Gorman v. Brazelton
This text of 168 S.W. 434 (Gorman v. Brazelton) 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.
Opinion
Mrs. Alice Gorman instituted this suit against J. W. Brazelton to recover damages for injury to a farm owned by the plaintiff which, according to allegations in the plaintiff’s petition, resulted from the unauthorized pasturing of cattle upon the farm by the defendant during the year 1911-12. From a judgment in favor of the defendant, plaintiff has appealed.
“That none of the evidence given by the witnesses as to the damage done to plaintiff’s land was worth anything, and that the jury wouldn’t pay any attention to the same, that the jurors were nearly all farmers, themselves, and would decide the case according to their own knowledge.”
A bill of exceptions was taken to these remarks by the court, which is made the basis of an assignment of error; the ground of objection being that the same was a comment by the court upon the weight of the testimony upon which plaintiff relied to show damages. According to the bill of exceptions, three witnesses had testified for plaintiff that in their opinions plaintiff’s land had been permanently injured by such pasturing of the cattle, one of whom had estimated such damage for the pasturing during the year 1911 at $1 per acre, and another had estimated the damage at $4 per acre for the same period of pasturing. Clearly, this action of the court was error, and, as it appears that it was reasonably calculated to influence and probably did influence the jury to plaintiff’s prejudice, the assignment is sustained.
Error has been assigned to the admission of the testimony of said witness J. T. Pick-ard and W. B. McCleskey and J. M. Hart, two other witnesses for the defendant, who stated that in their opinions the land had not been damaged by defendant’s cattle. The ground of plaintiff’s objection to the testimony of those witnesses was that they had not shown themselves qualified to give such opinions. We think that these witnesses did show themselves qualified to give the opinions to which the objections were made.
The court submitted to the jury the plaintiff’s claim for damages done during the year 1911. Upon another trial the claim for damages for both years should be submitted.
“Every man is responsible for the injury and damage occasioned „ by his stock to lands of another unless said injury is done under a contract anticipating said injury and paid for under the contract lawfully made with one having authority to make such contract.”
There was no evidence that plaintiff made a contract with any one authorizing any use of the land in such manner as to permanently injure the freehold, and the instruction quoted should not have been given because it was misleading and probably prejudicial to the plaintiff. The evidence was undisputed that the pasturing of defendant’s cattle on plaintiff’s land in 1911 was without her authority, and if the evidence is the same upon another trial that should not be submitted as a disputed issue, as was done upon the last trial. Even if plaintiff had given her consent for the pasturing of the cattle, it would not necessarily follow that she could not recover for an injury to the freehold done by the cattle, as the jury were told in substance in the court’s charge.
We are of the opinion further that the allegations contained in plaintiff’s petition were sufficient to sustain a claim for permanent injury to the land.
It is unnecessary to discuss other assignments to the action of the court in overruling objections urged by the plaintiff to the qualifications of some of the jurors who tried *436 the case as the same jurors will not be called upon another trial.
For the errors indicated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
168 S.W. 434, 1914 Tex. App. LEXIS 1156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorman-v-brazelton-texapp-1914.