3 Ga. App. 644 | Ga. Ct. App. | 1908
J. H. Smith brought a suit in a justice’s court of Bryan County against the Seaboard Air-Line Bailway for $30, for the killing of “one sandy yellow heifer cow, two and one half years old.” Upon the trial before the jury, Smith testified, that he owned “a sandy yellow heifer which was killed by the Seaboard.” 'The animal was not killed outright, but was so badly crippled that it was of no use. He told the section foreman that it was “no .good” to him, and was the property of the Seaboard Air-Line Bailway. The section foreman killed if. The plaintiff further testified, that “the animal was worth $30 and was a year and a half old. The suit says two and a half years, but that was a mistake.” On cross-examination the witness testified, that the .animal which had been injured was Guinea, and he could have .gotten $50 for it from his brother, because it was of the Clanton stock. He testified that' he did not get the hide or anything from the carcass, and that the animal was an entire loss to him.
The jury rendered a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $30, and costs. Thereupon counsel for the defendant presented a petition for certiorari, accompanied by proper bond and security, with certificate of payment of the costs, to the judge of the superior court. The judge, after considering the petition, denied and refused.the issuance of the writ of certiorari; and exception is taken to the order refusing the writ. Only two of the errors .assigned in the petition are insisted upon here.
1. It is insisted that the verdict and judgment are contrary to law and evidence, in that the allegata and probata do not agree .as to the description of the animal. The only difference between the statement in the justice’s court summons (or petition, if one was attached to the summons) and the testimony upon that sub
2. The second assignment is, that the verdict and judgment are contrary to law, because the justice’s court did not have jurisdiction of the cause of action, in that the suit was for the destruction of personal propertjq and not for injury to it. It is ingeniously argued by counsel for plaintiff in error that where there is a total destruction of one’s personal property, it can not be said to be comprehended within the words “injuries or damages,” as used in article 6,.section 7, paragraph 2, of the constitution (Civil Code, §5856); and quite a number of definitions of these terms are suggested in support of the argument. Of course it must be conceded that the word “damages,” as used in the clause of the constitution under consideration, refers to the personal property, and not the owner. Blocker v. Boswell, 109 Ga. 239. But personal property can be damaged, so far as its use is concerned, and so as to effect (what is essential in' every case of damages) an interference with the right of the owner to use his own, as well where an object of personal property is totally destroyed as where it is only partially injured. A costly vase would be none the less damaged if shattered into a thousand pieces than if a single piece, chipped from its artistic colorings, marred its beauty. In other words, a piece of personal property is not less damaged because it is more damaged. Can it be said, if one has two valuable paintings, handsomely framed, and another detaches the frame from one of these paintings and leaves the portrait itself uninjured, but, from some malicious motive, not only destroys the frame which encloses the other portrait, but, with a knife, slashes the canvas until it is a, mass of rags, that the latter picture has not been damaged? If one were to set fire to another’s cord-wood and damage it partly, by burning a portion of it, he would only have damaged it still more if the fire left only a few refuse pieces that would not burn.
In this case there was not a total destruction of the property, if the plaintiff had seen fit to use what the railroad left him. He could have used the hide for leather and the remains for fertilizer. But we can not sustain the contention that merely because the animal was killed by the railroad, it was not damaged. The life
The nse of the words “injuries or damages,” in the constitution, was not without significance. The framers of that instrument intended to include both; and they gave jurisdiction to the justices’ courts, where the amount did not exceed $100, of both injuries and damages. And while it was said in New v. Southern Ry. Co. 116 Ga. 148, that “injury and death are by no means synonymous,” it has not been held that the killing of a domestic animal does not damage it as an article of personal property. While the verbs “to injure” and “to damage” are very nearly synonymous, injury and damage are not always legally synonymous. There can be damnum absque injuria. The case of Patton v. State, 93 Ga. 116, cited bv counsel, is not in point. Nothing is decided in that case except that the section of the Penal Code which refers to wilful and malicious injury or destruction of either public or private property (Code of 1882, §4627) refers only to inanimate objects, and not to the injury or killing of animals of any kind.
Almost the precise question now under consideration was decided by the Supremo Court of Arkansas, in which State the constitutional provision in regard to the jurisdiction of justices’ courts, so far as damages are concerned, is the same as our own. In Stanley v. Bracht, 47 Ark. 210-214, it is held that article 7, section 20 of the constitution, giving justices of the peace concurrent jurisdiction in all “matters of damage to personal property, where the amount in controversy does not exceed the sum of $100, means all injuries which one may sustain in respect to his ownership of personal property.”