170 P. 971 | Utah | 1918
The questions presented by this appeal relate to the sufficiency of the evidence and measure of damages. Plaintiffs are the owners of land in Tooele county, and in the fall of 1915 had a crop of grain growing thereon. In October following the defendant, who is the owner of a band of sheep, permitted them to trespass on plaintiff’s said crop and partially destroy it. Plaintiffs brought suit for the recovery of $675 as damages. The ease was tried to a jury, and a verdict rendered for plaintiffs in the sum of $170.62. Judgment was entered accordingly. Defendant appeals, and assigns as error: (1) The refusal of the court to instruct the jury that the evidence was insufficient to sustain a verdict for more than nominal damages; and (2) the court erred in its instruction relating to the measure of damages. These alleged errors will be considered in the order above named.
There is substantial evidence tending to show that plaintiffs, in September, 1915, seeded to wheat sixty-five acres of the land in question; that during October next following the defendant at divers times permitted his sheep to trespass thereon; that ten acres of said land so planted went to grass; that thirteen acres of the wheat was totally destroyed; that twenty-seven acres only produced one-fifth of a normal
The foregoing statement, which, as before stated, is supported by substantial testimony, discloses every element and every factor necessary to determine the damage plaintiffs sustained, under the rule declared by the court for determining the damage, which will be considered later on in this opinion. It thus appears we have the number of acres planted (65), the number of acres that went to grass (10), the number of acres totally destroyed (13), the number of acres partially injured, which produced one-fifth of a crop (27), and the number of acres uninjured (15). As appears from the testimony, if the 65 acres planted, less the 10 acres which went to grass, had not been injured by the sheep, the land would probably have produced 14 bushels to the acre, or a total of 770 bushels, but, as plaintiffs could only harvest 283 bushels, there was a loss of the difference between these two amounts, or 487 bushels, lost on account of the injury. This quantity at $1.32 per bushel, the market price at the nearest market, amounts to $642.84. This sum, less the cost of harvesting and sacking at $2.50 per acre, or $137.50 for the fifty-five acres, and ten cents a bushel for transporting to market the 487 bushels, or $48.70, leaves as net damage to plaintiffs the sum of $456.64. The jury rendéred a verdict for only $170.62. The evidence is ample to sustain the verdict, unless the court erred in its instructions relating to the measure of damages. That question will now be considered.
The instruction assigned as error reads as follows:
'‘The measure of damage is the difference between the market value of the crop before the alleged damage was done and the market value of the crop after the alleged damage was done. This may be calculated by finding the market value the entire crop would have at maturity if no2 injury thereto had been done, and deducting therefrom the entire market value of the crop at maturity in its alleged*385 injured state. The difference, if any, will enable you to calculate the amount of damage. From this amount so found, if you so find, you must deduct its proportion of the cost of harvesting, marketing, and bringing the crop to maturity.”
Appellant challenges the validity of this instruction, except the first sentence thereof. This sentence, he insists, states the correct rule for measuring the damages in cases of this kind. The remainder of the instruction it is contended, is vicious and in conflict with the well settled law of this state as declared by the decisions of this court. In support of this contention appellant cites a ease decided by this court, Lester v. Highland Boy Gold Mining Co., 27 Utah, 470, 76 Pac. 341, 101 Am. St. Rep. 988, 1 Ann. Cas. 761, and quotes the first paragraph of the syllabi, as stating the rule for the measure of damages in this jurisdiction. The language quoted does not, to the fullest extent, reflect the opinion of the court in that case. The paragraph quoted reads as follows:
“The true measure of compensation for injury to or the destruction of growing crops is the value of the crops in the condition they were in at the time of their injury or destruction, and not the market value at the time of maturity or during the mai'ket season.”
Upon an examination of the opinion, it will be found that the court was dealing with an instruction of the trial court which had been assigned as error, and the opinion must be read with that instruction in view. The trial court in that ease gave the following instruction, which was excepted to by appellant:
‘ ‘ The plaintiffs in this ease are entitled to recover only such damages to their crops of lueern, potatoes, oats, corn, beets, wheat, and such things as are sued for as they were worth at the time when destroyed or injured, and at the place where injured or destroyed. In other words if they were injured at or before the time of harvest in the different years respectively, then in arriving at the damages you must take the market value of such products and crops not later than the prices prevailing at the time of such harvest or during the market season.”
The instruction, without further explanation or modification, was manifestly erroneous. It left out of consideration entirely the expense incident to maturing, harvesting, and marketing the crop subsequent to the injury complained of.
"This instruction, considered as a whole, is clearly erroneous. The rule stated in the first sentence has the support of authority, but, in attempting to explain it in the last sentence, the court -virtually set the rule aside, and misdirected the jury by stating that, in arriving at the damages, they must take the ‘market value of such products and crops not later than the prices prevailing at the time of such harvest, or during the market season.' While in eases of destruction of growing crops it is proper and important to introduce and admit evidence showing the kind of crops the land is capable of producing, the kind of crops destroyed, the average yield per acre of each kind on the land in dispute, and on other similar lands in the immediate neighborhood cultivated in like manner, the stage of growth of the crops at the time of injury or destruction, the expenses of cultivating, harvesting, and marketing the crops, and the market value at the time of maturity, or within a reasonable time after the injury or destruction of the crops, and while all such evidence may be considered by the jury in determining the amount of damages, if any, still the true measure of compensation is the value of the crops in the condition they were in at the time of their injury or destruction, and not the market value at the time of maturity or during the market season.”
It is true the court says, “The true measure of compensation is the value of the crops in the condition they were in at the time of their injury, * * * and not the market value at the time of maturity or during the market season,” but this must be taken in connection with the other parts of the opinion to which we have referred. In order to determine the value of the crop at the time and place of the injury, it is quite clear that this may be done as suggested by the court in that case, by taking into account the market value when harvested and of the expense incident to placing the crop in a marketable condition after the injury complained of. To contend that the court, by its opinion, declared the measure of damages to be the value of the crop in the condition it was at the time of its injury or destruction, without qualification, is not treating the opinion fairly, and leads to a manifest
"So, in an action for growing crops, the measure of damages is their value at the time of their destruction. But in estimating them the probable yield and value of the crop, had it progressed to maturity, may be shown.” Cleary v. Shand, 48 Utah 640, 161 Pac. 453.
In that ease the question as to the true measure of damages was not before the court in concrete form; the only question for the court’s consideration was the error of the trial court in permitting witnesses, over the objection of appellant, to answer the question, “What in your judgment was the damage done,” etc.? The question was objected to as calling for a conclusion respecting the ultimate fact to be tried to the jury. The language above quoted relating to the measure of damages was used by the court as illustrating what might be proper matter for consideration in determining the damages to growing crops. While the case, for this reason, is not authority to the extent that it would have been if the language had been applied to a point directly in issue, it nevertheless indicates the mind of the court, to a limited extent at least,
There is an earlier decision of this court relating to the measure of damages, but not to growing crops. However, there is a strong analogy between that and the present case, and we feel justified in referring to it for that reason. In Farr v. Griffith, 9 Utah, 416, 35 Pac. 506, plaintiff brought an action against defendant for breach of contract in failing to furnish water to supply an ice pond. The court gave the following instruction as to the measure of damages, which was excepted to by appellant:
“If you find for the plaintiff, gentlemen, the measure of damages will be the value of the iee that the plaintiff might, by reasonable diligence, have put up in the icehouses; the value of the iee in the ice-houses, that they failed to put up on account of the failure of the defendant to supply the usual amount of water, less the cost of putting such iee in the icehouses, the value of the ice in the icehouses, less the cost of putting it there.”
Appellant in that case contended that the true measure of damages was the value of the ice on the pond, just as appellant here contends that the measure of damages is the value of the crop at the time and place of the injury. 'This .court in that case held that the instruction was substantially cor-réct.
From the foregoing review of the decisions of this court, when treated fairly with the view of determining their meaning, the conclusion cannot be rationally drawn that the instruction complained of in this case conflicts with the law as declared by this court.
In the first ease cited the instruction, as we have shown, did not go far enough, and possibly left the jury to conclude that the market value at harvest, without deducting expenses of maturing, harvesting, and marketing, was the measure of damages. These essential factors are covered by the instruction excepted to in the present case. In the second case above
For other cases to the same effect, and also cases contra cited by appellant, see 6 Ann. Cas., note at page 949.
The instruction complained of by appellant is adapted to a case where the crop is only partially injured and not wholly
For the reasons above stated, it is ordered that the judgment be affirmed; respondents to recover costs.