City of Canadian v. Guthrie

87 S.W.2d 316, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 1312
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 8, 1932
DocketNo. 3839.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 87 S.W.2d 316 (City of Canadian v. Guthrie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Canadian v. Guthrie, 87 S.W.2d 316, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 1312 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

HALL, Chief Justice.

Guthrie was engaged in hauling in the city of Canadian, in which occupation he used a wagon and team. One of the animals so used is described as a “bay mare, one-eyed, about 12 or 14 years old. That this mare, by reason of the loss of her said eye, which plaintiff alleges to be the left' eye, was specially adapted, to the work of teaming in connection with the other horse.” It appears that on account of the *317 dearth of vitamins from A to Z in her home cuisine, this particular mare was prone to spend her off nights prowling through the city, feasting upon the lawns, shrubbery, and gardens of her neighbors. Some days before the fatal day she had been placed in the city pound, plaintiff was duly notified and failed to pay her board bill, whereupon the city marshal employed one Jess, whose surname was Lemley, more familiarly known as “Panhandle Pete,” who, at the direction of the mayor, ruthlessly took said mare’s life by shooting her between the bad eye and the one not so bad. In other words, in the vernacular of gangland, when Panhandle Pete’s, pistol popped, she petered, for which the poundkeeper paid Pete a pair of pesos. The mayor testified that just before her execution he visited the city pound twice to see her and found her in bad shape, that she was sick and prostrate, and had hay and other provender in her nose. That he cleaned out her flues so she could breathe, but, nevertheless, he called out the militia and ordered Pete to put her out of her misery for humanitarian reasons. This established the corpus delicti. His honor testified that he knew nothing about mares, and the jury believed him.

There is testimony that she was thin in .flesh, indicating that she had some fine points upon which her harness could be hung. From the record, we conclude that although she may not have had a skin you would particularly love to touch (though she had seen only fourteen joyous summers), yet she had a skin which clung like ivy to her rafters with a beautiful corrugated effect upon the sides of her lithe and spirituelle form.

Plaintiff immediately brought suit, fixing his actual damages at $50, alleging that his mare had no market value, and proudly averring that she was the only mare of her kind in Hemphill county, but that $50 was her actual and intrinsic value, and $100 was her sentimental value. He further sued for $350 for the loss of the services of said mare while pursuing his occupation of hauling, and claimed the further sum of $500 as exemplary damages on account of the malicious act of the city in having her killed. He averred that because of her loss his occupation, like Othello’s, was gone and he “had been set out an empty.” However, he concluded before the trial that a genial, brotherly-love city like Canadian, which had been converted into a one-horse town by Pete and the mayor, was incapable of harboring malice, and the claim for exemplary damages was abandoned at the trial.

Plaintiff testified that usually he kept her confined in a four-wire corral. The chain of title discloses that Mike Nolan at one time was her proud possessor, and sold her to Mr. Flowers for twelve pieces of silver, payable in installments of two pieces per month. The abstract of title further shows that Flowers sold her to Guthrie, the plaintiff herein, but, according to Flowers’ testimony, he had never received even a thin dime of the purchase money since he transferred possession. The testimony of Flowers and the plaintiff conflict upon this issue, but since the title is not involved in this action, that matter is “dismissed for want of jurisdiction,” because we do not know what else to do with it.

The record shows that upon at least two occasions

“When night drew her sable curtain down
And pinned it with a star,”

and

“Silence like a-gentle spirit
Brooded o’er a still and pulseless world,”

the time lock on her corral mysteriously went off and so did she, in search of tulips, dahlias, and gladioli in the neighboring lawns and flower beds. It is clear from the record that she had at least one eye for the beautiful, and was excessively fond of flowers, but that the tender passion was not reciprocated, for, as stated, he parted with her without consideration. While her origin is shrouded in mystery, her appetite for flora of the rarest and costliest varieties indicates that somewhere back in the line of her ancestry there had been injected a stream of royal blood. Although she had only one eye, appellant contends she could find more edible shrubbery in a single night than an experienced landscape gardener could replant in thirty days. We may assume that in her midnight excursions she had been thrown with porch climbers, joy riders, orchard raiders, and other nocturnal prowlers, which may account for her waywardness and utter disregard for the property rights of others. But after her midnight banquet upon orchids, delphiniums, and hyacinths,’ the poundkeeper would take her in charge, and set before her a bundle or two of mildewed sorghum of the vintage of 1927 *318 in order to take the taste out of her mouth, but when he sent the meal ticket to the plaintiff, the latter steadfastly refused to pay. It was not denied that she had “went hence” and was cut down in the heyday of her young and fitful life because the mayor found some of the hay in her nose, and he admitted that he was accessory before the fact and had personally ordered her gentle soul sent to the great beyond and the remainder to the municipal dump ground.

While, as bearing upon her sentimental value, it is saddening to know that the beautiful flower beds and onion patches of Canadians, over which she was wont to gambol in the moonlight between the hour when

“Curfew tolled the knell of parting day,”

and some hours later,

“when greyeyed morn
Stood tiptoe upon the misty mountain height
And flecked the eastern hills with rays of golden light,”

would know her no more forever, nevertheless, in the cold unsympathetic eye of the law, sentimental value is not recognized as a basis for damages. 13 Tex. Jur. 155.

A jury was impaneled, who found: (1)' That the mare had an intrinsic value; (2) of $25; (3) that plaintiff suffered special damages; (4) which were the proximate result of the city’s unlawful act; (5) in the sum of $35. The court defined “proximate cause” in the stereotyped form, and charged the jury that special damages “are such consequences of an injury as are peculiar to the circumstances and conditions of the injured party." Judgment was rendered in favor of Guthrie for $60, with interest from the date of the judgment at 6 per cent.

The city demurred to the petition generally and specially to the item of special damages based upon the loss of the use of the mare by plaintiff in his business as a drayman. This demurrer should have been sustained, and the court’s action in overruling it presents fundamental error.

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Bluebook (online)
87 S.W.2d 316, 1932 Tex. App. LEXIS 1312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-canadian-v-guthrie-texapp-1932.