44 Mo. App. 245 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1891
This action is brought to recover damages of the defendant for injuries to two carloads of potatoes, delivered to the defendant by the plaintiff at Charleston, Missouri, for shipment to Chicago, Illinois. The petition contains four counts. The answer was, first, a general denial; secondly, a special defense, setting up a special contract of shipment, under which the defendant was not liable for injuries to property beyond its own line. At the close of the evidence the plaintiff took a nonsuit as to the second, third and fourth counts of his petition, and went to the jury on the first count. The jury returned a verdict for $542.50. The plaintiff thereupon remitted $42.50, and the court rendered judgment for the residue, $500.
Against the objection of the defendant, the plaintiff was allowed to take the petition in the case, and to look at the ad damnum clause, for the purpose of refreshing his memory as to the amount of damages which he had sustained. After having thus refreshed his memory, he was allowed, against the objection of the defendant, to testify, in round terms, that he had been damaged in the sum of $392, the damages claimed in the petition. It has been often held in this state, and in this court, that a witness cannot assume the office of the jury by stating roundly the amount of the damages sustained by the plaintiff. White v. Stoner, 18 Mo. App. 540; Kenneday v. Holladay, 25 Mo. App. 503, 514; Smith v. Young, 26 Mo. App. 575, 578; Reno v. Kingsbury, 39 Mo. App. 240, 246; Kauffman v. Babcock, 66 Tex. 241. The principle of these decisions is, that the quantum of damages is a conclusion for thejury and not for the witness to draw; that the witnesses must state the facts from which the conclusion can be drawn, and that the jury must draw the conclusion from the facts thus stated. This principle is of peculiar application in the present case. Here the law furnished a distinct standard for the measurement of the damages, and what that standard was is pointed out in Heil v. Railroad, 16 Mo. App. 363. In such a case the jury cannot guess at the damages. Morrison v. Yancey, 23 Mo. App. 675. But
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded.