Court Opinion

ID: 3512845
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 22:23:44.346026+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:20:53.780031
License: Public Domain

* Corpus Juris-Cyc. References: Appeal and Error, 4CJ, p. 1216, n. 99, 2; p. 1242, n. 49.
This is the second appeal of this case, the first appeal being reported in 141 Miss. 199, 106 So. page 525, where the facts of the controversy are set out at length, and which we do not deem necessary to restate here, except such additional facts as seem necessary to a proper decision of this case.
On the second trial, the court below held that the supreme court, by its decision, had adjudicated every fact and question of law involved except the single question that the plaintiff had proved the value of the cotton shipped and destroyed by fire at the time of said fire on October 18, 1920, instead of proving the value of the cotton at the destination, New Orleans, on the day the cotton should have arrived in New Orleans in the usual and ordinary course of transportation, and the court below excluded on the second trial, all testimony which the defendant offered tending to reduce the value of the *Page 833 
cotton by showing a lower and different grade and staple from that alleged to have been stated in the opinion of this court.
We have carefully read our opinion in the former case. In the statement of facts, it is stated that the proof showed a certain staple, and the court said that Levy's testimony that he knew the value of the cotton was sufficient to go to the jury; but the judgment of the court, the mandate of the court, and the opinion of the court, all show that the only thing finally adjudicated by the court was that the defendant railroad company was liable for whatever damages had accrued to plaintiff by virtue of the destruction, by fire, of the lot of cotton here in controversy.
As a matter of law, it was adjudicated that there was liability, but it was not adjudicated that the only fact to be ascertained was the value of a certain kind, class, grade, and staple, on the date it should have been delivered in New Orleans. The opinion of the supreme court was not res adjudicata as to the grade and staple of the cotton, but the court simply held that there was sufficient proof as to the grade and staple to permit the jury to pass upon the case. In other words, the remarks of the court on this subject were addressed to the railroad company's contention that because of the lack of proof as to the grade the defendant was entitled to a peremptory instruction. The construction placed upon the opinion of this court in the former case by counsel and the court below is too narrow, and we say this in the light of a critical examination of the cases of Hardy v. O'Pry, 102 Miss. 197, 59 So. 73;Stewart v. Stebbins, 30 Miss. 66; Harvison v. Turner,116 Miss. 550, 77 So. 528; Dean v. Bd. Supervisors, 135 Miss. 268, 99 So. 563; Bates v. Strickland, 139 Miss. 636,103 So. 432; and Home Ins. Co. v. Tate Mercantile Co., 117 Miss. 760, 78 So. 709, none of which are in conflict with the view here expressed. It is unnecessary to quote, at length, the opinion in the former case. It speaks for itself. But the concluding *Page 834 
part of the opinion shows clearly what the court intended to decide, and did decide. In concluding, Judge ANDERSON said:
"Neither do we think there is any merit in appellees' cross-appeal. There was sufficient evidence to go to the jury on the issue of whether the cotton was gin-fired or the fire originated after it had been delivered to appellant. It follows from these views that the case is affirmed on both direct and cross-appeal as to the question of liability, and reversed on direct appeal for another trial on the question as to the amount of damages suffered by appellees on account of the October shipment. Affirmed on direct and cross-appeal as to liability, and reversed on direct appeal as to the question of damages alone."
On the second trial the question of liability was resadjudicata, but as to the amount of damages it clearly was notres adjudicata. The judgment of this court was not resadjudicata. The defendant in the first trial did not offer any proof on the grade and staple. There was no exact statement as to the grade on the first trial in plaintiff's evidence. Notwithstanding the court had held that the judgment of this court was res adjudicata as to the law of the case, counsel offered the deposition of Bodet to show the grade of the cotton, and also to show a lower staple than the staple mentioned in the opinion in the former case. In itself, this action of plaintiff, in introducing Bodet's testimony, would have reopened the whole question if it had been settled by this court in the first case.
Counsel for appellant, the railroad company, offered the testimony of members of the committee on valuation, and the committee on classification, as to the grade and staple of this cotton. As appellant says, all of the testimony that defendant offered on the grade and staple was excluded, because counsel for appellee contended, in the court below, in his objection to the testimony, that this referred to twenty-three bales of cotton instead of twenty-four bales of cotton, and that this court had settled the *Page 835 
matter of grade and staple of the cotton in controversy. The court sustained this objection. Counsel for appellee here now insists that the testimony of these committeemen is unreliable and uncertain, and, if competent, not entitled to much consideration. With that, we have nothing to do, as the case is here presented. On the objection made in the trial of the case, the court was in error in excluding all of the defendant's testimony as to grade and staple of the cotton. It was proper for him to show, by competent evidence, the grade and staple of the cotton, and any other fact which went to the amount of damages to be assessed against defendant. Of course, the court having assumed that the grade and staple were settled by this court, the instruction fixing the grade and staple, and, likewise, ignoring Bodet's testimony, was erroneous.
It is not before us now, and we do not decide, whether or not the testimony of members of the committee on valuation, and on classification, is, in its entirety, competent, because of the specific objection made, and the specific ruling of the court was that the testimony was not competent for the reason that this court had adjudicated the grade and staple of the cotton.
Without altering the former opinion in this case, or modifying same, and in the light of that opinion, this case will necessarily be reversed and remanded for another trial of the case in accordance with this opinion and the former opinion rendered in this case.
Reversed and remanded on question of damages alone.