Butler v. Mehrling

15 Ill. 488
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 15 Ill. 488 (Butler v. Mehrling) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Butler v. Mehrling, 15 Ill. 488 (Ill. 1854).

Opinion

Scates, J.

Defendant replevied certain horses and other property of plaintiff, which had been trained and used for circus purposes. Plaintiff re-replevied the same on the 17th of August, and at November term of Jo-Davies circuit court following, dismissed his action of replevin. Judgment of retorno for costs, and an inquiry of damages for the detention. At the instance of the defendant, a jury were called to assess these damages, to which the plaintiff objected; and this raises the first question which we notice.

There was no error in this. The constitution secures the right of trial by juries, but this court says in Campbell v. Head, 13 Ill. R. 127, that it has no application to a case like this; and the legislature may empower the court to assess. On the other hand we do not so read or understand the act, R. S. 45, p. 434, § 6, as obliging, but authorizing the court to assess. They may well call a jury to do so, as was done in this case.

The next question we notice is, as to the law as sought to be laid down by the plaintiff in the several instructions refused.

The court instructed that the value of the use of the property during detention, is the true measure of damages, and not the value of the property alone. That speculative or expected profits from its use, is not the proper criterion or measure of damages, but a reasonable compensation for its use or rent; and no particular injury is admissible, no smart money, or vindictive damages, can be given.

These propositions lay down a correct rule in relation to the measure of damages under our statute inquiry. Green v. Mann, 11 Ill. R. 616.

The next question is presented by objections to the testimony as it was introduced, and again repeated in the character of the instructions asked and refused by the court. Certain witnesses who had, some but slight, and some no knowledge of this property, were called to fix the amount of damages; and who testified to the value of such property for circus exhibitions at different seasons of the year. These witnesses had more or less experience with circuses, and the profits of their exhibitions, and based their opinions on such knowledge of this kind of property and this use of it, in other States and countries, with a limited experience of it in this State. All this kind of testimony was objected to as incompetent, but admitted by the court.

On this point the court instructed the jury, that opinions based entirely upon supposed profits of a circus, are not proper evidence of the value of its use, and should be disregarded; and that speculative profits do not give the true criterion of damages; but in fixing the value of its use, the witness is not confined to the value for use alone in Jo-Davies county, but anywhere possessor may choose; but if witness’s estimate of its value is based alone upon the belief that people attend circuses better at a particular season, it is inadmissible.

The instructions refused were numerous, but need not be set out at large, as we think the substance will fully present the principles they asked to be laid down as law on this inquiry. They are,

That valuations based solely upon a belief that witness could make the amount in a good season:

That the value of its use in New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Louisiana, or the West Indies, or another State, is not the criterion of damages, but in Jo-Davies county, Illinois:

That the opinion of a witness, unacquainted with the value of its use in Illinois, but only in other States and cities, and of its value for any other than circus purposes, ought to be disregarded:

That like opinion of value by a non-resident witness unacquainted, or of short experience, in the use of such property in Illinois, and unacquainted with the leasing, renting, hiring, or chartering of such property for such uses, is not proper evidence and ought to be disregarded :

That opinions, based upon what was made by defendant exhibiting at Chicago, with this property; or from helping to train and take care of it in Chicago, are not admissible and should be disregarded.

Other instructions required the defendant to prove a detention on this writ of inquiry; that the property had not been returned; and declaring that the judgment of retorno had not taken effect; and that defendant must prove a return of all or a part of the property.

None of these propositions lay down the law correctly upon the question before the court.

This inquiry is given by statute, immediately upon dismissal of the replevin suit, and embraces the damages suffered to the amount of the value of the use of the property for the time it had been detained. The default and the dismissal conclude all inquiry, whether it has or has not been detained; of ownership, and a right to have it returned. Neither is the actual return any further in question than that plaintiff might show it in mitigation, by shortening the period of its actual detention.

The error in the propositions in relation to the opinions of witnesses is in this, that they are incompetent on account of the means of information upon which they are based. This is predicated upon the idea that they are offered as experts, and the means stated by them, will not justify the court in so classing them, as was answered by the court in Lincoln and wife v. Inhabitants of Barre, 5 Cush. R. 590, in relation to one called to prove the manner of constructing a highway, who had only had experience as a surveyor, and not as a builder of them.

So in Hager v. Edmonds, the court exclude the witness when offered as an expert to. prove a common estimate, equally within any man’s competency, who is acquainted with the necessary facts. 4 Barb. S. C. R. 257: So ruled in Robertson v. Stark, 15 N. H. R. 112.

It is true, probably, that mere opinions, as opinions, when offered in evidence, should be confined to experts' in the questions of skill or science as such, which are open to that kind of proof, and for want of better. But there are many cases in which exceptions admit opinions as competent, and leave the weight due them to the jury, according to the means of information and intelligence of the witness. So it is said in McKee v. Nelson, 4 Cow. R. 356, and approved in Steamboat Clipper v. Linus Logan, 18 Ohio, R. 396, as a case where testimony from necessity embraces a compound of fact and opinion.

And such is the case usually in relation to the value of property and its use, that is, of common kinds at least. This valuation was of the use of the property. In valuing the property itself, but little weight would be given to one who knew nothing of the property. But in valuing its use, those acquainted with the kind and use of such property, may be allowed to testify as to the value of the use of such property, and such opinions may be weighed, together with similar opinions of those who know the property itself. Greater weight would be due and given to those whose superior intelligence and means of knowledge must ever outweigh the less in human transactions. Still, however, little weight might be given to an opinion upon very limited means of information, yet it could hardly be excluded for incompetency.

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15 Ill. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-mehrling-ill-1854.