Kennedy v. Treleaven
Kennedy v. Treleaven
Opinion of the Court
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an action to recover damages for the negligent destruction of a building. A judgment in favor of the plaintiff was recovered, from which the defendant appeals.
J. L. Kennedy, the plaintiff, owned a residence in Oakland estimated to be worth $2,000, which had been insured for $1,000, and he only asked judgment for $1,000. The defendant company
The principal question on this appeal is whether or not the ■plaintiff established the extent of the loss by competent and sufficient proof. The question was raised by an objection to evidence and an instruction of the court as to the character of evidence by which plaintiff’s damages might be measured. There was sufficient evidence as to the origin of the fire, and that it resulted from the negligence of the defendant, to uphold the verdict. Testimony was offered as to the size, plan, material, finish and condition of the building burned. There was-also testimony in regard to the cost of constructing a house of the kind burned, and also as to the deterioration of the building from the time it was erected until it was destroyed. The house had been built of white pine, which witnesses said was better and more enduring than,the pine now obtainable, but that white pine was no longer on the market, and hence their opinions were based on merchantable pine which was now on the market at this place. Defendant contends that the evidence mentioned was not receivable in the absence of proof of the original cost of the building.
Generally speaking, it may be said that one whose property is negligently destroyed by another is entitled to recover the actual loss sustained. There being no malice nor intentional wrongdoing, compensation is the proper measure, and hence the defendant was liable for the reasonable value of the building burned at the time and place of its destruction. There is no ■
Our own court has adopted and applied a different rule. In Insurance Co. v. Payne, 57 Kan. 291, 46 Pac. 315, where the value of a building that had been burned was in question, it was said:
“One method of arriving at such loss is by estimating the cost replacing the building less any depreciation from use, age, or otherwise;*654 and the other is by evidence of the value of the building, at the time of its destruction, less the value, if any, of the ruins.” (p. 301.)
In the same case an exception was taken' to the testimony of the owner of the building giving the cost of it, and in holding the testimony improper the court said:
“Evidence of the -cost of a building, however, can hardly be said to be evidence of its value at a particular time. Sometimes, from the necessities of the case, it may be proper to inquire as to the cost of an article as tending to establish its value; but there is no such necessity here, and Payne ought not to have been permitted to testify that the house cost about $25,000.” (p. 301.)
The defendant has no cause to complain of the rule for measuring the damage laid down by the trial court.
An objection is made that the court in its instructions did hot present defendant’s theory of the case as fully as that of the plaintiff, but we think that the issues were sufficiéntly presented, and that no prejudice could have resulted to the defendant from the instructions. We find no error in the record, and therefore the judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- J. L. Kennedy v. L. G. Treleaven, as Receiver of the Consumers Light, Heat and Power Company
- Cited By
- 20 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. 1. Building Destroyed by Fire — Measure of Damages. The measure of damages for the negligent destruction of a building by fire, where there is no malice or willful wrongdoing, is' the fair and reasonable value of the building at the time and place of its destruction. 2. Same — To arrive at the damages sustained, where the building burned had no market value, resort may bfe had to any facts which fairly tend to show its actual value when it was destroyed, and a permissible method of proof is by showing the cost of replacing the building, less any depreciation from age, use, utility, or condition. 3. Same — Cost of Building as an Element of Damages. The cost of property destroyed, less a deduction for deterioration, is a proper element for consideration in fixing its value in some cases, but where the building burned had been erected more than twenty-six years before the fire occurred, when the cost of material and labor which entered into it differed greatly from the present cost of the same, evidence of the original cost is not essential. 4. Sameí — Trial—Instructions—No error is found in the instructions of the court, and the evidence is deemed sufficient to support the verdict.