of-Use,” which expressly forbade loss-of-use damages, in total-destruction cases.
The uniformity of this view should not be overstated, however, because the Restatement (First) of Torts appears to endorse loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases. To be sure, the Restatement distinguishes' between partial and total destruction of personal property.
Where a person is entitled to a judgment for the conversion of a chattel or the destruction of any legally protected interest in land or other thing, the damages include
(a) the exchange value of the subject • matter or the plaintiffs interest therein at the time and place ofthe conversion or destruction, or a different value where that is necessary to give just compensation, and
(b) the amount of any further loss suffered as the result of the deprivation, and
(c) interest from the time at which the value is feed or compensation for the loss of use,147
Section 927(b) could be plausibly read to account for a circumstance where a plaintiff suffered loss-of-use damagés beyond the amount of the fair market value of the personal property — that is, “further loss” suffered. A comment to section 927(b), however, states that “[t]here can be no recovery for the value of the use of the subject matter after the point of time at which the plaintiff has feed the loss, since in the measure of damages is included interest on the subject matter as well as damages for losses proximately resulting from the loss of use.”
B
The strength of this trend necessarily begs the question why. < Why would a trend permitting loss-of-use damages in partial-destruction, but not total-destruction, cases devеlop? Some courts have speculated without much elaboration that this trend was a-result of the common-law action of trpver.
1
The action of trover is the ancestor of the action of conversion.
Numerous facets of trover made it a plaintiffs preferred remedy. One such aspect was that trover avoided “wager of law,” a form of licensed perjury that disadvantaged honest plaintiffs who sued dishonest defendants.
But the most important aspect of troVer for our purposes was the theory upon which recovery was based. The theory of trover was that the defendant had appropriаted the plaintiffs chattel, for which the defendant must pay.
Thus, when some courts suggest that trover was the foundation for the early prohibition of loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases, that suggestion undoubtedly had purchase in early cases, particularly those that expressly mentioned trover. Israel’s story is a prime example, because there the Supreme Court of Alabama stated “where trespass is brought for the destruction of personal property, ... the action is to be regarded as one of trover.”
Nonetheless, understanding the prohibition of loss-of-use damages as necessarily
2
We think the more plausible explanations for the early prohibition of loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases lie in a panoply of judicial assumptions and ultimately the growing tide of common-law development.
One early judicial assumption centered on judicial competency and the speculative nature of loss-of-use damages. In the mid-nineteenth century, Sedgwick’s treatise described recovery of special damages as “doubtful” because of “the question as to remoteness or consequentiality of damages.”
In an action to recover damages for an injury to property by reason of the negligence of the defendant, the plaintiff can not recover anything on account of his inability to instantly supply himself with other property in lieu of that injured or destroyed. Such damages are too remote to be the subject of judicial ascertainment.170
Courts in this camp thus assumed that ascertainment of such damages was necessarily outside the bailiwick of the judiciary.
Another assumption was that awarding loss-of-use damages in addition to fair
Yet another assumption was that, in total-destruction cases, a plaintiff could immediately replace the destroyed property and, thus, did not suffer any loss-of-use damages.
Finally,’ while all of these assumptions played roles in the early movement against loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases, perhaps the greatest influence on the development of that prohibition was the creation of common law on this issue in the United States. Time and again, many of these early cases took a monkey-see-monkey-do approach, replacing independent reasoning with string citations to earlier cases and treatises without further elaboration.
c
Since the mid-twentieth century, however, there has been a sea change in both easelaw and legal treatises on the availability' of loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases.- The result is a clear consensus that loss-of-use damages are available in total-destruction eases.
1
In assessing the current jurisprudential landscape on this question, we are mindful not only of the substantial number of courts that have permitted loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases, but also of the consistently uniform reasons these courts have expressed for doing -so.
The numbers are compelling. By our count, sixteen high courts around the country and the District of Columbia Court of Appeals have held that loss-of-use damages are available in total-destruction cases.
But even beyond the impressive number of courts that have endorsed the availability of loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases, the near uniformity in the reasoning underlying these decisions is particularly persuasive. The reasoning may be properly viewed in terms of two interrelated arguments.
The first argument is that any distinction between partially destroyed and totally destroyed personal property for purposes of loss-of-use damages is unpersuasive. As the Supreme Court of California put it, “There appears to be no logical or practical reason why a distinction should be drawn between cases in which the property is totally destroyed and those in which it has been injured but is repairable[.]”
The second argument flows from the first and emphasizes that loss-of-use damages must be available in total-destruction cases pursuant to the principle of full and
The modern trend, therefore, is both quantitatively and qualitatively persuasive: A substantial number of jurisdictions hold that the principle of full and fair compensation requires the availability of loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases just as in partial-destruction cases.
2
Recent legal treatises have also followed suit. Harper, James and Gray on Torts contains one of the more blunt assessments of the early prohibition of loss-of-use damages and the movement away from it. The authors of that treatise acknowledge that “[wjhere the article is wholly destroyed or where repairs are not practicable, however, most courts, until recently, have refused to allow any recovery for lost use.”
' Many treatises have eliminated altogether the distinction between partial-destruction and total-destruction cases when discussing the availability of loss-of-use damages. Dan Dobbs’s Law of Torts treatise, for example, explains that consequential damages such as lost profits may be available where “the property cannot be used during the repair or replacement period.”
But it is perhaps the Restatement (Second) of Torts that best captures this change in the law. As discussed above, section 927 in the Restatement (First) of Torts permits a plaintiff whose personal
(1) When one is entitled to a judgment for the conversion of a chattel or the destruction or impairment of any legally .protected interest in land or . other thing, he may recover ..;
(a)the .value of the subject matter or ;of his interest in it at the time and place of the conversion, destruction or impairment;
(2) His damages áíso include:
(a) the additional value of a сhattel dúe to additions or improvements made by a converter not in good faith;
(b) the amount of any further pecuniary loss of which the deprivation has been a legal cause;
(c) interest from the time at which the value is fixed; and
(d) compensation for the loss of use not otherwise compensated.196
Contrary to the earlier version of section 927, this version plainly permits a plaintiff to recover both prejudgment interest pn the fair market value of the property and loss-of-use damages. Further, a. comment to section 927 explains the reason behind the enactment of section 927(2)(d):
There are, however, cases in which the loss of use is not otherwise compensated... . [One] type of case is that in which the plaintiff is unable promptly to find a replacement for the chattel on the market and is deprived of use during the period of delay. The loss of that use is not made good by a subsequent purchase and it is therefore compensable.197
The Restatement, therefore, sets up a far more generous recovery regime for total-destruction cases than previously existed, bringing the Restatement in line with the majority of jurisdictions that likewise permit loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases.
ÍV
We agree with this modem trend, and we now hold that the owner of personal property .that has been totally destroyed may recpver loss-of-use damages in addition to the fair market value of the property immediately before the injury,
We conclude our discussion the way we began it — with the guiding principle of Texas- tort law: “The thing to be kept in view is that the party shall be compensated for the injury done.”
Permitting loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases, however, is not a license for unrestrained raids on defendants’ coffers. As with all consequential damages, the availability of loss-of-use damages is necessarily circumscribed by commonsense rules. To begin with, the damages claimed may not bé “too remote.”
* * *
Applying those principles to the facts of this case, we find that the trial court did not abuse its discretion' in submitting the loss-of-use-damages question
Notes
. City of Canadian v. Guthrie,
. See, e.g., Joe Drape, American Pharoah Wins Belmont Stakes and Triple Crown, NEW YORK TIMES (June 6, 2015), http://www. nytimes.com/2015/06/07/sports/american- ■ pharoah-wins-belmont-stakes-and-trlplecrown,html?_r=0 (explaining how “American Pharoah became the first horse since 1978 to sweep the Triple Crown”).
. See City of Canadian,
. Id. at 317.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 318 (emphasis added).
. Id.
. Id.
. '
. Id.
. See Smith v. Sherwood,
. Pasadena State Bank v. Isaac,
. See Nelson v. Krusen,
. 1 Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies § 3.1, at 281 (2d ed. 1993) [hereinafter Dobbs, Law of Remedies (2d) ].
. See, e.g., Baylor Univ. v. Sonnichsen,
. Id. (citing Arthur Andersen,
. Id. (citing Henry S. Miller Co. v. Bynum,
. Arthur Andersen,
. Id. (citing White v. Southwestern Bell Tel. Co.,
. See, e.g., Powell Elec. Sys., Inc. v. Hewlett Packard Co.,
. Dobbs, Law of Remedies (2d) § 5.15(1), at 875.
. Id.; Harper, James and Gray § 25,7, at 676,
. See Pasadena State Bank v. Isaac,
. Pasadena State Bank,
. Some courts have permitted loss-of-use damages only if a plaintiff opts to recover the cost of repairs. See, e.g., Carson v. Bryan,
Where a person is entitled to a judgment for harm to chattels not amounting to a total destruction in value, the damages include compensation for
(a) the difference between the value of the chattel before the harm and the value after the harm or, at the plaintiff’s election, the reasonable cost of repair or restoration where feasible, with due allowance for any difference between the original value and the value after repairs, and
(b)' the loss of use.
Pasadena State Bank,
. Pasadena State Bank,
. For purposes of Texas 'tort law, "total-destruction” may be considered a legal fiction when a vehicle is a “total loss.’-’ A vehicle is a "total loss” when "it would not be absolutely impossible to repair it, but the damages are so extensive that repair would not be economically feasible.” Morrison v. Campbell,
. See Tex. & Pac. Ry.,
. See Walter Lord, A Time to Stand 104, 142 (1961) [hereinafter Lord, A Time To Stand] (containing refrains of the Texans’ refusal to surrender, such as Colonel Travis’s "I answered them with a cannon shot” and “[lender the flag of independence, we are ready to peril our lives a hundred times a day”). ’
.- See Jakie- L. Pruett & Everett B. Cole, Sr., Goliad Massacre 109-20 (1985) (detailing firsthand aсcounts of that fateful day when Texas captives were marched to their deaths).
. See Lord, A Time To Stand, at 195-97 (stating- that “[t]here was nothing quite like the fury of those eighteen minutes” of battle).
. See Andrew C. McLaughlin, a Constitutional History of the United States 501-02 (1935) ("[Tjhough the issue was not distinctly between freedom and slavery, and was not distinctly sectional, the fact remains that annexation was opposed by many at the north because of opposition to' the extension of slaveholding territory, and the movement for annexation came more and more to be looked upon as a movement for the advancement of slaveholders' interests.”).
. See Rupert Norval Richardson et al„ Texas 222-27 (4th ed. 1981) (explaining the sharp discourse on maintaining slavery in Texas that led to secession); see also The Laws of
. See The Laws of Slavery in Texas, at 1 (“The institution of African slavery as practiced in the antebellum United States depended on the ownership of humans as chattels, pieces of movable personal property.”).
.
. Conversion, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014).
. Pridgin,
. Id. at 427-28.
. Id. at 428.
. Id. at 428-30.
. Id. at 433-34.
. Id. at 434.
. Id. at 434-35 (citing Shotwell v. Wendover,
. Id. at 435.
.
. Id. at 587.
. Id.
. Id. at 588.
.
. Id. at 116-18.
. Id. at 118.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 119 (citing Craddock v. Goodwin,
. Id. (quoting Craddock,
. Id. (quoting Craddock,
. We note, however, that one court has raised the question of whether Pridgin sanctions loss-of-use damages in totahdestruction cases. See Reinarz v. Griner,
.
. Pasadena State Bank,
. id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 128.
. See id-
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. at 129.
. Jtt
. Id.
. See id.
. Id.
. Id. at 128.
. See id.
. Id.
. Id.
. See id. at 128-29 (citing Restatement (First) Of Torts § 928).
. Id. at 129.
. See Resp’t’s Br. 16-17 (citing Pasadena State Bank as evidence of "more than fifty years of Texas law” prohibiting loss-of-use damages in total-destruction cases);
. See Pasadena State Bank,
. See Restatement (First) of Torts § 928 (emphasis added); see also Pasadena State Bank,
. See Pasadena State Bank,
. See City of Canadian v. Guthrie,
. See Pickett v. J.J. Willis Trucking Co.,
. See Am. Jet, Inc., 683 S.W.2d at 128 (citing Riddell v. Mays,
. Mondragon v. Austin,
. See Hanna,
. Mondragon,
. Id. at 196.
. Id.
. Morrison v. Campbell,
. Id. at 612-13.
. Id. at 618.
. Id. at 614-17.
. Id. at 618-22.
. Id. at 622-23.
. Id. at 623.
. Hollins v. Rapid Transit Lines, Inc.,
. See Exodus 3:9-10 (English Standard) (containing God’s charge to Mosés: “And now, behold, the cry of the people of Israel has come to me, and I have also seen the oppression with which the Egyptians oppress them. Come, I will send you to Pharaoh that you may bring my people, the children of Israel, out of Egypt.”).
. See Exodus 2:11-12; Acts 7:24.
. Fail's Adm’r v. Presley’s Adm’r,
. Id.
. Id. at 346.
. Id.
. See, e.g., Adamson v. Adamson,
. Fail’s Adm’r,
. Id.
. The Tennessee Supreme Court, in a similar case, appeared to agree with this position. See Johnson v. Perry,
. Compare Churchman v. Kansas City,
. See Synecdoche, New York (Sidney Kimmel Entertainment 2008); see also Carina Chocano, Review: ‘Synecdoche, New York’, Los Angeles Times (Oct. 24, 2008), http://www. latimes.com/entertainment/la-et-synecdoche 24-2008oct24-story.html (explaining that "Sy-necdoche, New York” is "a lilting play on the name of the town of Schenectady, N.Y., where the movie’s hero, a melancholy regional theater director named Caden Cotard (Philip Seymour Hoffman), lives”).
. Edwards, 48 Barb, at 106.
. Id.
. Id. at 107.
. Id. at 106-07.
. Id. at 106.
. Id. at 108.
. See id.
. Id.
. Id.
. See, e.g., Keyes v. Minneapolis & St. Louis Ry.,
. See, e.g., Johnson v. Thompson,
. See, e.g., Barnes v. United Rys. & Elec. Co. of Baltimore,
. See id.
. Colonial Motor Coach Corp. v. N.Y. Cent. R.R.,
. Id. at 512.
. Id.
. Id. Notably, however, the court did leave open the possibility that the plaintiff might have recovered loss-of-use damages "[i]f the proposed amendment had been to the effect that the plaintiff was compelled to buy a coach to replace the one destroyed, and that, during the lapse of time between the date of the accident and the time within which it reasonably could purchase and get delivery of a suitable coach, it had suffered loss of earnings.” See id. at 512-13.
. 2 Theodore Sedgwick, A Treatise On The Measure Of Damages § 432 (8th ed. 1891).
. Id. §§ 433, 434.
. Id. § 435.
. Id.
. 2 Theodore Sedgwick, A Treatise on.the Measure of Damages § 435a (9th ed. 1912) (footnotes omitted and emphasis added).
. George w. Field, a Treatise on the Law Of Damages § 781 (1876) (emphasis added).
. Id. § 782 (emphasis added).
. See id. (citing Streett v. Laumier,
. Charles T. McCormick, Handbook оn the Law of Damages ch. 19, § 124, at 470 (1935).
. Id. (emphasis added)'.
. Id. ch. 19, § 124, at 476.
. Howard L. Oleck, Damages to Persons And Property § 201 (3d rev. ed. 1961).
. Id. "
. Id.
. Id.
. ' Id.
. Compare' Restatement (First) of Torts § 927, with id. § 928.
. Id. § 927 (emphasis added).
. Id. § 927 cmt. 1.
. Id. § 927(c).
. See Alaska Constr. Equip., Inc. v. Star Trucking, Inc.,
. Prosser And Keeton § 15, at 89.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id.
. Id. §15, at 90.
. Fail's Adm’r v. Presley's Adm’r,
. Id.
. 1 Theodore Sedgwick, A Treatise on the Measure of Damages § 178, at 336-37 (9th ed. 1912) (emphasis added), Sedgwick distinguished this case from one in which "injury does not extinguish the plaintiff's title” and thus would give the plaintiff "a right to compensation for the loss of any use he might rightfully make of the property.” See id. (emphasis added).
. See id.
. Konrad Bonsack, Damages Assessment, Janis Joplin’s Yearbook, and the Pie-Power Court, 13 Geo, Mason U.L. Rev. 1, 6 (1990).
. Theodore Sedgwick, A Treatise on the Measure of Damages 501-02 (3d ed. 1858) [hereinafter Sedgwick, A Treatise on the Measure of Damages (3d)] (emphasis added); 2 Theodore Sedgwick, A Treatise on the Measure of Damages 369, 373 (7th ed. 1880) [hereinafter Sedgwick, A Treatise on the Measure of Damages (7th) ].
. See Banks v. Hatton,
. Sedgwick, A Treatise on the Measure of Damages (3d), at 502; Sedgwick, a Treatise on the Measure of Damages (7th), at 373-74.
. See Louisville & Nashville R.R. v. Tippenhauer,
. See, e.g., Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies § 5.11, at 384-85 (1973) [hereinafter Dobbs, Law of Remedies (1st)] ("A third argument against granting loss of use recovery where a chattel is totally destroyed is that to grant such recoveries opens the door to speculation.”). Cf. Guido v. Hudson Transit Lines,
.See, e.g., Riddell v. Mays,
. See, e.g., Edwards v. Beebe,
. See, e.g., Hayes Freight Lines v. Tarver,
. See, e.g., Cecere v. Harquail,
. See Edwards,
. See id.
. See, e.g., Barnes v. United Rys. & Elec. Co. of Baltimore,
. See, e.g., id.
. See Ex parte S & M, LLC,
. See Wajay Bakery, Inc. v. Carolina Freight Carriers Corp.,
. See Buchanan v. Leonard,
. See Behrens v. Gateway Court, LLC,
. Reynolds,
. Long,
. See, e.g., Alaska Constr. Equip., Inc. v. Star Trucking, Inc.,
. Gateway Foam Insulators, Inc. v. Jokerst Paving & Contracting, Inc., 279 S.W.3d 179, 184 (Mo.2009).
. Long,
. Harper, James and Gray § 25.7, at 674.
. Id.
. Id.
. See 2 Dan B. Dobbs, The Law of Torts § 379, at 1056 (1st ed. 2001); see also 3 Dan B. Dobbs et al., The Law of Torts § 481, at 22 (2d ed. 2011).
. Dobbs, Law of Remedies (2d) § 5.15(2), at 876-77.
. John G. Fleming, The Law of Torts ch. 9, at 233 (5th ed. 1977) (footnote omitted).
. See Restatement (First) Of Torts § 927.
. Restatement (Second) Of Torts § 927 (emphasis added).
. Id. § 927 cmt. o.
. Lund v. N. Star Dodge Sales, Inc.,
.We recognize that one may construe a plaintiff's recovery as double recovery where he receives the fair market value of his property and loss-of-use damages plus prejudgment interest on that total. Indeed, we have said before that prejudgment interest itself is compensation allowed bylaw as additional damages for lost use of the money due- as damages. Johnson & Higgins of Tex., Inc. v. Kenneco Energy, Inc.,
. Arthur Andersen & Co. v. Perry Equip. Co.,
. See id.
. Id. (citing White,
. See id.
. Dobbs, Law Of Remedies (2d) § 5.15(1), at 875.
. For the first time in this litigation, AAIC contended at oral argument before this Court that a remand was necessаry to determine the proper amount of loss-of-use damages. That was the entire reason for submitting the question to the jury, yet AAIC refused to engage in the trial court, choosing instead to attack only the legal availability of loss-of-use damages. A party cannot ignore a squarely presented issue in hopes of winning on another issue on appeal, and then reasonably expect to return to the trial court for a second bite at the apple after an unsuccessful post-judgment appeal. By failing to object to the amount of the award, AAIC has waived this argument. See Tex. R. App, P. 33.1.
. The court of appeals technically reserved for consideration the third issue raised in AAIC’s brief in the court of appeals — namely, whether J & D could recover under the AAIC policy “where its legally recoverable damages do not exceed the limits of the tortfeasor’s liability coverage.”
