Case Name: Kansas City Southern Railway Company v. Short
Court: Arkansas Supreme Court
Jurisdiction: Arkansas
Decision Date: 1905-05-13
Citations: 75 Ark. 345
Docket Number: 
Parties: Kansas City Southern Railway Company v. Short.
Judges: 
Reporter: Arkansas Reports
Volume: 75
Pages: 345–347

Head Matter:
Kansas City Southern Railway Company v. Short.
Opinion delivered May 13, 1905.
1. Appeal — question not 'raised. — Where, in a suit against a carrier for conversion of bales of cotton, evidence was admitted without objection as to the value of middling cotton, but no evidence was introduced as to the grade of the cotton converted, the defect of proof was not raised by assignments in the motion for new trial to the effect that the verdict was not supported by the evidence, and that there was no proof of the value. (Page 346.)
2. Same — waiver op errors. — The excessiveness of the damages awarded is waived by failure to assign it as one of the grounds in the motion for new trial. (Page 347.)
Appeal from Little River Circuit Court.
James S. Steel, Judge.
Affirmed.
S. W. Moore and Read & McDonough, for appellant.

Opinion:
Hill, C. J.
This is an action by appellee against appellant railroad company for conversion of four bales of cotton, and the issue contested in the lower court was _ whether appellee was the owner of the cotton. The counsel for appellant frankly admit that they lost that issue before the jury, and do not ask the court to review the jury's action, and merely present on this appeal the sufficiency of the evidence to show the market value of the cotton. The appellee stated that he did not know the grade of the cotton. He testified that he paid 2 1-2 cents per pound for the cotton as seed cotton, and when he got 1,500 or 1,600 pounds would then have it ginned into a bale. He said the bales were medium size, and would probably weigh 500 pounds. Another witness said middling cotton was the basis for the market value of cotton, and he put the value of middling at the time in question at Ashdown (the place of conversion) at 7 1-2 cents. Other witnesses, a cotton buyer and a merchant, put the price of middling cotton at Ashdown at the time of the conversion at 8 cents There was no objection to this evidence, and none in opposition to it. The appellant might well have objected to the price of middling cotton being shown until the grade of this cotton was shown, or offered to be shown, to be middling, or of a grade from which the value could be ascertained from that basis. The court instructed the jury in the first instruction if they found the wrongful appropriation of the cotton then to find its value as shown by the proof. The appellant asked and the court gave an instruction that, before the plaintiff (appellee) could recover, he must prove by a fair preponderance of the evidence the market value of the cotton at the time of the taking. The course of the testimony indicates an assumption that this was middling cotton. Had the question of the inapplicability of the price of middling been raised in the trial court by an objection to the evidence on that ground, it could, and doubtless would, have been met with the connecting evidence. The case was tried on another issue, and it appears that this was but an incident, which is now raised for the first time. Treating this as applicable evidence, then, a verdict for 8 cents per pound is fully sustained; but the verdict is for $20 more than that basis, being for $180. This question, however,-was not raised in the motion for new trial. The motion for new trial assigns these errors: "The verdict is not supported by the evidence." "VIII. The court erred in submitting the case to the jury, since there was no proof of the value, and no proof that cotton was converted by the defendant, and no proof that the alleged taking occurred in Little River County, Arkansas." The other grounds are abandoned, and it is not necesseary to set them forth.
Now the argument is made: "There is a total failure of proof as to the grade of the cotton in controversy. There is also a total failure to show what the cotton was worth." As heretofore indicated, there was sufficient evidence for the jury to find the value to be $160, and the amount above that is excessive, but the assessment of excessive damages is specifically made ground for new trial. Kirby's Dig. § 6215. The cases are too numerous for citation that errors not assigned in the motion for new trial are waived. The court could and doubtless would have corrected this error in the lower court; but whether 'it would or not, this court will not correct it until the lower court is first invited by the motion for new trial to do so, and then given the opportunity. The excessive feature is not urged now, and is merely developed in the examination of the challenged evidence.
Finding no reversible error., the judgment is affirmed.