Millam v. Southern Ry. Co.

36 S.E. 571, 58 S.C. 247, 1900 S.C. LEXIS 112
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedJuly 16, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 36 S.E. 571 (Millam v. Southern Ry. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Millam v. Southern Ry. Co., 36 S.E. 571, 58 S.C. 247, 1900 S.C. LEXIS 112 (S.C. 1900).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Pope.

The plaintiff by his action sought to recover $1,000 damages by reason of the injuries sustained by a lot of twenty-four horses which were transported by the defendant from Birmingham, Alabama, to Newberry, in the State of South Carolina. Plaintiff in his complaint sets up three causes of action- — one based upon the common law doctrine that the defendant was an insurer of the freight received by it as a common carrier; the second charged the same facts as were set forth in the first cause of action, except that the defendant was charged with negligence by which injuries to the twenty-four head of horses resulted; and the third charged wanton negligence. By the answer of the defendant, it admitted that it was a common carrier, but denied all other allegations of the complaint; alleging, in addition thereto, that the plaintiff was responsible for all injuries which resulted to his car load of horses from a failure to feed, water and rest them, as was required by law; that any injuries done the said car load of horses happened upon some other line of railway, in their transportation to Clinton, S. C., than on the defendant railway.. The cause came on for trial before Judge Watts and a jury. During said trial the defendant objected to certain testimony offered by plaintiff; also, it made two motions for nonsuit, both of. which were overruled; also, it made certain requests to charge, which were declined by the Circuit Judge. Verdict was for plaintiff in the sum of $300. After judgment thereon, defendant appealed upon the grounds previously indicated, and also upon the ground that the Circuit Judge erred in portions of his charge to the jury.

*250 1 *249 The first ground of appeal suggests error in the Circuit Judge in allowing the plaintiff to testify in answer to the *250 question: “From your experience as a horse dealer and from your knowledge of the valuation of horses, did you or did you not have to sell your horses at a price less than their real value by reason of these injuries ? Did you by reason of these injuries sell your horses for less than they were worth?” The testimony offered here showed that these twenty-four horses, when taken from the car in which they had been transported from the city of Birmingham, in the State of Alabama, to the village of Clinton, in the State of South Carolina, were scarred, bruised, gaunt, stiff in limbs, with high fever, and that two were down on the floor of the car, and had to be struck with a whip to be made to get up; and that on the day after arrival, a handsome grey died, having passed blood before death, and a little later than the next day after arrival, two other of the horses died. But soon after arrival — in a few days — plaintiff sold some of the horses. The plaintiff was the owner and keeper of a livery and sales stable. Hence the Circuit Judge allowed him to answer these questions. Before going further, it should be stated that the plaintiff had inspected the horses when he bought them. Therefore, he knew how they looked at the date of shipment, how they looked on their arrival at Clinton, and how they looked several days thereafter when he sold them. We cannot see anything speculative in the testimony in question. It was based upon facts within the knowledge of this witness. In 12 vol. A. & E. Ency. of Daw, page 477 (2d ed.), the doctrine is thus stated: “Farmers, dealers in horses and liverymen who know the value of horses generally may testify thereto.” See, also, page 460 of same authority, which says: “On damages, as on other subjects of expert opinion evidence, the opinions of witnesses must not be speculative or conjectural, but must be based on facts and conditions existing and proved.” Who is there who has not been astonished at the accuracy of dealers in stock and hogs in their estimate of the weight of each one of them. It is this accuracy of judgment derived from the experience of dealers in stock which gives their *251 opinions as to the value of horses, mules, &c., such great weight. This exception is overruled.

2 Again appellant suggests that the Circuit Judge erred when he allowed Mr. Horton, as the agent of the Columbia, Newberry and Laurens Railroad, which railroad had received the car load of horses from the defendant at Newberry, to testify, as to the three waybills on which he had receipted for the charges of the defendant itself for feeding the horses at Birmingham, Atlanta, Ga., and Hodges Depot, S. C. We believe the defendant withdrew this exception. But in the abundance of caution we pass on it — and in doing so we remark that the service of Mr. Horton in collecting these bills, entered as waybills, was as the quasi agent of said defendant in its collection of charges from the plaintiff, which service of Mr. Horton the defendant has ratified. This exception' is overruled.

3 In its second exception, the defendant suggests that the Circuit Judge erred in not allowing it to introduce in evidence, while one of the plaintiff’s witnesses was being examined and before the defendant introduced any testimony, a bill of lading after the plaintiff had admitted that he had signed some writing on the back of said bill of lading. When Mr. Millam, the plaintiff, was on the witness stand, the defendant asked him in cross-examination, if he had not signed such a paper, a copy of which was exhibited to him. The witness replied that he did not know whether he had signed such a paper or not, but said he would know his signature when he saw it. It was at this point when defendant’s counsel proposed to open the commission it had issued to examine some witnesses at Kansas City, State of Missouri, claiming that the original papers, which had been signed by Mr. Millam, and a copy of which he had exhibited to Mr. Millam, would be found attached to the bill of lading. After a while the Court allowed the package containing the depositions of witnesses taken in Missouri to be opened and the papers referred to taken out, while Mr. Millam, as plaintiff’s witness, was on the stand, and the *252 counsel for defendant then exhibited the papers, of which the following is a copy, signed by Mr. Millam, to wit: “Form 45. Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis R. R. Rive Stock Contract. Duplicate. Station Kansas City. Date October 28, 1896.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
36 S.E. 571, 58 S.C. 247, 1900 S.C. LEXIS 112, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/millam-v-southern-ry-co-sc-1900.