Dix v. Brown

41 Miss. 131
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 15, 1866
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 41 Miss. 131 (Dix v. Brown) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dix v. Brown, 41 Miss. 131 (Mich. 1866).

Opinion

Handy, O. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by the defendant in error by attachment against the steamboat Hiawatha, to recover the value of a flat-boat and thirty cords of wood, alleged to have been lost to the defendant in error by the improper conduct of the officers of the boat.

The declaration alleges, in substance, that the plaintiff in the action was the owner of a wood-yard on the Mississippi River, at which he had a flat-boat, loaded with fifty cords of wood, worth three dollars per cord, the wood being piled in the boat on the sweeps or oars used for its navigation, as was customary: that the captain of the steamboat agreed to purchase said wood and to pay the plaintiff three dollars per cord for it; and, in order to receive it, to take the flat-boat in tow of the steamboat up the river, and to transfer the wood to the steamboat; that the flat-boat was accordingly taken in tow for some miles up the river, and part of the wood was delivered to the steamboat, when the defendant suddenly refused to take the remainder of the wood, and maliciously cast off the flat-boat from the steamer, ■whilst a large portion of the wood was piled up on the oars and sweeps, which left the plaintiff utterly without the means of controlling the flat-boat, and left the boat entirely subject to the current, and it was carried by the current down the river below the wood-yard of the plaintiff, and was finally stranded on the other side of the river, beyond the ability of the plaintiff to recover the boat with any means at his command; and the boat and its contents were irrecoverably lost to the plaintiff.

After the evidence was closed, the court instructed the jury [133]*133at tlie instance of the plaintiff, to which the defendant excepted, and refused instructions asked by the defendant, to which he also excepted. After verdict for the plaintiff, the defendant moved for a new trial, because : 1. The verdict was contrary to law and the evidence. 2. That the defendant’s instructions were erroneously refused. 3. That the court erred in giving the plaintiff's instructions. 4. That the verdict was excessive. This motion was overruled, and exception taken thereto.

The record contains the testimony of several witnesses, on both sides, upon the points, whether the defendant was justifiable or not in refusing to take the wood from the plaintiff’s boat; or in casting off the boat from the steamer in the manner in which it was done ; whether the plaintiff was excusable or not for having the wood piled up on the oars so that they could not be used in navigating the boat when, cast off; whether, in fact, the oars were so covered up, and whether the boat might not have been got to shore if the plaintiff’s agents in charge of it had used the proper efforts within their power. On these points the testimony is conflicting ; and unless there be error in the record in some other respect, we could not with propriety say that the verdict is not correct.

But the record shows other evidence touching the conduct of the plaintiff after his boat had drifted to the shore, which it is material to take into consideration with reference to the value for which he was entitled to recover, and with reference to the instructions granted and refused by the court.

A witness for.the plaintiff testified that after the boat was cast off it floated below his wood-yard and landed on the opposite side of the river, about half a mile below a point immediately opposite his wood-yard, where it was made fast; that he told the plaintiff the next day where sh¡e was, and he said he would have nothing more to do with her, and would not bring her back; and that there would have been no difficulty in a steamboat towing her up to plaintiff’s landing. The plaintiff* testified that he knew the next morning after the boat was landed that she was there; that she was worth $250, and the wood $3 per cord.

[134]*134Henderson, a witness for tlie defendant, testified that the plaintiff’s boat lay on the opposite side of the river about a week, and that the witness got a steamer to take it in tow and to land it a short distance above the plaintiff’s Wood-yard on the same side of the river. There were twenty-seven cords of wood on the boat at that time, which witness sold to the steamer which towed the boat over for $81, which sum he holds to be paid to the party entitled to it; and that when the boat was being towed over, and past the plaintiff’s wood-yard, some persons in witness’s charge hailed the people at plaintiff’s wood-yard, and two persons came up from the wood-yard and received the boat. The boat was then sound and did not leak, and was worth $200.

The first witness for the plaintiff testified that he afterwards saw the boat, in June, 1860, six miles below, used as a wood-boat.

Several grounds of error are insisted on, in behalf of the plaintiff in en’or; but the merits of the case, as it is now presented, may be sufficiently determined by considering the instructions granted at the instance of the plaintiffj and those asked on behalf of the defendant and refused.

At the request of the plaintiff, the court gave the following instruction <: To constitute a delivery or tender of the boat and wood, or either of them, to the plaintiff, it must be proved, in the case, that such delivery or tender was made either to the plaintiff in person, or to some person proven to the satisfaction of the jury to have been authorized by the plaintiff to act for him in this matter.”

This instruction proceeds on the idea that the plaintiff had been illegally deprived of the possession of his boat, or that it had been illegally taken out of his possession by the defendant; for upon no other view would the rules in relation to tender or re-delivery, referred to in the instruction, have been pertinent. But there is-no evidence tending to show that the boat was ever in possession of the defendant, or was ever out of the legal possession of the plaintiff; and, of course, the rule in relation to tender or re-delivery of the possession to him had [135]*135no application to the case. It was calculated to mislead the jury with reference to the effect of the evidence, and it was error to give the instruction..

The following instructions, asked by the defendant, were refused: “ If the boat and wood were, by the proof, shown to have been lost to Brown, only because he failed to make any exertion to save them, ahd if the proof shows that he could easily have saved both, then the jury should not find damages for the value of the boat and wood.”

“If the proof shows that the wood-boat and wood were safely landed by the plaintiff at Black Hawk, and were then uninjured, and plaintiff abandoned the boat and wood, and this when he could easily have recovered the boat and wood, then the jury will find for plaintiff only such damages as he sustained by having his boat and wood turned loose, and the value of the wood taken by the Hiawatha out of the boat, and interest, and such further sum as would have compensated him for the labor of recovering the boat and wood.” .

The former of these instructions appears to look as well to the failure of the plaintiff to make any exertion to save the boat from drifting past his wood-yard, before she reached the shore, as to his failure to get her back after she was landed. The latter has reference to his conduct after the boat was landed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
41 Miss. 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dix-v-brown-miss-1866.