47 W. Va. 467 | W. Va. | 1900
Elizabeth Kay brought an action of trespass on the case in the circuit court of Raleigh County against the Glade
A question important in daily practice arises in this case, which seems,, under our decisions, to be in a state more or less chaotic and unsettled. The defendant moved the court to set aside the verdict, and, the court having refused to do so, certified all the evidence as taken down by the stenographer; incorporating it in a bill of exceptions, duly noted on the record. Thus, all this evidence is made part °f the record by that bill of exceptions. The defendant complains that certain questions propounded by it were ruled out and not allowed to be answered,, and that certain questions asked by plaintiff, and objected to by the defendant company, were allowed to be answered. These questions were not made the subject of bills of exception, according to the usual practice, but the stenographic report .shows the matter in this wise: When objection to a question was sustained, the report says: “Objection. Sustained. Exception.” When objection to a question was not sustained, the report merely says: “Objection. Overruled. Exception.” Does this give the excepting parties the benefit of the exception? The questions appear from this report; the objection appears; the exception appears; all the things appear that would appear from a formal bill of exceptions, except onlv particularity or specification of the particular questions or answers. To get them the Court has to grope though the whole report of the evidence, consisting of hundreds of pages very frequently, — in this case one hundred and sixty-four printed pages, consisting of hundreds of questions and answers; and very often a printed record contains several times that much. Can an appellate court be asked to winnow out from the great mass of questions and answers the particular ones constituting the ground of complaint? In the
The question before us is, what shall this Appellate Court’adopt as a rule of practice, under the statute mentioned above, as regards objections and rulings and exceptions merely noted in the stenographic report of the proceedings and evidence in a trijal? Must the party complaining, who has objected and excepted, to the courts’ rulings, wholly lose his point because he did not take a formal bill of exceptions, as the Virginia court.decided in cases above cited? Why shall he do so, when we can safely find his point? Would not that defeat the purposes of this statute? Is it not intended to portray all the events of the trial? As the trial is taken down, it saves time and great labor to utilize the report for the purpose of showing the thing taking place during its progress. The statute is here, and is acted on, and the report is made official by it. But, on the other hand, here is a great volume of questions, answers, and proceedings, and it is utterly out of the question to ask an Appellate Court to grope through the labyrinth of-matters contained in the report, questions,-objections, answers, remarks of counsel and judge, documents, etc., without some guiding specification. To do so would involve a consumption of time, labor on the Court, and, worse j’et, great danger of missing the real point or matter complained of as error. My conclusion is that, if the assign
Following this ruling, the assignment of error points out that witness Scott was asked, if a map was correctly made of the location of the railroad, to tell the jury what damages Mrs. Kay sustained by reason of the road, and was allowed to answer, over objection, that he understood that he “should take into consideration all the damage to Mrs. Kay’s property that would originate frum this road> and not the damag-etothe tract generally.” The objection is stated to be that the witness was valuing damage to the property that had been done, and what might be done in
Complaint is made that witness Scott was allowed to answer certain -questions on a certain page of the stenographer’s notes, and others “as shown in the record.” I do not find the questions. The specification is too indefinite.
As to the complaint that evidence of John Dillon and others was improper: No point is specified, except the general one that they did not know what they were talking about, for want of knowledge. That was a question for the jury, as to the-weight of the evidence, not a question of admissibility.
As to the complaint that the jury disregarded the award made by arbitrators as to the damages: The award is lost irom the record. Moreover, it was not binding on Mrs. Kay, as no evidence is shown of authority on the part of
As to the complain t that .there was no-evidence to show that the. fire that burned fencing and damaged timber came from the defendants’ locomotive: Turner Ransom’s evidence was before the jury, and, to sajr the least, was some evidence on the subject; and we cannot set aside the verdict for that cause. I think it is enough to fairly impute the fire to the locomotive of the company. The jury passed on the question of neg-ligence. If anything was allowed on that score, it is probably under one hundred dollars; and, therefore, if there were error in that, that alone would not justify reversal.
As to the refusal to allow Carpenter to answer the question first asked on page 83 of stenographer’s notes: The original notes are not before us. . The specification is too indefinite. If it refers to what Kay said, there is a want of authority to bind his wife to his declaration.
As to the refusal to allow Wright to answer the question, “What did William Kay tell you, at the time this award was made bjr the arbitrators, in regard to it?” There is no authority in Kay shown to bind his wife.
As to striking out the answer of Boxley, on page 102 of • stenographer’s notes, not before us: Guessing'at it, he says that Carpenter and Wright were to meet, to go over the line and get Kay to consent to the construction of the road, but failed to do so, and he then agreed that the construction should be proceeded with, and, if they could not agree on the compensation, the matter should be arbitrated. How does the exclusion of this answer prejudice the defendant? It only shows the agreement of the husband to arbitrate, and his authority to do so is not shown. Suppose the plaintiff had agreed to do so, but failed to finally agree to it; it would not preclude this action.
As to the refusal to allow Scott to answer certain questions: They are not sufficiently specified, under above principles. I am not sure, that I could find them, except by guesswork.
In addition, as to all these questions which the court refused to allow to be answered, they cannot be considered, for the reason that the answers are not given, nor is it
The last ground of complaint against the judgment is that the verdict for one thousand dollars against the company is excessive. I cannot myself help saying, that, from what I can glean from the cold paper view of the case, I regard the verdict as high and onerous in amount, — beyond just compensation. The company occupies three and seventy-eight-hundredths acres of the plaintiff’s land, all in woods, on a steep mountain side; very, very rough; of almost no value for farming purposes; placed by most of the witnesses at low value, — one of the most intelligent of plaintiff’s witnesses putting it at four dollars or five dollars per acre. For that land, of course, the plaintiff must have pay, but I can hardly see, on the evidence, that the residue of the land is not worth as much for all purposes as before the railroad went there; and that is the test. Board of Education v. Kanawha and M. R. Co., 44 W. Va. 71, (29 S. E. 503). But I may be wrong in this conception, and that I am wrong is attested by the verdict of twelve ‘men, approved by a competent circuit judge, all of whom were present, and experienced the practical showing of the trial,
A firmed.