Campbell v. Railroad

Tennessee Supreme Court
Campbell v. Railroad, 98 Tenn. 148 (Tenn. 1897)
38 S.W. 732
Beard

Campbell v. Railroad

Opinion of the Court

Beard, J.

This record embraces two causes between the same parties, by agreement consolidated and tried together in the Circuit Court. Both these actions were brought to recover damages for stock, which, it is alleged, were killed by the moving trains of the railroad company, at different times, on unfenced portions of its roadbed. The declaration in each one of these cases contained a common law count, and also a count resting on an appraisement of value, made after the killing of stock, and seeking a recovery of this appraised value, and also of attorney’s fees, under Secs. 4 and 5 of Ch. 101 of the Acts of 1891 (Shannon’s Code, §§ 1589, 1590). The defendant below filed separate pleas to these counts. On the trial of the cases there were verdicts for the plaintiff below, giving him the appraised value of his stock and also attorney’s fees in the two actions. From the judgments rendered in these two verdicts the causes in their present form have been appealed by the railroad company to this Court. It is now insisted that this case should be reversed, because, as is argued, the two counts of the declaration above indicated are incompatible. This objection is made in this Court for the first time. It was not raised by a demurrer or in any other way in the Court below. In this state of the record, the verdicts being clearly referable to *150the second count, which in its averments conformed to the statute in question, we think it comes too late. In addition, however, we do not agree that these counts are incompatible, or that in the use of the common law count seeking general damages the plaintiff below was precluded from setting up and seeking recovery upon an appraisement, contemplated by the Act of 1891, already referred to. The same injury is complained of, and a recovery is sought in damages, to make good the loss by reason thereof, in both counts. Under the common law count, and under the statutory count, the amount of these damages is a matter of proof, the only difference on this point being that under the latter the - ap-praisement is a prima facie evidence of value. It is true that under the latter count, if his appraisement is conformable to the statute and the jury should agree with the appraisers as to value, then the plaintiff, if the defendant has failed for sixty days after the appraisement, and before the institution of the suit, to pay the amount so found, may recover additionally his attorney’s fees. This, however, is no part of the damages for the plaintiff, but is given “in addition to the assessed value,” “in case of litigation,” like costs, in order that the plaintiff may sustain no loss by reason of the defendant’s wrongful conduct.

On the trial of the case the plaintiff below read to the jury, over the objection of the railroad company, a report of the appraisers as to the value of *151the stock in question. In permitting this the trial Judge committed an error. Sec. 4, Ch. 101, of the Acts of 1891, under which it was claimed this ap-praisement was made, is in these words: “Whenever any stock may be killed or crippled by any train of cars or locomotive upon any unfenced railway within this State, it shall be lawful for the owner of the stock so killed or crippled, after first giving the nearest station agent of the company to which said railroad shall belong, written notice of his intention to apply to a Justice of the Peace within the district in which said stock may have been killed or crippled, and said Justice shall appoint three discreet and disinterested householders of his county a board of appraisers, who, after being duly sworn, shall examine the stock so killed or crippled, and affix a value on the same, if killed, or assess the damages to the same if crippled, and return to said Justice of the Peace a written report, carefully describing the stock, stating whether they were killed or crippled, and also setting out the valuation or assessment of damages made by them; which report said Justice of the Peace shall file and preserve as a part of the records of his office, and said report shall be prima facie evidence as to the value of said stock killed or damages as to that crippled.”

The reports of appraisement which were submitted to the jury in these causes fall far short of the requirements of this section. Each failed to show *152that the parties who made the appraisements were disinterested householders of the county, or that they were sworn before undertaking the office of appraisers, or that they ever examined the stock killed in order to make the appraisements; nor was there any effort made by outside testimony to remedy these vital defects, even if they could be thus supplemented, and this we do not decide. The statute in question intends to furnish to the party whose stock has been killed or crippled, a speedy method of ascertaining loss, by the inspection under oath of disinterested and properly qualified appraisers of the property injured or killed, and makes the valuation fixed by them the basis of his claim and recovery, unless overturned by proof. It is a new and special tribunal constituted for his convenience and benefit, and the Court does not impose too much of a burden in requiring him to see that it exercises its functions in accordance with the terms of the statute, if he desires to avail himself of its privileges. Especially is this so, when if he fails to present a statutory appraisement, an opportunity is given him to recover as at common law.

For this error these causes are reversed and remanded.

Reference

Status
Published