34 Fla. 471 | Fla. | 1894
Under the provisions of Chapter 3742 laws of Florida, approved May 13th. 1887, James W. Braxton sued the Pensacola and Atlantic Railroad Company in the Circuit Court of Jackson county for divers head of cattle killed by the defendant’s engines, cars, etc., and on the trial before a jury recovered judgment for $84 as damages, with interest under said statute at the rate of 50 per cent, per annum, amounting to $35, and $25 for attorney’s fees, aggregating $144, besides the costs of the suit; the allegation and proof being that the defendant had failed to keep its roadway fenced and supplied with cattle guards, etc. From this judgment the defendant company appeals here, and assigns as error the refusal of the court below to grant its motion for new trial predicated upon the following grounds : (1) The verdict of the jury is contrary to law and to the evidence; (2) The court erred in permitting the plaintiff to testify orally as to the statutory notice alleged to have been given to the defendant company by him of his claim for the stock killed; (3) the court erred in admitting a copy of said statutory notice of claim for stock killed given by the plaintiff to the defendant; (4) the court erred in giving the instructions designated as sections 2 and 3 of the court’s charge; (5) the court erred in refusing the charge requested by defendant’s counsel.
We will dispose of these assignments in the order here given; and, to a more perfect understanding of the questions presented, we will first outline and quote the statute under which the recovery was had. Section
At the trial it was shown that the plaintiff, on the 3rd of August, next prior to the bringing of his suit in December, 1889, gave to the defendant company the written notice of his claim and the amount thereof as required by the statute; in which written notice the-aggregate valuation put upon the cattle killed, and the amount thereby demanded of the company as damages, was $99. lío tender or offer to pay this or any other amount was made by the company to the plaintiff at any time after the service of such written notice- and claim upon it. The appellant company now contends that the verdict and judgment are contrary to law, because the jury by their virdict found only the sum of $84 as being the just and reasonable damage suffered by the plaintiff through the killing of his stock, and, therefore, by their verdict found, in effect, that the plaintiff’s claim “aspresented)’’ in his written notice for $99 was unjust and unreasonable; and'that' therefore under the statute the plaintiff was not entitled to recover interest at the penal rate of 50 per centum per annum, nor any attorney’s fees. The ap
The defendant plead as a set-off to the plaintiff’s claim, and proved at the trial, that the plaintiff had,
The court gave the following charge: “If you are satisfied from the evidence that the plaintiff served a written notice upon an agent of the defendant in this county, within one year from the time of the alleged damage in this suit, and that thé defendant had not made an offer or tender of payment of any portion of said claim to said plaintiff within thirty days after the service of said written notice, you will find for 'the plaintiff in addition to the damages sustained by the lulling of the stock as proven 50 per cent, per annum from the time of the service of said written notice, and such attorney’s fees for conducting this suit as are proven to be reasonable and just.” The court also refused to give the following charge requested by the defendant: “If you believe from the preponderance •of the evidence that after plaintiff’s stock was killed by defendant’s trains the plaintiff did give notice and present his claim in writing therefor to a station agent of cl efendant in this county, and that defendant failed for thirty days to pay said claim, and that such claim as presented was reasonable and just, then the plaintiff is entitled to the interest and attorney’s fees allowed by the statute; but if yon believe said claim as presented was not reasonable and just, then you will not allow plaintiff the interest and attorney’s fees as aforesaid.” The giving of the first, and the refusal to give the last, of these charges is also assigned as error. Prom our construction of the statute as already given it becomes apparent that the court did not err in
The verdict of the jury is amply sustained by the •evidence in the cause, and, finding no errors of law, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.