30 Fla. 557 | Fla. | 1892
Appellee, as plaintiff in the Circuit Court, commenced suit in the Fifth Judicial Circuit for Putnam county against the appellant company for the alleged negligent killing of a Jersey cow. The material allegations of the declaration, omitting the formal parts, are that the defendant on the 26th day of June, A. D. 1886, was possessed of, using and operating a railroad called and designated as the Jacksonville, Tampa and Key West Railway, through a portion of the- county of Putnam, and so using and operating said railway with locomotive engines and cars, said defendant then and there drove a certain locomotive engine and train
A demurrer to this declaration, assigning as grounds that it states no cause of action, and is too vague and indefinite to be answered, was overruled in the trial court, and this decision is assigned as error here. The contention is, that negligence is the basis of plaintiff’s right to recover, and this being so, the declaration should set forth fully in what respect defendant was negligent, in order that defendant may not be taken by surprise at the trial. The cases of Chicago, etc., R. R. Co. vs. Harwood, 90 Ill., 425, and Savannah; Florida & Western Ry. Co. vs. Geiger, 21 Fla., 669, are cited. In the Gfeiger case there was no allegation whatever of negligence on the part of the defendant in killing the stock sued for by the plaintiff. Here there is an allegation that the engine and cars were so negligenHy and carelessly operated by the agents and servants of defendant that the engine struck the cow
After the overruling of the demurrer, the defendant company interposed the plea of the general issue, and that it did not, at the time alleged in the declaration, own, use or operate any railroad through the said county of Putnam, south of the city of Palatka. Upon issue joined, the case was referred to a referee
. The plaintiff testified, among other things, as follows : ‘‘During the month of June, 1886, I had a cow killed on the Jacksonville, Tampa and Key West Nail-way. It was injured. It had its back broken. I went and looked at the cow and saw she was mine. ’ ’ He stated that the cow was killed on the 26th day of June, 1886, about one mile and three-quarters from Palatka; that it was reported that she could not be found, and he went to hunt for her and found her on the east side of the track, going south. He says he went to see how she was injured, and found her so broken down that he did not try to save her, and also that he saw signs of a spike maul on her head where she was thumped to death. In describing the injuries to the cow, he further says ‘‘they were evidently done by the train, because the cow was on the track, and I saw where something heavy had struck her. I measured her tracks and saw where she had run ahead of the train and where it had struck her, and after that
The second objection, that the finding of the referee is excessive, can not be sustained. ' The plaintiff testified positively that his cow was worth three hundred and fifty dollars in any market. He says she was a Jersey, and in fine condition, and that he had seen cows sell in that market for five hundred dollars that he would not have traded his cow for, and that he could not have duplicated her for five hundred dollars. If we discard entirely the indirect way in which the
The third objection, that the appellant company was not operating the road south of Palatka when the cow was killed, is also, in our judgment, without support. The record discloses the fact that A. B. Mason, the then Vice-President of the defendant company, and
The judgment will therefore be affirmed, and it is so ordered.