Court Opinion

ID: 4893917
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-09-02 23:54:19.644483+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:11:49.163103
License: Public Domain

West, Associate Justice.
The sixth and seventh paragraphs of the charge of the court are brought in question by the assignment of errors.
Tbe^ appellee, in his original petition, simply claimed briefly, in the most general terms almost that could be used, and as it were pro forma, a judgment for §1,000 in damages, by reason of the refusal of appellant to make him a deed in accordance with his bond, and also by reason of his having closed up the streets that by tfw same instrument the appellant had agreed might be kept open forever.
There was no pretense of proof offered on the trial to show any special damages to the appellee resulting from the failure of the appellant to execute a deed to him in accordance with the terms of his bond for title. On the contrary, as a matter of fact, the appellee was at once let into the actual possession of the propertypurchased, at the date of the bond, and continued from that period down to. the day of trial in undisturbed enjoyment of the premises, as com-. pletely and as fully as he could have done if he had been holding-under the deed, to which, by the terms of the bond, he was justly - entitled.
The other averments in the original petition as to the damages, sustained by appellee from the unauthorized acts of the appellant in closing the streets named in the bond, are of so vague and indefinite a character that the appellee seems on the trial below to have abandoned all idea of recovering under them. The court also in its charge practically instructed the jury to allow no damages under the averments as contained in the original petition, and confined their inquiries to the more special allegations on the subject of damages in this case to be found stated in appellee’s supplemental petition, as incurred by him in or about his business as a gunsmith,.
The averments on the subject of damages to the appellee resulting from the loss of business as a gunsmith, found in the supplemental petition (which would more properly be the subject of an amended petition, under the rules laid down by this court for the guidance of the district court), were, under the circumstances, sufficient to admit of proof in support of this allegation. Under these averments, however, the appellee claimed damages, only for the two years next preceding the filing of the supplemental petition, in *274which this special ground of damages was for the first time set up. That pleading was filed on the 14th of May, 1880.
Ho damages were sought to be recovered for any period of time later than two years from the date of the supplemental petition, and no recovery was sought for any damage that appellee might suifer between the date of the filing of the supplemental petition and the day of trial. Evidence, however, on this special element of damage was adduced, covering a period of ten years down to the date of the trial, and the court invited the attention of the jury to this subject, by instructing them that they might estimate the damage to appellee’s business resulting from the unlawful closing of the streets, for two years preceding the filing of the original petition down to the day of trial.
The attention of the jury should have been directed in estimating the ■ damages, alone to the two years preceding the filing of the supplemental petition, as specially desired by the appellee in his pleading. He sought no recovery for any other period of time. He waived his right of action for damages (if any action he had) accruing two years before the suit was brought, and for damages that he may have sustained between the date of his supplemental petition and the day of trial. Yet the appellee testified that he had been injured considerably since the filing of the suit. He also swore that, by being fenced off, he had been damaged at least $200 a year, because his customers had no direct mode of reaching his gunshop. The evidence shows that the appellant had inclosed the land as early as the year 1870, more than ten years before the supplemental petition was filed. He also testified that he had been damaged at the rate of $200 per annum in his business as a gunsmith two years preceding the 14th of May, 1880, and at the same rate down to the day of trial.
The court, especially in a case of this character, should have by its charge directed the minds of the jury to the very point in issue. We cannot say that no injury resulted to the appellant from this failure of the court' to limit their attention, when considering the subject of damages, to the precise period of time to which the appellee had confined his claim.
The evidence on this branch of the case is, when considered in the most favorable light for appellee, and assuming that the court had instructed the jury correctly, of the most meager and unsatisfactory character. There is no proof on the subject except that of the appellee and the witness Henkel. In his evidence, appellee confined himself to a reiteration of his statement that he was dam*275aged by reason of the closing up of the streets, in his business as a gunsmith, in an average of $200 per annum from the time the streets were closed down to the day of trial. Bone of the facts upon which this estimate is based are given. It resulted, he says, from the fact that his customers could not have access to him, but no person is named who at any time failed to give him work to do because he was inaccessible. Bor were any of his customers, who were thus by the acts of the appellant deprived of his services (and we may fairly infer that they were numerous), placed upon the stand. Bor does the evidence of Henkel, as it appears in the record, add much, if anything, to the strength of appellee’s case. He says that he had resided in the village of Bound Top during the whole time that the appellee lived on the land purchased of appellant, and that he had seen several parties who came to Bound Top and wanted to have gun-worlc done, and inquired for appellee, and, on learning how they would have to go to reach him, would not take •their work to him, because it was so far out of the way to get to him. Bo date is fixed by this witness as to when he saw the several parties to whom he refers. As the evidence shows that appellee had been fenced off from Bound Top ever since 1870, this may have occurred during that year or some year anterior to 1878. The names of the persons are not given, nor any other circumstance that would enable the appellant to show that no such occurrence ever took place, and if it did, that it was at a period of time different from that for which the appellee was now seeking to recover damages.
The error in the charge of the court on this subject will necessitate a reversal of the case. We are not prepared, however, to say, even if the court had, in its charge, correctly submitted the" issues of fact to the jury on this point, that the evidence was sufficient, under the facts and circumstances of this particular case, to authorize the finding of the jury on the question of damages. This court has no doubt held on many occasions, and wisely held, for many reasons, that where the evidence is so conflicting that the jury might well be justified in finding either way, that the verdict will not be disturbed.
It, however, has never failed, when the occasion, in their opinion, required it, to set aside a verdict that was clearly wrong; as where it was without evidence or manifestly against the weight of evidence. Willis v, Lewis, 28 Tex., 191.
In all other respects, except in the one above adverted to, the charge of the court is a clear presentation of the issues raised by *276the pleadings, accompanied by a series of instructions in every way proper, under the state of the case, to be given to the jury to enable them to arrive at a correct conclusion.
[Opinion delivered January 16. 1883
We are, for this reason, disinclined to reverse the judgment; and as the question of damages does not seem to be the main issue in the case, we have concluded that if appellee, through his counsel, will file a remittitur of the damages in this court within the next twenty days, to allow the judgment in other respects to be affirmed, appellee paying the costs of this court. Chadwick v. Meredith, 40 Tex., 384. If, however, the remittitur is not made by the expiration of that time, then the judgment to be reversed and the case remanded, in order that a new trial may be had in accordance with the views herein expressed.
Judgment affirmed.1

Note, —The remittitur was filed within the time specified in the opinion, and a rehearing asked for by the appellant was refused.