Watkins v. Junker

40 S.W. 11, 90 Tex. 584, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 350
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 12, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by201 cases

This text of 40 S.W. 11 (Watkins v. Junker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Watkins v. Junker, 40 S.W. 11, 90 Tex. 584, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 350 (Tex. 1897).

Opinion

BROWN, Associate Justice.

Watkins sued Junker to recover a demand for $620.98, alleged to be due for the services and the rental of certain boats. Junker pleaded in reconvention for damages resulting *586 from a failure to furnish certain dredge boats under a contract between the parties.

There have been several trials of the case, and once it was appealed to the Supreme Court before the organization of the Courts of Civil Appeals, and by the Supreme Court reversed; after which it was again tried and appealed to the Court of Civil Appeals, which reversed the case again. Upon the third trial the defendant below recovered of Watkins the sum of $3262.52, less $1013.08, the amount of the claim and interest sued for by the plaintiff in the ease, leaving the balance in favor of the plaintiff on his plea in reconvention $2249.44. The jolaintiff in error has assigned a number of grounds in his application, upon which he complains of the judgment of the District Court and Court of Civil Appeals,, but we deem it unnecessary to notice any of them except that one which calls in question the correctness of the charge of the court wherein the-jury was instructed to allow interest at eight per cent upon the damages, which they might find in favor of the defendant upon his plea in re-convention.

The facts found by the Court of Civil Appeals, and which are sufficient to understand the questions to be discussed, are as follows: “We conclude that the facts show that appellee had entered into a contract with the Federal Government to perform certain services at Calcasieu Pass; that to perform the labor contracted to be performed required at a certain stage in the work the use of dredge boats; that appellee before entering upon the work entered into a contract with appellant, which required appellant on ten days notice to furnish the necessary dredge boats. Relying upon the promise of appellant, through his agent Thompson, appellee entered upon the work and after proceeding until it was about time to use the dredge boats, appellee applied to appellants-for the dredge boats, which he failed and refused to furnish. Appellee used every endeavor to obtain other dredge boats but failed to get them. That by reason of the failure of appellant to furnish the dredge boats, appellee lost all that he had expended on two revetments, the government refusing to pay him anything for the work because he could not complete his contract. Appellant knew that the dredge boats were indispensable to enable appellee to finish his contract. Appellee was damaged in the amount found by the jury after deducting the amount due appellant by appellee.”

It is objected in this case that interest is a creature of the statute and cannot be allowed upon unliquidated damages. It is true that interest, strictly speaking, exists only by statutory law; but it is likewise true that courts have recognized the fact that compensation for detention of that which is due on account of injury inflicted is an element of damages necessary to the complete indemnity of the injured party and the courts have, by analogy, adopted the legal rate of interest fixed by statute as the-standard by which to be governed in assessing damages for the detention of money.

In the case of Heidenheimer & Co. v. Ellis, 67 Texas, on page 428, the- *587 court said: TiIt is frequently said, in the decisions of the courts, that interest is the creature of the statute. In a certain sense this is true, but as applied to one class of cases the phrase is misleading. Interest cannot be allowed eo nomine unless expressly provided for by statute, but in many instances it may be assessed as damages when necessary to indemnify the party for an injury inflicted by his adversary, though the statute be silent upon the subject.” It may not be technically correct to call this compensation interest, but that is a term so familiar that it is perhaps the most expressive and intelligible that could be used to inform the jury what the rights of the parties are. At any rate, the use of the word does not constitute error for which a judgment would be reversed.

Interest as damages may be allowed upon unliquidated demands whether they arise out of a breach of contract or out of a tort. (Sedgwick on Damages, vol. 1, section 320.) Interest, however, cannot be allowed upon damages arising from assault and battery, libel and slander, seduction, false imprisonment, nor for personal injuries and the like. (Sedgwick on Damages, sec. 320; Railway Company v. Young, 81 Ga., 397; Railway Company v. Sears, 66 Ga., 499.) The reason why interest cannot be given in the class of cases last mentioned is, that the measure of damages is not fixed at any particular time, hut the right of recovery may be greater or less at the time of trial than it would have been at the time the injury was inflicted; for example, in a case of personal injury the party injured would be entitled to recover for the loss of time occasioned by the injury up to the time of trial as well as to compensation for all physical pain and mental anguish endured, and also for such as might probably arise from the injury in the future. Besides, in such cases the jury is allowed a latitude in determining the amount of recovery Avhich renders it too uncertain to be the basis for the allowance of interest.

It has been generally held by the courts that the jury may allow interest upon damages arising out of the breach of a contract made by a carrier for the carriage and delivery of goods. (H. & T. C. Ry. Co. v. Jackson, 62 Texas, 209; Wolfe v. Lacy, 30 Texas, 351; Robertson v. Transportation Co., 45 Iowa, 470.) Also upon damages arising from the breach of a contract for the sale and delivery of specific articles and for the breach of a contract of warranty of personal property. (Stoudenmeier v. Williamson, 29 Ala., 568; Dana v. Fielder, 12 N. Y., 51.) Interest is likeAvise allowable upon damages to propertj7 or for the destruction of property caused by the negligence or wrongful act of another. (Railway Co. v. Tankersly, 63 Texas, 57; G. C. & S. F. Ry. Co. v. Holliday, 65 Texas, 520; Railway Co. v. Greathouse, 82 Texas, 104.)

In the greater number of cases it has been said that interest may be given by the jury in their discretion upon the damages assessed when the character of case is such as to alloAv of interest; and in some cases it has been held to be error to instruct the jury to allow interest upon damages assessed by them, although it Avould have been correct for the court to inform the jury that they might allow such interest in their discretion. *588 (Close v. Fields, 13 Texas, 623.) If interest be property an element of ■damages in any case, then it is so as a matter of law. Whether the case is such that the law makes it applicable is a question of fact for the jury, but whether or not it is to be allowed if the facts exist is a question of law that should not be left to the jury. We think that it is an inconsistency to say that a right exists which a jury may or may not enforce as they may deem proper, and we believe that practically the courts have come to the proposition that in all cases where the measure of recovery is fixed by the conditions existing at the time that the injury is inflicted the person entitled to recover has also the right to have compensation for the detention of the money to which he is entitled by reason of the wrong done to him.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.W. 11, 90 Tex. 584, 1897 Tex. LEXIS 350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/watkins-v-junker-tex-1897.