276 S.W. 746 | Tex. App. | 1925
"The jurisdiction of a court a quo, aside from questions arising from the subsequent assertion of new causes of action, is determined by the matter put in issue when the suit is brought. But as, in cases in which damages accumulate pending the action, the amount recoverable when judgment is rendered may be greater than that recoverable at its institution, the right of appeal is properly held to depend upon the amount in issue and which the court has the power to adjudge at the time of the trial. This is the holding in the Fromme Case [
See G. W. T. P. Ry. Co. v. Fromme,
In M., K. T. Ry. Co. v. Hughes,
In Hegman v. Roberts,
"The appellant, under a proper assignment of error, submits the proposition that `the county court had no power under its appellate jurisdiction to take cognizance of, or render judgment for, a greater amount than could have been considered and adjudicated by the justice court.' He cites, in support of his proposition, Cain v. Culbreath [Tex. Civ. App.]
See Sulzberger v, Hille (Tex.Civ.App.)
We do not go as far as the court in Hegman v. Roberts, supra. The assignments at tacking the jurisdiction of the justice court, and the jurisdiction of the county court, are hereby overruled.
In various assignments complaint Is made that the trial court erred in admitting testimony as to the original cost of the Ford car some four months before the accident, and testimony as to what the car in its claimed impaired condition, after the accident and after the repairs had been made on it by defendant, could have been sold for, etc. We believe that we might be permitted to take judicial cognizance of the well-recognized rule that Ford cars and other automobiles are sold new for a fixed price all over the United States, or at least all over this state. Therefore, what the plaintiff paid for the car new would be its market value. But compensation for the loss sustained was what plaintiff was entitled to. He could have established this amount by proof of the fair market value of the car immediately before and immediately after the accident, or the reasonable cost of putting the car in as good condition after the accident as it was before. As to the measure of damages, the court charged the jury to find what amount of money would be required to compensate the plaintiff for the damage done by reason of the negligence, if any, of the defendant. The answer was $140.10. Proof was made by plaintiff of the reasonable cost of the parts necessary to place the car in the condition it was before the accident and the reasonable charges for the work necessary to be done.
Further evidence was offered as to the reasonable value of the use of the car during the time when plaintiff claimed to have been deprived of such use by reason of the accident. We think that it is evident that any error in the trial court's admission of the testimony as to the original cost of the car, four months before the accident, is harmless, at any rate. When the injured article is susceptible of restoration, the reasonable cost of replacements and repairs is one of the elements of recovery, but not necessarily the only one. The plaintiff may recover the value of the use of the article during the time he was deprived of it. C., R. I. G. Ry. Co. v. Zumwalt, 239 S.W. 912, by the Commission of Appeals, and authorities there cited. We think that the plaintiff was entitled to have his car restored to the condition it was in prior to the accident, and that he was not required to go into the second-hand market and secure parts for the purpose of replacement. We think that a jury would be authorized to find that a new car which had been used only four months with reasonable care in the use thereof was substantially as valuable as a new car, and that the cost of the parts injured by an accident should be borne by the defendant at fault, and that the cost of the new parts is properly chargeable to the defendant. C., R I. G. Ry. Co. v. Zumwalt, supra.
Complaint is made that the trial court improperly permitted plaintiff to sue in the county court for 72 days' loss of the use of the car. It is urged the evidence shows that 9 days after the accident defendant notified plaintiff that the car had been repaired and to come to its shop and see if the car was satisfactory. Plaintiff did go, drove the car around the city, and brought it back, and claimed that the car did not operate as it did before — that the front and rear wheels were not in alignment, and one of the axles was bent, and other repairs were necessary. The manager of the defendant company agreed with plaintiff to leave the car in the shop, and assisted him to write a letter to the casualty company, in which the defendant had a blanket accident policy. He told the plaintiff that the adjuster of the casualty company would could to Cleburne soon and the matter would be arranged. The accident occurred on September 2, 1923. The plaintiff did not get the car from defendant's repair shop until some time in November. The evidence does not show that the defendant made any additional repairs or replacements on the car to meet plaintiff's demand, or that the representative of the casualty company ever came to Cleburne in an effort to adjust the matter. We think, in view of the agreement on the part of the defendant's manager for plaintiff to leave the car at its shop to await adjustment, that no error is shown in the failure to sustain the exception of defendant to plaintiff's pleading for the 72 days loss of time, and in admitting evidence of that fact.
At the time of the accident plaintiff secured the assistance of J. T. Comte, a garage *749 owner, to help him to determine the cost of the repairs necessary. Plaintiff testified that the parts and the work necessary to replace them amounted to $105. Defendant objected to this testimony on the ground that it was hearsay. But Comte testified to the same effect, and no question is raised as to his qualification to testify as to the cost of such parts and the work necessary to be done, and he made the total cost about the same as shown by the testimony of plaintiff. Therefore we think that any error in admitting the testimony of plaintiff as to the cost of the parts and the work necessary to be done, based on what Mr. Comte had told him, becomes harmless.
All assignments are overruled, and the Judgment is affirmed.