Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Burroughs

66 S.W. 83, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 422, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 306
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 19, 1901
StatusPublished

This text of 66 S.W. 83 (Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Burroughs) 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
Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Railway Co. v. Burroughs, 66 S.W. 83, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 422, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 306 (Tex. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

PLEAS AHTS, Associate Justice.

Defendant in error brought this suit to recover of plaintiff in error damages for the destruction of certain personal property and for injury to certain real estate owned by defendant in error, alleging that said loss and injury was caused by a fire negligently set out by the plaintiff in error. The personal property alleged to have been destroyed consisted of a lot of nursery trees and the growing crop of hay upon about eighty acres of plaintiff’s land. The injury to the land was caused, as alleged in the petition, by the burning of an orchard and of shade and ornamental trees, shrubbery and fences situated on said land, and by the destruction of the grass roots and damaging the sod so that the production of grass would be greatly decreased for several years. The aggregate sum of the damages claimed in the petition amounted to $3261.

The defendant below answered by a plea of general denial and plea of not guilty. The trial in the court below was by a jury, and resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiff for $600. Plaintiff in error presents no assignment questioning the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the verdict of the jury and our conclusions of fact are as found by the jury, that plaintiff’s property was injured and destroyed as alleged in his petition by fire negligently set out by the defendant, and that by such negligence plaintiff has been damaged in the amount found by the jury.

The first assignment of error complains of the action of the trial court in overruling the defendant’s motion for a continuance. The continuance was asked for because of the absence of Evans and Polk, two of defendant’s witnesses. The application for a continuance sets up that plaintiff in error would have proved by the witness Evans, if he had been present, that defendant in error’s trees, which he claimed had been burned by plaintiff in error, had been neglected for several years, had not been cultivated, were practically worthless, small, not bearing, and very scrubby; that the witness was acquainted with the propert” for *424 at least five years and for several years before the alleged injury to it; that several months prior to the date that defendant in error alleges plaintiff in error damaged his property, the buildings and improvements thereon were destroyed by fire, and a large number of trees and shrubbery and plants and the fencing and grass upon said property were burned by said prior fire, and not by plaintiff in error, as claimed by defendant in error; that the fence of said property claimed to have been burned by plaintiff in error was old and had been used formerly by plaintiff in error to inclose its right of way; that the said witness Evans inspected the property immediately after it was burned by the fire charged by defendant in error to have been set out by plaintiff in error, and that the marks between said prior burn and said new burn were at that time easily distinguished, and that the fire which destroyed the improvements and damaged the trees and shrubbery upon said property was not the fire alleged by defendant in error in his petition in this' case. Said motion for a continuance further showed as to the witness Evans that he had been in attendance upon the court at every previous term at which this case had been set for trial; that he was at the date of the trial in the employ of the defendant, and would then have been in attendance upon the court except that he was too sick to be so in attendance; that he had then recently undergone an operation for appehdecitis; that plaintiff in error, knowing of said illness of said witness, inquired of his physician whether he could with prudence and safety give his deposition in this cause, and that plaintiff in error was informed that the witness could not. give his deposition on account of his physical condition.

Attached to said motion and made a part of it was the affidavit of the attending physician of said witness, A. C. Scott, showing the serious illness of said witness. Said motion for a continuance also showed that but for said illness said witness would have been in attendance upon the court at the trial term just as he had theretofore been in attendance at every previous term of the court when this cause was set for trial.

By said motion for a continuance it is also shown that the witness W. A. Polk was a resident of Harris County, Texas, and that process had been duly issued on the 14th day of November, 1900, to secure his attendance, and that plaintiff in error had in every way used due dilligence to secure the attendance of said witness Polk, and that his absence and the failure of the officer to serve him with process was due to the fact that he was temporarily absent from the county upon a surveying expedition. That plaintiff in error would have proved by said Polk, if he had been present at the trial, that shortly after the damage to defendant in error’s property alleged in his petition, said witness, at the request of plaintiff in error, made a survey of the same; that the number of acres burned over is much less than alleged by defendant in error in his petition; that the trees upon said property of defendant in error were small and scrubby and practically worthless; that there were less posts, plank, and fences burned than alleged in the petition; that *425 so soon as it came to the knowledge of plaintiff in error that the-witness Polk was absent from the county, it immediately thereupon made inquiry of different parties whom it had reason to believe would know of the whereabouts of said Polk, and that -it had been wholly unable to locate him; that he was not located at any particular point on his surveying expedition, but was daily moving up and down the Brazos river making a survey thereof.

It is shown further by said motion that the plaintiff in error knew of no other source from which said absent testimony could be procured, and that the witnesses were not absent through the consent or procurement of plaintiff in error, and that the continuance was not sought for delay only, but that justice might be done, and said motion was duly verified by affidavit. ,

The record shows that this was defendant’s third motion for a continuance, and such being the case, it is well settled that said motion was addressed to the discretion of the court, and if we concede that the application shows a substantial compliance with the statute regulating continuances, the court having in the exercise of his discretion overruled the motion, such ruling is not subject to revision by this court unless it clearly appears that the trial court has abused his discretion. Brooks v. Howard, 30 Texas, 278; Land Co. v. Lumber Co., 21 Texas Civ App., 411. The evidence in the case shows that there had been a fire on plaintiff’s premises which consumed his dwelling house several months prior to the fire complained of in this case, but said prior fire did not destroy the grass on plaintiff’s land, nor any part of his orchard, and only destroyed a few pannels of his fence and very little, if any, of his shrubbery. In view of all the evidence in the case it is not at all likely that the witness Evans would have sworn that the grass, orchard, nursery trees, and all of the shrubbery and fencing, for the destruction of which plaintiff claims damages in this suit, were burned in said prior fire, and if he had so testified, such testimony would not have been probably true.

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Related

Brooks v. Howard
30 Tex. 278 (Texas Supreme Court, 1867)

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Bluebook (online)
66 S.W. 83, 27 Tex. Civ. App. 422, 1901 Tex. App. LEXIS 306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gulf-colorado-santa-fe-railway-co-v-burroughs-texapp-1901.