The appellees, J. A. Grundy and L. T. Da Vault, sued the Pecos & Northern Texas Railway Company and the Chicago, Rock Island & Gulf Railway Company, in the county court of Randall county, Tex., for damages with reference to a shipment of a car of household goods from McLean, Tex., to Canyon, Tex., claiming damages for the loss of some of the goods and for difference in value as to others, as well as specific damages for the detention of the use of the goods on account of unreasonable delay. Upon a trial to a jury the appellees recovered a verdict for $375.
were to find such damages as they may find were incurred on account of the negligence of the carrier. The objection to this charge was that the court erred “in failing to charge the jury correctly the measure of the plaintiffs’ damage by reason of the alleged damage to said goods, the measure as to difference in market and actual value.”
We take it that the purpose of the act of the Thirty-Third Legislature with reference to the presentation of objections to the court’s charge before the same is read to the jury (article 1971) is to correct the court’s error — to lead the court to the truth of the law — -and places the burden upon the party making the objections to show the court wherein the error exists. Appellants say:
“It is true that their abjection * * * did not particularly specify that the measure of damages to certain of the goods was the difference in the actual value of the goods ‘just prior to and just subsequent to the alleged damage’; but * * * submit that by said objection * * * they did suggest to the court the correct basis of plaintiffs’ measure of damages.”
Appellants did not submit any special charge embodying a correct rule as to the measure of damages. In cases of this peculiar character, under our interpretation of the statute, the same having been passed for the purpose of preventing reversals, unless the court is informed of his error, in the condition of this objection, and the record, it was not error to overrule the same. See Memphis Cotton Oil'Co. v. Tolbert,
The plaintiff! and witness was testifying to the value of the goods which had been lost by the carriers. The measure of damages referable to the destruction or loss of this character of property, as announced by Chief Justice Willie, in the leading case of Railway Co. v. Nicholson,
“ * * * The lost articles seem to be of such a. character — namely, secondhand clothing, books, and table furniture which had been used by the plaintiff — that they, could not be paid to have to him a value at one place different from what they possessed at another. He could hardly have supplied himself in the market with goods in the same condition and so exactly suited to his purposes as were those of which he had been deprived. As compensation for the actual'loss is the fundamental principle upon which this measure of damage rests, it would seem that the value of such goods to their owner would furnish the proper rule upon which he should recover; not any fanciful price that he might for special reasons place upon them, nor, on the other hand, the amount for which he could sell them to others, but the actual loss in money he would sustain by being deprived of articles so specially adapted to the use of himself and his family.”
The Supreme Court, in the case of Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Colquitt,
The Supreme Court of New York, in the case of Fairfax v. Railway,
“It would sell but for little, if you put into market to be sold for secondhand clothing, and it would be a wholly inadequate and unjust rule of compensation to give plaintiff, in such a case, the value of the clothing thus ascertained. The rule must be the value of the clothing for use by the plaintiff.”
The Supreme Court of Kentucky, following our courts, also quoting from the New York case, supra, further says:
“No two sets of secondhand effects of this kind are the same in condition; and therefore no standard of market value exists.” Railway Co. v. Miller,162 S. W. 76 .
Wigmore (volume 1, § 716), in speaking upon kindred subjects and with reference to personal services principally, says:
“Here the general test that any one familiar with the values in question may testify is liberally applied, and with few attempts to lay down detailed minor tests.”
And, continuing, said:
“The owner of an article [italics his], whether he is generally familiar with such values or not, ought certainly to be allowed to estimate its worth; the weight of his testimony (which often would be trifling) may be left to the jury; and courts have usually made no objection to this policy.”
See note 2 and the numerous cases cited by the author. The author is also commenting upon household goods.
Chamberlayne, in his work on Evidence, (volume 3, § 2127), says:
“ * . * * An ordinary observer may properly estimate the value of familiar articles of personal property. So, generally, a designation may properly cover household furniture of any ordin'ary description, new or secondhand, * * * wearing apparel and the like. It would probably include stable equipment, such as carriages, horses, or barn fixtures.”
In reading the numerous authorities and copious annotations in the notes relevant to the general text of the writers mentioned some of the authorities bear out the rule indicated and some of feeble importance sustaining the particular principle. It is necessarily true, as elements entering into the consideration affecting the value to the owner, that the cost of the articles, the period of their use, and their condition, with other pertinent data, as would enable the jury to arrive at a fair valuation, is important testimony; hut we are unable to find any well-considered case, as to the peculiar property involved here, that the owner of the goods, as a witness, is required to state the elements mentioned as a precedent qualification to testify to the value. These goods were lost by the carrier and no witness produced by it as to the value of the property; neither does the record show any cross-examination by defendants of the witness attempting to ascertain the cost of said articles, the extent of their use, the kind and character- of the same, or as to the condition of the goods at any time, but rely solely upon the general objections enumerated in the bill. If the value in this instance is at all fanciful, or if the ingredients of cost, the extent of the use of the property, the condition of same at the time of the loss would have indicated to the jury that the value placed upon the same by the owner was improper, we believe, in this character of ease, it is the duty of the defendants to elicit it. If neither market value, nor secondhand value, nor the price for which he could sell the goods to others is a criterion for the compensation to the owner, but the value to him is the standard, from this underlying principle it seems to us that the owner of the goods could testify to the value, weak as it may be.
The case of Seyfarth v. Railway Co.,
“The subject of inquiry was not one to which the doctrine in reference to experts applied; and it cannot be questioned that the opinion of this witness as to the value of the articles was clearly admissible under the circumstances. The evidence being competent, the plaintiff was not obliged to restrict the examination to. the value of each article, and in that way arrive at the total value; nor was it incumbent on him to show the process by which the conclusion of the witness was reached.”
The Supreme Court of Nebraska said, in the cause of Western Home Insurance Co. v. Richardson,
“ * * * We think it was competent for the witness (in this instance the owner of the goods) to state the value of the stock in the store. Such evidence was not the statement of a conclusion, but of a fact. If the defendant desired, he could, on cross-examination, have interrogated the witness as to the value of the different articles and kind of goods.”
The Supreme' Court of Michigan, in the case of Erickson v. Drazkowski,
“Plaintiff and her husband testified to the value of the property taken, but it is insisted that their competency to testify upon the question of value did not appear. The articles seized were such as housekeepers are accustomed to buy, and householders must be presumed to have such knowledge upon the subject as to render them competent to testify as to the value of such articles.”
To the same effect, in practically the same language, is the case of Tubbs v. Garrison, by the Supreme Court of Iowa,
There are no other assignments deserving consideration, except to say that the charge of the court wherein the expression “reasonable value,” instead of “actual value,” is used, referable to the measure of damages, in the condition of this record, could not have misled the jury.
Note. — Remittitur of $65.30 filed by appellees November 24, 1914.
