42 Tex. 529 | Tex. | 1874
The appellee brought suit in the District Court of Goliad county, at the February term of 1874, to recover five thousand dollars damages for the unlawful and forcible taking by the appellees, out of his warehouse, and from Ills wagons on their way from Cummingsville, in the county of Goliad, to Victoria, in the county of Victoria, 195 hides, and prayed for a judgment for the value of the hides. The defendants, Reed and McKinney, answered generally, denying the trespass,
Under the charge of the court, the jury found “ the number “of hides taken by defendants to be one hundred and ninety- “ five, and assessed their value at five hundred and seven dol- “ lars,” with interest from the day of the taking, at eight per cent., upon which the court rendered judgment against the defendants for the amount found by the j ury.
Of the assignments of error, the first and third embrace all that it is necessary to consider. They are, “ 1st, that the court “ erred in his charge to the jury,” and “3d, that the verdict “ rendered herein is contrary to law and the evidence.”
That portion of the charge which informed the jury that the affidavit made by Reed, McKinney, and Myers, and the search-warrant issued by the justice of the peace by virtue of the affidavit, conferred no authority, and could not justify the trespass by defendants, is not open to objection ; it stated substantially
In view of this, the court erred in stating to the jury, “ the “ taking off the hide of any dead animal not his own, and “ without the written authority of the owner, or some one having “ charge of the same, * * * * or any person knowingly “purchasing the same, shall be fined in the sum of ten dollars “ for each and every hide so skinned or purchased.” One-half of the fines going to whoever might see proper to prosecute the offenders to conviction, and that if the owner “ fails to prosecute, and by proper proof convict the person skinning, oi “ knowingly purchasing the hides of such of his dead animals “ as may have been skinned without his consent, he has no “ legal right to have the hides seized in the hands of a pur- “ chaser from the person skinning them ; or from any subse- “ quent purchasers, because cattle hides are a merchantable “ commodity, the title of which passes by its purchase and de- “ livery, the same as any other merchandise.”
The law quoted was not enacted to give compensation to the owners of the cattle unlawfully skinned; the one-half of the penalty can be secured by any other person who may prosecute the offenders; it was intended as a punishment to the unlawful skinner and illegal purchaser, and by giving one-half of the fine to the prosecutor, to stimulate the diligence of those in-
Reversed and remanded.