21 S.W. 158 | Tex. App. | 1893
The verdict of the jury, which is supported by the evidence, establishes that on the 23d day of November, 1889, appellant negligently set fire to the dry grass and weeds which it allowed to accumulate upon its right of way; and this fire spread to the farm of appellee adjoining, and burned over about 80 acres of his pasture, destroying 300 of his rails, 25 posts, 306 fruit trees, 60 grapevines, and 200 blackberry vines, the cash value of all of which amounted to as much or more than the verdict of the jury. Appellee brought this suit for the damage so caused to him, and recovered judgment for the sum of $609.17, from which this appeal is taken.
No complaint is made as to the amount of the verdict, or the sufficiency of the evidence to show negligence on the part of appellant.
Appellant complains that the measure of damage applied by the court below for the destruction of the growing fruit trees and vines was their cash value, when they should have been treated as a part of the land, and its lessened value the proper measure.
A number of decisions in such cases recognize as correct the rule adopted by the court below. Whitbeck v. Railway, 36 Barb., 644; Railway v. Bohannon, 7 S.E. Rep., 236; Montgomery v. Locke,
We believe where the thing injured or destroyed is a part of the realty, the lessened value of the land will come nearer furnishing a just rule in its application to all cases than the one adopted by the court (Express Company v. Real Estate Association,
Appellant also complains at the action of the court in giving to the jury, at the request of appellee's counsel, the following definition of negligence, viz.: "Negligence is the lack of that care which an ordinarily prudent man would exercise in the management of his own affairs." The following definition was approved by our Supreme Court in Railway v. Oram,
The court committed no reversible error in calling the attention of the jury in the charge to the values of the several items as alleged in the petition.
We think the judgment of the court below should be in all things affirmed.
Affirmed.
Justice STEPHENS did not sit in this case. *147