Court Opinion

ID: 3961158
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-06 10:21:27.16802+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:54:24.982383
License: Public Domain

In the month of November, 1891, appellant's freight train set fire to the grass land of appellee, which burned over 56 1/2 acres thereof, to the injury of the roots and turf, besides destroying the fence inclosing the same.
The witnesses for appellee placed the damage to the roots and turf at from $2 to $4 per acre, with the decided preponderance of the evidence in favor of $2 as the maximum amount of damage. They also proved that the burning of grass at that season of the year greatly impaired its productive capacity for the next succeeding years, so that it would not produce more than a half or a third of a crop the following year.
About one year after this burn the witnesses of appellant examined the meadow, and testified, that they could discover no difference in *Page 301 
the turf and grass on the land that had been burned and that that had not. Appellant also offered to prove by the witness Buchanan, that the land burned in November, 1891, was burned over in the fall of the year 1889 and in the fall of the year 1890, and that the turf and roots were damaged thereby. This evidence was excluded, on the objection that it was irrelevant and immaterial to any issue in the case.
It seems to us that, in view of the testimony introduced on behalf of both parties, and especially in view of the difficulty in this class of cases of ascertaining the true extent of damage done to the sod, the testimony should have been admitted, as a circumstance for the consideration of the jury in weighing the conflicting estimates of damage made by the several witnesses. It can hardly be said to be entirely irrelevant.
It is contended by appellee, however, that if admitted the result would have been the same. This may be, but we are of the opinion that, if this evidence had not produced a different result, something else should have done so; that is to say, we can not account for the amount of the verdict, of which complaint is made, on the evidence found in this record. While the excess is not great, it is none the less real.
Had it not been for this excess in the amount of the verdict, it may be that the excluded testimony would not have been of sufficient magnitude to have required a reversal of the judgment.
On account of its exclusion and the excess in the amount of the verdict considered together, we are of opinion that the judgment should be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Reversed and remanded.