127 Va. 87 | Va. | 1920
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Norfolk Southern Railroad Company complains of a judgment for damages caused by a fire which damaged the woodland of C. R. Fentress, hereinafter called the plaintiff. There are four assignments of error.
1. The plaintiff, having testified in detail as to the.amount of his damages on account of the destruction of pine straw (which is used by farmers in that vicinity for making compost), of fish-pound poles (for which there is a local market) and of pine timber, as well as young pine, having a prospective value for timber; and that already having a one-fourth interest in the land, he about three or four years before had by purchase acquired the other undivided interests therein, his motive being to provide a home for his mother, who also had dower in the tract, and that his mother’s dower had lapsed because of her death since that
In Warren Co. v. Hanson, 17 Ariz. 252, 150 Pac. 240, it is said that, “Such evidence is admissible as a circumstance which may properly be considered by the jury in connection with other circumstances tending to prove the value of the property at the time it was destroyed.”
The cost of the property may or may not be evidence of its value, and is never more than a circumstance tending to throw light upon the question. The lapse of time from the date of the purchase to the date of the inquiry should be considered, for the longer the period the less the signif
In discussing a kindred question, Alderson, B., in Attorney-General v. Hitchcock, 1 Exch. 104, says: “When the question is not relevant, strictly speaking, to the issue, but tending to contradict the witness, his answer must be taken (although it tends to show that he in that particular instance speaks falsely, and although it is not altogether immaterial to the issue) for the sake of the general public convenience; for great inconvenience would follow from a continual course of those sorts of cross-examinations which would be let in in the case of a witness being called for the purpose of contradiction.” And in the same case Rolfe, B., expresses himself thus: “The laws of evidence on this subject, as to what ought and what ought not to be received, must be considered as founded on a sort of comparative consideration of the time to be occupied in examinations of this nature and the time which it is practicable to bestow upon them. If we lived for a thousand years, instead of about sixty or seventy, and every case were of sufficient importance, it might be possible and perhaps proper to throw
By way of contrast to English judicial style, this from Mr. Justice Holmes saves his time and expresses the same idea, together .with the reason therefor, with his customary sententious emphasis: “So far as the introduction of collateral issues goes, that objection is a purely practical one— a concession to the shortness of life.” Reeve v. Dennett, 145 Mass. 28, 11 N. E. 938.
Cross-examination, which is said to be an art, certainly as practiced in many instances, becomes a burden to the courts and juries as a greát waster of valuable time. It is also frequently so aimless as to be inexcusable, while it sometimes reacts against the litigant whose attorney persists in indulging therein too freely as a pastime. There should be some better reason therefor than that it is his privilege, and that nobody can stop him until it is too late.
09] 4. The fourth assignment of error is that the verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence. As to this
Amended and affirmed.