Cogley v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad
This text of 185 Iowa 1080 (Cogley v. Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinions
“Q. I will ask you what would have been the fair and reasonable market value at Grand Island, Nebraska, of the nine carloads of horses and mules which you shipped from Billings, Montana, on or about the 12-th day of August, 1916, had they arrived at Grand Island, Nebraska, in the usual and ordinary course of shipment of such horses, between such points.”
The meaning and significance of the foregoing hypothetical question can be understood only in the light of the record as it stood when the testimony was given. At that time, amendments to the petition were on file wherein it was alleged that, in the forwarding of the shipment from Alliance, there had been rough handling of the train between Alliance and Grand Island, and that such rough handling had resulted in the killing of a horse and in the throwing down of several others, to their injury. Plaintiff himself testified in support of these allegations. Plaintiff then testified to the -actual value of the horses at Grand Island, Nebraska, as $60 each. In answer to the above hypothetical question, he testified that the horses would have been worth at Grand Island $110 each, “had they arrived at Grand Island in the usual and ordinary course of shipment of such horses between -such points.” Clearly, damages resulting from the rough handling were included in his estimate. Plaintiff’s last amendment, filed after the close of the evidence, eliminated all claim for damages for rough [1084]*1084handling, and limited the damages claimed to those resulting from the premature watering of the horses. Strictly speaking, therefore, there was no evidence in the record of the extent of damages based upon the allegations of the last amendment to the petition. Furthermore, in the light of the whole record, the estimate of the plaintiff as to the extent of his damages was so clearly exaggerated that the jury was justified, for that reason .alone, in placing no credence therein. The jury might well believe that it furnished no aid whatever in ascertaining the approximate truth. The plaintiff had alleged, in his petition and in each successive amendment, that the actual value of his horses after their sickness was $80 each. Yet, in his testimony, he fixes such actual value at $60 each. He had alleged, in his petition and its successive amendments, that the sum total of his damages was $3,600, and he prayed judgment for even less: yet his testimony estimated his damages at over $7,000. He had repeatedly averred in his pleadings that approximately one half of his horses had been rendered sick, and damaged thereby. Yet he testified that all of them had been thus sick and had been damaged. As to 76 of them, he estimated damages to the extent of $10 per head, and as to 130, he estimated his damages at $50 per head. In the light of the whole record, therefore, it is clear that the evidence of the plaintiff as to the extent of his damages was not worthy of great consideration, and that the jury was, therefore, justified in disregarding it.
2' ?iageIofSiivear" of°<iamagc:eilco donar eqviivalent to a find-ins of no damage. II. In overruling the plaintiff’s motion to set aside the verdict, the trial judge put the ruling, in effect, upon the ground that he deemed the plaintiff’s case without merit, and that the great weight of the evidence was against him. We think the record fairly sustains-the trial court in the . view thus expressed. It was, therefore, a sufficient reason for the ruling. Hubbard v. Town of Mason City, 64 Iowa 245.
[1085]*1085
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
Related
Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
185 Iowa 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cogley-v-chicago-burlington-quincy-railroad-iowa-1919.