Pope v. Ramsey
This text of 78 Mo. App. 157 (Pope v. Ramsey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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The principal, if not the only, contest in the trial court was as to what amount, if anything, did defendants owe the plaintiff, and this was made to depend on the number of ties [161]*161taken from the land. Defendants objected to plaintiff’s mode of proof, contending that it was based on the opinion and conjecture of witnesses. This is the principal point for decision. Defendants say that plaintiff’s witnesses were allowed to give opinions as to the number of ties taken when they were not experts. In other words, that they were permitted to testify as experts when they were not qualified.
Neither do we think the testimony was conjectural in the sense that it was any more indefinite and uncertain than the very nature of the case made necessary. This will be better understood by a moment’s reflection on the character of the claim against defendants. The claim was not for articles of property which were or could be brought in view. The timber had been cut and manufactured into ties. The ties had been removed and the question was, how many ? It seems to us that the very best evidence, of which the case was susceptible, was introduced by plaintiff. Witnesses who had been over the land and taken note of the size of the stumps and tops or laps of the trees which had been cut were introduced by plaintiff. They were enabled to fix definitely the number of trees. They could also, with practical or substantial accuracy, fix upon the length of the bodv [162]*162of a tree, it being the length of the distance between the stump and the top. Indeed it would not seem, to be a matter of much conjecture for a practical man of common sense and observation, measuring the diameter of a stump and the distance from it to the top, to say, with substantial accuracy, the number of ties, of the kind described in testimony made from it. The record shows that some of those witnesses measured off an acre of the best timber and an acre of the worst and calculated the number of ties the timber on each would make. Others estimated by including a third acre of the medium timber and made their calculation and average of the different tracts. The result of their count or estimate, with the manner of making it, was given to the jury. We can not see what else could have been done.
It is contended by defendant in this connection, that plaintiff as a witness was permitted to make an estimate partly on what had been sworn to by others in depositions. But on inquiry from the trial court the plaintiff replied that what he said was from his own observation. Plaintiff testified that he had been dealing in ties and tie timber; that he had been over the land three times and had made his calculations and estimate by counting and measuring stumps, the length of the trees, etc., on different parts of the different tracts. This witness and others testified how they made the calculations and how they obtained the data upon which to base them.
What has been said in relation to the evidence admitted over defendants’ objection disposes of the point made on refused instruction number 5.
A full examination of the record has failed to disclose anything to justify us in overturning the judgment and hence it will be affirmed.
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78 Mo. App. 157, 1899 Mo. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pope-v-ramsey-moctapp-1899.