143 S.W. 293 | Tex. App. | 1911
J. E. Smith instituted this suit against Dave Milam to recover title and possession of a tract of land. By virtue of a writ of sequestration sued out by plaintiff, the defendant was ousted of possession of the land on January 8, 1910, and, by plea in reconvention, he sued the plaintiff for damages, upon allegations that the writ was wrongfully issued. Interpreted in the light of the court's charge, the verdict of the jury shows a finding that Milam rented from Smith, for the year 1910, 66 acres of the land sued for, under a contract that Milam would furnish the labor necessary to cultivate, harvest, and market a crop, that Smith would furnish to Milam the land, together with teams, feed, and implements necessary to raise and harvest the crop, and the parties should share equally in the crops so produced. For the breach of that contract by Smith, the jury returned a verdict in Milam's favor for $300, but awarded the plaintiff title and possession of the land. From the judgment in favor of Milam for the damages awarded, Smith has appealed.
After being ousted from the land in controversy, Milam rented other land, which he cultivated during the year 1910. The court instructed the jury that, if they should find in favor of Milam on his plea in reconvention, then they should "assess his actual damages at the reasonable market value of one-half of the corn and cotton which the defendant would be reasonably expected to have received upon said premises during the crop year 1910, less such amount as the defendant is shown to have earned, or, by the use of ordinary diligence he might have earned, by engaging in a similar or different business after the breach of said contract." In failing to instruct the jury that the reasonable value of such labor as the defendant *294
would have hired, if any, in order to cultivate the 66 acres so rented from Smith, should also be deducted from the market value of the crop he would have realized, we think there was error. Crews v. Cortez,
Complaint is made of the refusal of the trial court to sustain special exceptions to certain allegations in plaintiff's petition; but the court failed to submit to the jury issues presented by those allegations, thus, in effect, sustaining the exceptions, and, as appellant has not pointed out any evidence introduced to sustain those allegations, the errors in the rulings, if any, were harmless.
For the error in the court's charge indicated above, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.