88 Ky. 176 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion oe the court.
This case was once before the Superior Court by appeal by this appellant from a verdict of a jury and judgment thereon, for two thousand dollars in favor of the appellees. The case was reversed, not upon its merits, and sent back for another trial, which was had, and which resulted in a verdict and judgment thereon for seventeen hundred dollars in favor of the appellees. The case is now in this court by an appeal by the appellant.
Appellees’ amended petition alleges in substance that they leased from the appellant a lot of ground situated in the city of Covington, for' a term of years, commencing on the-day of January, 1879, and ending on the-day of March 1883; that said land was to be used by the appellees in carrying on a coal and coke business ; that the appellees had the right, at any time during their lease, to erect buildings, etc., on the leased ground, which were to belong to them during the lease, and afterward, provided the same were removed from the said land within thirty days after the expiration of the lease; that during the lease, they erected on said land, coal-bins and chutes worth two thousand dollars; that the appellee, by its employes, wrongfully placed a quantity of unslacked lime on the ground
The lower court refused the instructions asked for by the appellant and appellees, and gave seven of its-own, to some of which the appellees objected, to all of which the appellant objected. The appellant, while objecting to all the instructions given by the court, particularly objects to instruction No. 4. The amended petition copied in the record complains of a tort, not of a breach of contract by the appellant. The objection urged against instruction No. 4. is, that if the appellant was licensed by the appellees to use said ground for general purposes, or for the specific purpose of storing its lime, and by the gross carelessness or negligence
We do not mean to say that this instruction was wrong, but we mean to say that if the appellant’s contention be correct, we must presume that the lower court, unless the contrary appears, committed no error, and that the pleadings, not copied, but which were before the lower court, authorized the said instruction. The court’s instructions in reference to the tortious conduct of the appellant’s employes were correct.
Upon the subject as to whether or not' the buildings were fired by the heat generated by the* unslacked lime coming in contact with the high water from the Licking river, there was proof, pro and con; the jury found upon that subject, and we can not disturb their verdict. The lower court peremptorily instructed the jury to find for the appellees in reference to the appellant’s counter-claim. There was not a scintilla of proof before the jury that tended to show that the buildings were fired and burned by the negligence of the appellees, or either of them. The appellees’ claim is not sufficient in amount to give this court jurisdiction, so the question which the appellees make is, does the fact that the appellant claimed in his counter-claim four thousand dollars, which was wholly unsustained by the proof, give this court jurisdiction of the whole case? Upon appellant’s appeal as to its counter-claim, the question to be determined is not as to the weight, of the evidence, but as to whether there was any evidence, whateve'r, tending to prove the counter-claim.
But for the reasons above assigned the judgment of the lower court is affirmed.