Tretter v. Chicago & Great Western Railway Co.

134 N.W. 626, 154 Iowa 280
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 16, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 134 N.W. 626 (Tretter v. Chicago & Great Western Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tretter v. Chicago & Great Western Railway Co., 134 N.W. 626, 154 Iowa 280 (iowa 1912).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

The plaintiff owns certain lots in Marshalltown which he uses as a market garden, and upon which, at the time im question (August 15, 1907), he had planted and was bringing to maturity crops of cabbage, celery, and tomatoes, to be marketed in Marshalltown. Some of this produce was substantially matured, and the remainder still in a growing condition. The defendant’s railway runs along or near t'he south side of the garden, and the natural drainage of -the premises is to the south or southeast, down the course of a draw or swale. Prior to the summer of 1907, the defendant had maintained a bridge or opening at -the crossing of said diraw, thus affording escape for the drainage, until a short time before the injury complained of, when, as is alleged, defendant shortened the opening under said bridge, and still further obstructed said passage by ditching or dumping therein a car load of clay and other rubbish. It is further alleged that by reason of such obstructions in the course of said drainage the flood and surface waters were dammed up and set back over said garden to a considerable depth, injuring and destroying the crops growing therein, for all of which he asks to recover damages.

The defendant denies the charge of negligence on its part. It further pleads that since this action was begun the railway has been placed in the possession and control of receivers, by virtue of an order entered in the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of Minnesota, [282]*282ajad -that plaintiff’s claim should be filed iu said receivership proceedings, and be n¡o further prosecuted in the courts of this state. To this last ple'a, the trial court sustained a demurrer, to which ruling an -exception was preserved.

The issue was triad to a jury, and verdict returned for plaintiff, assessing his damages at $490, and judgment being entered thereon the defendant -appeals.

The case was before us on a former appeal (see Tretter v. Railroad Co., 147 Iowa, 375), anld a judgment for plaintiff reversed because of -an error in -the trial court’s instruction on the measure of damages. The instructions given upon the same subject on the second trial are again challenged by the defendant.

1. Damage to growing crops: evidence. Ini -considering 'this feature of the case on 'the former trial, we recognized two rules for the measurement of damages for -the destruction of growing crops; ’the application of either of which would produce substantially just results. The first measure thus recognized was the value of the immature crop in the field as it stood at the time of its alleged destruction; and, secondly, the market value of the product, had it been carried to maturity, less the reasonable cost in labor and expense required to mature and market it. By either rule, it was assumed that the resulting figure would represent “the difference between the values of the growing crop before and after the injury.” As immature, growing crops are not commonly bought and sold, except as a part of the land, and may fairly be said to have no recognized market value, i't is bath reasonable amid proper that, in applying -the first rule, inquiry should be made into such facts -or elements as may fairly be presumed to affect their actual or reasonable value. Railroad Co. v. Wilson, 46 Tex. Civ. App. 38, (101 S. W. 1042); Harris v. Railroad Co., 3 Bosw. (N. Y.) 7, affirmed in 58 N. Y. 660; Lachner v. Express Co., 72 Mo. App. 13; Horres v. Berkeley Chemical Co., 57 S. C. 189, (35 S. E. 500, 52 L. R. A. 36).

[283]*283Among .such elements, that of the cost of producing the property or tiling which is the subject of controversy is a pertinent matter of investigation. But, however this may be, as a general proposition, it was made the law of this case by the opinion on the first appeal. It was there said, “Consideration of the cost of production . . . and the cost of labor necessary yet to be done was authorized;” and, in so far as the court on second trial followed the doctrine thus stated, there was no reversible error. In the tenth and eleventh paragraphs of its charge, the court gave to the jury the two measures of damage to which we have adverted.

It is to be admitted that these propositions 'are not stated with the fullness or clearness which is desirable and the court failed to indicate, by a disjunctive word or other direct statement, that these rales were to he understood as alternatives, 'and -that -if one was applied by the jury the other should he disregarded; hut such, we think, was the force and effect of 'the instructions when considered together, and 'assuming, -as wc must, that the jurors were men of average intelligence, understanding, and experience, we are disposed to think they must have so understood it. There was therefore uo reversible error in this part of the charge.

2. Same: measure of damages: instructions. In stating the last alternative rule, the jury were told that plaintiff, if entitled to -a verdict, could recover the value of the matured crop in 'the nearest market, less the expense and labor incurred “in preparing-and fitting it for the market.” This is said to be erroneous, because it omits from consideration the cost of marketing; but 'this objection requires the application of a standard of verbal criticism entirely too exact for practical purposes, and if consistently followed few, if any, instructions, would stand the test of appeal. The cost of fitting a crop for the market may, in >a marrow sense, he limited to the cost of putting it in the condition in which such products are usually bought and sold; but as here used, [284]*284it is very clear the court was directing the jury that, after ascertaining the gross market value of the crop when matured, there should be deducted all the cost in labor and expense which would have been incurred in bringing, the crop to maturity and converting it into money .at the nearest market, and this would of necessity include the cost of hauling and selling 'the produce. No ether interpretation can fairly be placed on this instruction, 'and the jury could not have been misled by it.

Under our system of procedure, the court’s instructions must be reduced to writing, and if trials are not to be unduly prolonged -the" preparation of these instructions must be attended to while the trial and the arguments of counsel are in progress, subject at every moment to the interruption's and distractions incident 'to maintaining an orderly course of judicial business .and ruling upon the question's raised by counsel. Under such circumstances, it would bo unreasonable to expect or demand that the court shall state rules of law with the technical exactness which we look for in the text-books, or the'fineness of differentiation observed in judicial precedents. Indeed, such niceties of statement would tend to defeat the very purpose for which instructions are given. The jurors of to-day are not lawyers, and an excess of instruction is more apt to confuse than to enlighten their judgments; but, as a rule, they are men of intelligence, endowed with the “saving grace of common sense,” and slight inaccuracies in the statement of a general rule of law are not likely to lead them astray, if the general tenor -and effect of the court’s charge be not clearly erroneous.

Some other instructions, by which exceptions are taken, were rather loosely drawn; but we find no reversible error in them.

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Bluebook (online)
134 N.W. 626, 154 Iowa 280, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tretter-v-chicago-great-western-railway-co-iowa-1912.