Page 147 U. S. 599
The defendant asked the court to instruct the jury as
follows:
"(1) The jury are instructed that plaintiffs are only
Page 147 U. S. 600
entitled to recover in this case such damages as they have
shown, by the preponderance of the evidence, were the natural
Page 147 U. S. 601
and proximate consequence of the acts complained of in the
petition, and that they are not entitled to recover any damages
Page 147 U. S. 602
which could have been avoided or prevented by the plaintiffs by
the exercise on their part of reasonable and proper care and
Page 147 U. S. 603
prudence. (2) The jury are further instructed that before they
can allow the plaintiffs damages on account of abortions, as
claimed in the petition, they must be satisfied by a preponderance
of the evidence that the abortions if any, were caused
Page 147 U. S. 604
directly by the alleged collision. (3) If the jury are satisfied
by a preponderance of the evidence that the cows or heifers
mentioned in the petition were with calf at the time of the
collision alleged in the petition, and that some of them aborted
their calves in consequence of injuries received in said collision,
and that ordinary care and prudence required that such aborting cow
or cows should be separated from the other pregnant cows of
plaintiffs, and that this was not done, but such aborted cow or
cows was or were allowed to be and remain with the other pregnant
cows, by reason of which such other pregnant cows, or some of them,
aborted their calves, by contagion or sympathy, they should not
allow damages for or on account of abortions thus caused by
contagion or sympathy. (4) If the jury find that the plaintiffs'
cows aborted their calves after the alleged collision, and that
some of said abortions were caused by said collision, and that some
were the result of poison, fatigue, heat, exhaustion, or any cause
other than the collision, and the jury are unable to determine from
the evidence which cows, and how many, aborted in consequence of
the collision, and which from other causes, they should not allow
damages on account of abortion from any cause. (5) The court
instructs the jury that the burden is not upon the defendants to
account for the abortions amongst cows and heifers of plaintiffs,
if there were such abortions, but upon the plaintiffs to prove and
establish by a preponderance of the evidence that such abortions
were caused by the collision alleged in the petition, and if, upon
all the evidence, the jury are not convinced that such abortions
were caused by the injury, they should not allow damages for such
abortions, although they may not be able to determine from the
evidence what the real cause of such abortions was. (6) The court
instructs the jury that unless the defendant knew that some of the
cattle of the plaintiffs were cows or heifers in calf, plaintiffs
are not entitled to recover for abortions, although they may have
been caused by the wreck, as in that event damages on account of
abortion could not have been in the contemplation of the defendant
at the time the cattle were received."
The bill of exceptions states that the court refused to give
Page 147 U. S. 605
to the jury instruction 6, and that the defendant excepted to
the action of the court in refusing that instruction. It is to be
inferred that the court gave to the jury the other five
instructions asked for.
The case made by the evidence is, in substance, as follows: the
plaintiffs bought in Scotland a large number of high-bred cattle
and imported them to this country for sale for breeding purposes.
Some were bulls, but the majority were heifers which were in calf
at the time of the collision. The cattle were shipped from
Liverpool to Boston, the ocean trip occupying twelve days. They
reached Boston in good condition, and were kept for a while at
Waltham, and then removed to Concord. While at Concord, some of the
Leonard cattle ate some Paris green, and 5 of them died from its
effects. About 30 others were affected more or less by the poison,
but after two days they were turned out with the rest of the cattle
as having fully recovered. The Estill cattle did not have access to
the poison, and were in a separate lot from the Leonard cattle,
which did. The cattle remained in Concord two or three weeks after
the Paris green was eaten, and were then shipped to Missouri in
good order and condition. On the journey, in Ohio, during the
transportation over the railroad of the defendant, the train
carrying the cattle was divided, and run in two sections. On
reaching Nankin, Ohio, the first section was put on one side, on a
switch and stopped, and the second section ran into it. Several of
the cars were almost demolished by the collision; some were thrown
from the track, and nine or ten of them were so badly damaged that
the cattle in them had to be transferred to other cars. By the
collision, some of the cattle were knocked down, the ropes by which
some of them were tied were broken, and some were lying down, with
others standing upon them, when they were found after the
collision. Some were knocked against others and against the cars,
and the shock of the collision was very great. The cattle were
detained about thirty hours without suitable food or water. The
collision occurred on a Sunday, between four and five o'clock A.M.,
and the train did not start west again until the
Page 147 U. S. 606
next day. The cattle were greatly bruised and injured, and the
day after the collision the heifers began to abort, or prematurely
cast their calves. Five of them lost their calves while on the cars
in the next two or three days, and from day to day, during the next
several weeks, abortions occurred among them. The number of
abortions, and the character of other injuries, are summarized by
the court in its charge to the jury.
The evidence for the plaintiffs further showed that an ordinary
railroad journey would not have caused the abortions, and that the
aborting cattle were fed in the same way as those which did not
abort. The plaintiffs also introduced some expert testimony to show
that the abortions were the result of the collision. The testimony
for the plaintiffs further showed that a cow which had once lost
her calf prematurely was an uncertain breeder, and could not be
sold in the market for a breeder, but was worth only what she would
bring as beef; that the heifers were worth, in calf, $400 or $500
in the Missouri market, in the fall of 1883; but that a heifer
which had prematurely lost her calf would not be worth more than
$25 or $35, the price for beef. The evidence also stated in detail
the injuries to others of the cattle and the nature thereof.
The defendant gave evidence tending to show that where one cow
in a herd aborted, others would do likewise through sympathy or
contagion, and that the aborted cow ought to be separated from the
herd. This fact of abortion through sympathy or contagion was
controverted by other witnesses. The plaintiffs showed that the
cattle were cared for in the best manner possible. The defendant
offered testimony as to the cattle that were injured, and the
extent of their injuries, and also examined some experts who stated
that the abortions might not have been caused by the wreck.
(1) The first point urged for a reversal of the judgments is
that the circuit court erred in overruling the defendant's motion
to quash the writs issued by the state court to the Sheriff of the
City of St. Louis and the returns of that sheriff thereon. It is
contended that the fact that the defendant at the time of the
alleged services, had a business office in St. Louis at which
office the writs were served on its city passenger agent,
Page 147 U. S. 607
who had charge of such office at the time of the service,
prevented it from being a nonresident of Missouri within the
meaning of the statutes of that state regulating the subject of
jurisdiction and the service of process.
Writs of attachment were sued out in the suits, but no property
was levied on, and hence the suits stand as if they had been
instituted by summons alone. It has been held by the courts of
Missouri that a nonresident corporation which has a business office
and an agent in the state is amenable to the jurisdiction of its
courts.
McNichol v. U.S. Mercantile Reporting Agency, 74
Mo. 457. In that case it was held that service of a summons upon a
nonresident corporation, having an office or doing business in
Missouri, in the manner provided by the fourth subdivision of
§ 3489, Revised Statutes of 1879, has the effect of personal
service and gives the court jurisdiction to enter a general
judgment, and that the legislature had power to pass an act
authorizing the service of legal process upon any nonresident
corporation having an office or doing business within the state by
leaving the same with an agent of the corporation within the state
and authorizing the rendition of a general judgment upon such
service.
Said § 3489 provides that a summons shall be executed,
except as otherwise provided by law, in anyone of six different
methods specified in the section, the fourth of which reads as
follows:
"Or fourth, where defendant is a corporation or joint-stock
company organized under the laws of any other state or country, and
having an office or doing business in this state, by delivering a
copy of the writ and petition to any officer or agent of such
corporation or company, in charge of any office or place of
business, or, if it have no office or place of business, then to
any officer, agent, or employee in any county where such service
may be obtained."
In the case cited, the court held that the effect of the
enactment, in 1879, of the fourth subdivision of § 3489 was to
make all foreign corporations having an office and doing business
in Missouri or an agent or employee there suable in precisely the
same manner as any other defendant, by the delivery of a copy of
the writ and petition, and that it must be presumed
Page 147 U. S. 608
that the legislature intended that the ordinary consequences
should attend such service.
See also
Lafayette Ins. Co. v.
French, 18 How. 404;
Railroad
Co. v. Harris, 12 Wall. 65;
Southern Pacific
Co. v. Denton, 146 U. S. 202,
146 U. S. 207;
Gibbs v. Queen Ins. Co., 63 N.Y. 114; 2 Morawetz on
Corporations § 977. The principle applicable under such
circumstances is that if the corporation does business in the
state, it will be presumed to have assented to the statute, and
will be bound accordingly.
It is contended for the defendant, however, that as its office
was in St. Louis, it was a resident of that city and that, under
the statute of Missouri fixing the place of bringing suits, it
could be sued only in a court of that city. But we are of the
opinion that under the statutes of Missouri, the Circuit Court of
Saline County had jurisdiction of the present suits, although the
agent and business office of the defendant were in St. Louis, and
not in Saline County; that the service in St. Louis of the summons
issued by the circuit court of Saline County was valid, and that
the defendant was within the provisions of the Missouri statute
which made nonresidents suable in any county of the state.
It is provided by § 3481 of the Revised Statutes of
Missouri of 1879 that suits instituted by summons shall, except as
otherwise provided by law, be brought in five specified ways, the
fourth of which is that "when all the defendants are nonresidents
of the state, suits may be brought in any county."
Farnsworth
v. Railroad Co., 29 Mo. 75;
Stone v. Travelers' Ins.
Co., 78 Mo. 655;
Swallow v. Duncan, 18 Mo.App. 622;
U.S. Mutual Accident Ins. Co. v. Reisinger, 43 Mo.App.
571. The defendant, by establishing its business office in
Missouri, subjected itself to suit in such of the courts of the
state as had jurisdiction conferred upon them, and was suable in
any county in the state.
If, under § 3481, suit may be brought against nonresidents
in any county, regardless of the county in which the defendants may
be found, it follows necessarily that the court in which the suit
is brought may send its summons to the county in which service can
be obtained upon such nonresidents.
Page 147 U. S. 609
Otherwise, if the summons could be issued only to the county
wherein the court is held, suit could only be brought in the county
where the defendant could be found, which was the provision of
section 5 of Article 1 of the Revised Statutes of 1845, page 805,
which provision was abrogated by § 1 of Article 4 of the
Session Acts of 1849, page 76, providing that if all the defendants
were nonresidents of Missouri and an action would lie against them,
it might be brought in any county, which latter provision was
continued in § 3481 of the Revised Statutes of 1879. This
construction has been held by the courts of Missouri.
Stone v.
Travellers' Ins. Co., 78 Mo. 655;
U.S. Mutual Accident
Ins. Co. v. Reisinger, 43 Mo.App. 571. The City of St. Louis
is placed by the statutes of Missouri on the same footing as a
county.
It is further contended by the defendant that it was a resident
of the City of St. Louis within the meaning of § 3481. But the
Supreme Court of Missouri has held that a foreign corporation doing
business in the state is a nonresident, and under § 3481 is
suable in any county.
Stone v. Travellers' Ins. Co., 78
Mo. 665, 668. It is suggested that in that instance, the defendant
was a foreign insurance corporation, and its case was provided for
by § 6013, which requires foreign insurance companies doing
business in Missouri to appoint an agent upon whom service can be
made in suits against the companies and expressly authorizes such
suits to be brought in any county, and that what was said in that
case about § 3481 was merely
obiter dictum. But
§ 6013 does not provide as to where suits may be brought
against foreign insurance companies. It merely requires them to
appoint an agent upon whom service may be made, and leaves the
place of instituting suits to be determined by the general law, and
regulates only the manner of service. Hence it was necessary, in
the case of
Stone v. Travellers' Ins. Co., for the court
to determine, as it did, whether a foreign corporation doing
business in Missouri was to be sued as a resident or as a
nonresident under § 3481, and it was held that such a
corporation was a nonresident within the meaning of § 3481.
Section 6013 in no manner interferes with § 3481.
Page 147 U. S. 610
It is quite apparent from the case of
U.S. Mutual Accident
Ins. Co. v. Reisigner, 43 Mo.App. 571, that the case of
Stone v. Travellers' Ins. Co., was regarded as holding
that, as the defendant in that case was a nonresident, suit might
have been brought against it in any county.
In
Farnsworth v. Railroad Co., 29 Mo. 75, and in
Swallow v. Duncan, 18 Mo.App. 622, foreign corporations
were treated as within the statutory provisions relating to
nonresidents. This Court will adopt the construction placed upon
the statutes of Missouri by the courts of that state.
The ruling of the Supreme Court of Missouri that corporations
created by other states do not become residents of Missouri by
engaging in business in that state agrees with the rulings of the
federal courts.
Ex Parte Schollenberger, 96 U. S.
369;
Myers v. Murray, 43 F. 695.
In the cases of
Farnsworth v. Railroad Co., 29 Mo. 75;
Robb v. Chicago & Alton Railroad, 47 Mo. 540, and
Middough v. St. Jos. & Denver Railroad, 51 Mo. 520,
there is nothing which militates against the foregoing views or
which holds that corporations created by other states become
residents of Missouri by engaging in business in Missouri.
Not only did MR. JUSTICE BREWER overrule the motion to quash the
writ of summons and the return of service by the sheriff, but Judge
Philips, in his opinion on the motion for a new trial, 41 F. 853,
held that a foreign corporation having an office in Missouri was to
be treated under the statute as a nonresident defendant; that the
provisions of subdivision 4 of § 3481 applied, and that
therefore the suit could be brought in any county. He said that the
provisions of the statute invoked by the defendant must refer, and
must be limited, to domestic corporations, and he quoted a remark
made by the court in
Stone v. Travellers' Ins. Co., 78 Mo.
655, 658, that
"the defendant, being a nonresident of the state, was subject to
suit in any county in this state, Rev.Stats. § 3481, and could
be personally served in the manner pointed out by the section under
consideration"
that is, § 6013.
Page 147 U. S. 611
Judge Philips remarked also that there could be no question but
that if the suit had remained in the state court and the defendant,
after moving to suppress the sheriff's return, had pleaded and gone
to trial on the merits, the defective service would have been
waived, citing
Kronski v. Railway Co., 77 Mo. 362, and
Scoville v. Glasner, 79 Mo. 454, 455, and adding that
where a party had thus removed the cause into the federal court,
tried it on its merits, had one new trial, and had again tried it
on the merits in its own approved jurisdiction, it would be
trifling with the administration of justice to allow it to escape
judgment on the ground that it had never been in court. Judge
Thayer, in his opinion, 41 F. 849, stated that the views of Judge
Philips were in accord with his own.
We conclude, therefore, that the defendant was a nonresident of
Missouri; that the suits were properly brought against it in Saline
County under § 3481, and that service of process was properly
made under subdivision 4 of § 3489.
It is insisted by the plaintiffs that the defendant waived any
objection to the service of the summons by appearing in the state
court and filing petitions for the removal of the causes into the
federal court. Each of the petitions for removal states that the
defendant appears "only for the purpose of making this
application," and the motion made in the federal court to quash the
writ of summons and the sheriff's return states that the defendant
appears specially, and only for the purpose of making that motion.
The plaintiffs cite in support of their view the cases of
West v. Aurora
City, 6 Wall. 139;
Bushnell
v. Kennedy, 9 Wall. 387, and
Sayles v.
Northwestern Ins. Co., 2 Curtis 212.
The opposing view is that the removal statute provides that
after removal, the cause shall proceed in the federal court in the
same manner as if it had been originally commenced there.
To this it is replied that the exception to jurisdiction is a
personal privilege of the defendant, and may be waived; that the
construction contended for would enable the nonresident
Page 147 U. S. 612
defendant to remove the suit into the federal court, and then,
by there moving to dismiss it, defeat the jurisdiction of both
courts; that the defendant is not in the federal court against its
consent, but is there by its voluntary action, in view of the
necessary statement in the petition for the removal that the suit
is properly brought against it and is pending; that as the state
court had jurisdiction of the subject matter, it is too late for
the defendant, after appearing to the merits, to raise an objection
to personal jurisdiction; that although the petitions for removal
state that the defendant appeared only for the purpose of making
the application for removal, it could not make such application
without admitting necessarily that the suit was properly pending
and that therefore the special appearance reserved nothing and
amounted to nothing.
We do not find it necessary to decide this point, after holding
that the Circuit Court of Saline County acquired jurisdiction.
There are different decisions on the question referred to in the
circuit courts of the United States. In
New York Construction
Co. v. Simon, 53 F. 1, it was held in he Sixth Circuit that a
defendant who removes a cause to a federal court will not there be
allowed to say that he was not properly brought before the state
court when he failed to raise that point before applying for
removal. On the other hand, in the Second Circuit, in
Bentlif
v. London & Colonial Finance Ass'n, 44 F. 667, it was held
citing several cases, that a defendant could have a suit of which
the state court acquired no jurisdiction dismissed on that ground,
even after it had been removed by the defendant to the federal
court.
(2) During the trial, on the examination, as a witness for the
plaintiffs, of John Cunningham, who came with the cattle from
Scotland to the United States and accompanied them on the railroad
journey, he was asked:
"Judging from your experience as a shipper of this class and
blood of cattle from Scotland to this country, would the trip
across the ocean, and detention in quarantine, and shipment by rail
to Missouri, cause cows to prematurely lose their calves or abort
them if no unusual accident had occurred to them?"
The defendant
Page 147 U. S. 613
objected to that question, claiming that under the circumstances
it was not liable for abortions, and was liable for nothing except
injuries to the animals; that damage from abortions was too remote;
that it was something that the defendant could not anticipate or
know anything about; that it was not alleged in the petitions, and
that, so far, there was no proof that the defendant knew that the
cattle were in calf. The court, after hearing the argument, ruled
as follows:
"My opinion is that if a railroad company receives a cow or any
other animal for transportation that is with calf, and such animal
is of greater value at the point of destination by virtue of her
being in such condition than she would otherwise be, and in the
course of the journey, through the fault of the carrier, the animal
receives an injury that is the direct and immediate cause of her
losing her calf, that is an item of damage that is recoverable from
the carrier. It stands upon the same footing as an ordinary
physical injury to the animal. Of course, there may be some
difficulty on both sides in proving or disproving the fact alleged
that a particular injury sustained led to the loss of calves, but
the fact that there is difficulty in making the proof don't alter
the rule of law. The difficulty is one of fact, and not a
difficulty in the law. I shall allow you to proceed on both sides,
and try that issue of fact."
The defendant then asked whether such ruling was without regard
to the knowledge of the carrier. The court replied:
"I don't think that has anything to do with it. The carrier had
a right to make any inquiry it saw fit, before it received the
property, as to the condition the cows were in and to make its
arrangements accordingly. If no inquiries were made and the cattle
were received, the rule stated applies."
The defendant excepted to such ruling of the court. The witness
answered to the question, "It would certainly not." Like rulings
were made, under the objection and exception of the defendant, in
regard to other questions of the same character.
We are of opinion that the evidence referred to was properly
admitted, and that the above ruling of the court thereon was
correct. Some remarks on the subject will be made further on.
Page 147 U. S. 614
The defendant objects to those parts of the charge of the court
which are marked in brackets 1 and 2; but it is not proper to
select detached sentences in the charge and predicate on them an
objection. They must be read in connection with the whole charge,
and for the reason we have set it forth in full. The court
correctly told the jury that the defendant was liable only for the
damages directly traceable to its negligence. There was nothing in
the two sentences complained of which could have misled the jury.
Railway Co. v.
Whitton, 13 Wall. 270.
As to paragraph 3 in brackets, it is contended by the defendant
that the court should have directed the jury that the value of the
cattle when delivered at the western terminus of the railroad of
the defendant, in Ohio, and not their value at the final
destination of the cattle, in Saline County and Howard County,
Missouri, should be the basis on which to estimate the damages; but
it does not appear that any such claim was made in the court below.
Both parties introduced their evidence and tried the cases on the
theory that the value of the cattle in Saline and Howard Counties
was the proper basis for fixing the damages. No objection was made
by the defendant to the evidence of value at the point of final
destination, but it appears to have been conceded that it was
proper to base the damages on the value of the cattle at that
point. Evidence was introduced on the part of the plaintiffs,
without objection, as to what the market value of the cattle would
have been in the markets of Missouri if they had arrived there in
good order and condition. Various objections were made by the
defendant to items in the evidence, but no objection was made on
the ground that the testimony was not confined to the value of the
animals at the terminus of the defendant's railroad, and the court
said:
"Inasmuch as the damage complained of consisted in part in the
fact that certain of these cattle lost their calves, it appears to
me to be competent to show what the difference in value was in the
fall of 1883, when these cattle arrived in Saline or Howard County,
between an animal that was then with calf and liable to have a calf
within the next two or three months and one
Page 147 U. S. 615
that had aborted its calf."
The counsel for the defendant then said: "I concede that, unless
it appears they have the power to prove its value exactly." Both
parties introduced their evidence on that theory, and no question
was raised about it, and it does not appear anywhere that the
defendant objected to that mode of trying the cause. Neither side
offered any evidence as to the value of the cattle at the terminus
of the defendant's railroad. The defendant introduced its own
evidence on that basis, and asked one of its witnesses what, in his
opinion, was the value of the cattle on Estill's farm or at Kansas
City, assuming that they were in good order, and asked another what
he would say was a fair price for the cattle per head, where they
were --
i.e. on Leonard's farm in Missouri -- or at Kansas
City, assuming them to be in good condition, and recovered from the
effects of the trip. The opinions on the motion for a new trial do
not show that any such question as is now made was then presented.
The jury were authorized to infer from the evidence that the
defendant knew that the cattle were to be transported to Missouri,
and were to for the market there.
It is further contended for the defendant that if the proper
measure of damages is the difference between the market value of
the cattle, in the condition in which they would have arrived, but
for the negligence of the defendant, and the condition in which
they did arrive, that value must be fixed as of the time when the
cattle first reached their destination, and the plaintiffs could
not show that subsequently some of the cattle died. It is further
contended that two rules for a recovery by the plaintiffs were
adopted: first the difference between the two market values of all
the cattle in the condition in which they arrived, and second, in
addition thereto, the value of those that subsequently died.
That market value of the cattle at their destination would
depend upon their condition when they reached it. Proof that the
deaths subsequently resulted from injuries the cattle had received
in the collision would simply show their real condition when they
reached their destination. It would not establish any new injury or
any additional damage. The
Page 147 U. S. 616
plaintiffs were permitted to prove that some of the cattle had
been so badly injured at the time of their delivery that they
subsequently died from the effect of such injury, and therefore
were of no value when delivered. There was, as to those animals, no
double assessment of damages.
The charge of the court clearly pointed out the different items
of damage. There is nothing in the record to show that the jury,
under the charge, assessed the damages on the view that the value
of the animals was depreciated, and afterwards allowed for the same
animals on the ground that they became totally worthless. The
evidence in question tended to show the condition and value of the
cattle when they reached their destination. Judge Philips, in his
opinion, 41 F. 853, 856, said:
"The rule as to the measure of damages permits the plaintiff, up
to the time of trial, to show the condition of the injured animal,
merely as a means of ascertaining the result of the injury
inflicted, so as to better enable the jury to fix the damages at
the time and place of delivery. If the cows did subsequently abort,
this is proof only of the extent of the injury inflicted; as much
so as if they had subsequently died from the effect of the
collision. The only known limit to the inquiry up to the trial is
whether or not the subsequent development in the condition of the
animal is traceable directly to the injury inflicted by the
carrier,"
citing
Kain v. Railroad Co., 29 Mo.App. 53, 61-62, and
Soreason v. Railroad Co., 36 F. 166, 167. To the same
effect are
Missouri Pacific Railway v. Edwards, 14 S.W.
607, and
Lake Erie & Western Railroad v. Rosenberg, 31
Ill.App. 47.
See also Wilcox v.
Plummer, 4 Pet. 172.
The circuit court required the witnesses for the plaintiffs to
describe the specific injuries to particular cattle, so that it
might be seen that such injuries resulted from the collision, and
also permitted both parties to show the condition of the animals
after their arrival at their destination in order to show how badly
they were hurt by the collision.
The measure of damages was properly stated by the court in its
charge to the jury. The difference between the market value of the
cattle in the condition in which they would have
Page 147 U. S. 617
arrived but for the negligence of the defendant and their market
value in the condition in which, by reason of such negligence, they
did arrive constituted the proper rule of damages.
Mobile &
Montgomery Railway v. Jurey, 111 U. S. 584;
Smith v. Griffith, 3 Hill 333;
Sturgess v.
Bissell, 46 N.Y. 462;
Cutting v. Grand Trunk Railway
Co., 13 Allen 381;
McCune v. Railroad Co., 52 Ia.
600;
Missouri Pacific Railway v. Fagan, 72 Tex. 127;
Missouri Pacific Railway Co. v. Edwards, 14 S.W. 607;
Hutchinson on Carriers, 2d ed., §§ 221,
770
a.
It was not material whether the plaintiffs intended to keep the
cattle upon their farms for breeding purposes or to sell them upon
the market. The depreciation in value of the cattle was the same in
either case.
It was claimed by the plaintiffs that many of the cattle were
heifers, which were bred in Scotland and were in calf when
imported, and that a number of them prematurely cast their calves
in consequence of the collision, and that the value of those
heifers was thereby greatly depreciated. The court instructed the
jury that the burden was upon the plaintiffs to show that such
abortions were the direct result of the collision. The question was
passed upon by the jury and found in favor of the plaintiffs, and
we cannot review their verdict upon the weight of the evidence. The
bill of exceptions states that it contains all the evidence offered
in the case on either side, and there was sufficient evidence to
sustain the finding of the jury.
Zeller v.
Eckert, 4 How. 289;
Express
Co. v. Ware, 20 Wall. 543;
Lancaster v.
Collins, 115 U. S. 222;
Chicago & Northwestern Railway v. Ohle, 117 U.
S. 123.
It was not necessary for the plaintiffs to show that the
defendant had notice at the time of the shipment that the heifers
were in calf in order to render it liable for the depreciation in
their market value in consequence of the abortions which were
caused by its negligence. It was not claimed by the plaintiffs that
on account of the heifers' being with calf, any special care was
necessary in transporting them, and the suits were not brought on
account of the absence of any such special care. In
Hart v. Pennsylvania
Railroad, 112 U.S.
Page 147 U. S. 618
331,
112 U. S. 340,
it was said by this Court:
"As a general rule, and in the absence of fraud and imposition,
a common carrier is answerable for the loss of a package of goods,
though he is ignorant of its contents and though its contents are
ever so valuable, if he does not make a special acceptance. This is
reasonable because he can always guard himself by a special
acceptance or by insisting on being informed of the nature and
value of the articles before receiving them."
See also Railroad Co. v. Fraloff, 100 U. S.
24;
Baldwin v. Liverpool & Great Western
Steamship Co., 74 N.Y. 125;
McCune v. Railway Co., 52
Ia. 600;
Stewart v. Ripon, 38 Wis. 584; 3 Sutherland on
Damages 191.
The circuit court gave the correct rule of damages as to the
heifers which lost their calves. If, through the negligence of the
defendant, the heifers lost their calves, the difference between
their market value if they had arrived in calf and their market
value after losing their calves constituted the amount of the
plaintiffs' damages.
Missouri Pacific Railway v. Fagan, 72
Tex. 127;
McCune v. Railway Co., 52 Ia. 600.
There is no ground for applying a special rule to this case or
for holding that the plaintiffs ought to have traced each animal
and to have shown the amount received for it when sold. The circuit
court correctly held that it was competent for the plaintiffs to
show what the difference in value was in the fall of 1883, when the
cattle arrived in Saline or Howard County, between a heifer that
was then with calf, and liable to have a calf soon, and one that
had lost her calf.
The plaintiffs may have received on the sale of the cattle more
or less than their market value. The defendant might have brought
out evidence as to what the animals were sold for by the plaintiffs
to contradict the evidence as to their market value, but the
plaintiffs could not bind the defendant by the prices for which the
animals were sold. The impracticability of adopting such a rule as
is insisted upon by the defendant is pointed out in the opinions
rendered on the motion for a new trial. Many of the cows were kept
for months after their arrival in Missouri. Some of them were
traded for ponies, and the ponies were sold at a loss. Others were
sold
Page 147 U. S. 619
with a warranty that they would become breeders, and were
afterwards taken back by the plaintiffs. Some were shipped from
point to point in the west and sold. The suggested rule was
therefore impracticable of application.
The circuit court refused to instruct the jury that unless the
defendant knew that some of the cattle shipped by the plaintiffs
were cows or heifers in calf, the plaintiffs were not entitled to
recover for abortions, although caused by the collision, as,
without such knowledge, damages on account of abortions could not
have been in contemplation of the defendant at the time it received
the cattle. Exception was made to such refusal, but we have already
remarked sufficiently on the proposition involved.
(3) The circuit court further instructed the jury that when they
had assessed the damages in each case, they might compute interest
thereon at 6 percent per annum from the time suit was brought in
each case, respectively, and the jury was directed to state in its
verdict the amount of interest which it awarded in each case. In
the Estill case, it awarded in its verdict as interest $2,362.50,
and in the Leonard case $11,880. The defendant excepted to that
part of the charge which related to interest, and which is
paragraph 10 contained in brackets in the margin. The defendant
calls attention to the fact that interest was not claimed in the
petitions, and that §§ 2126 and 2723 of the Revised
Statutes of Missouri of 1879 do not, nor does any other statute of
that state, authorize the recovery of interest in a suit for injury
to property caused by negligence, and that the Supreme Court of
Missouri has repeatedly so held. Section 2126 provides as
follows:
"The jury, on the trial of any issue or on any inquisition of
damages, may, if they shall think fit, give damages in the nature
of interest over and above the value of the goods at the time of
the conversion or seizure."
Section 2723 allows interest on moneys due on written contracts,
on accounts, and sundry other money demands.
In
Kenney v. Hannibal & St. Jo. Railroad, 63 Mo.
99, in 1876, the question arose whether, in a case of the loss of
property set on fire by a locomotive engine on a railroad, the
Page 147 U. S. 620
jury were authorized to allow to the plaintiff, in addition to
the value of the property destroyed, damages by way of interest on
its value not exceeding 6 percent. The court said that it was not
apprised of any statutory provision which allowed a jury to give
interest for such damages; that there was no such provision in the
statute concerning interest, and that § 7 of the act
concerning damages, which allowed interest in cases of the unlawful
conversion of property by the party sued, would not, in terms or by
analogous reasoning, embrace a case where no benefit could possibly
have accrued to the defendant by the negligence which occasioned
the destruction of the property. The judgment was reversed because
of the allowance of interest.
In
Marshall v. Schricker, 63 Mo. 308, in 1876, it was
held that, in actions
ex delicto, based upon the simple
negligence of a party to whom no pecuniary benefit could accrue by
reason of the injury thereby inflicted, interest was not
allowable.
The same ruling was made in
Atkinson v. A. & P.
Railroad, 63 Mo. 367, in 1876.
In
Meyers v. A. & P. Railroad, 64 Mo. 542, in 1877,
which was an action for damages for the killing of a heifer through
the negligence of a railroad company, the court held, citing two of
the cases in 63 Mo., and Judge Norton delivering its opinion, that
the jury could not allow interest on the damages from the time they
accrued.
But in 1878, in
Dunn v. Hannibal & St. Jo.
Railroad, 68 Mo. 268, in an action to recover damages against
a carrier for negligence in transporting livestock, the court below
having instructed the jury to allow interest on the damages at the
rate of 6 percent from the institution of the suit until the
verdict, the supreme court, Judge Norton delivering the opinion,
held that the instruction was proper, citing the case of
Gray
v. Missouri River Packet Co., 64 Mo. 47, 50, in which, in a
case to recover damages for negligence by a common carrier in
transporting an animal, the court below had directed the jury to
add 6 percent interest from the time the animal was shipped to the
damages found, and the judgment
Page 147 U. S. 621
was affirmed, he himself delivering the opinion and saying that
it was a general rule that when goods were not delivered by a
common carrier according to contract, the measure of damages was
the value of the goods, with interest from the day when they should
have been delivered, less the freight, if unpaid. No allusion was
made in either case to the cases in 63 Mo. or to § 2126.
In
De Steiger v. Hannibal & St. Jo. Railroad, 73
Mo. 33, in 1880, while Judge Norton was still a member of the
court, it was held, in a suit for the destruction of hay by fire
escaping from the defendant's locomotive through its negligence,
that interest was not allowable in cases of that character, citing
the three cases in 63 Mo. and the case in 64 Mo. above referred
to.
In
Wade v. Missouri Pacific Railway, 78 Mo. 362, in
1883, reference was made to the two cases to that effect in 64 Mo.
and 73 Mo. and it was said that interest was not allowable in
actions for negligence.
In
Kimes v. St. Louis &c. Railway, 85 Mo. 611, in
1885, which was an action against a railroad company for damages
for negligence in killing a horse and breaking a wagon by a train
of cars at a public road crossing, the court below had instructed
the jury to allow 6 percent interest on the damages. The Supreme
Court of Missouri, delivering its opinion by Judge Norton, held
that the interest was not allowable, referring to the case in 73
Mo., but, as the plaintiff remitted the amount of the interest, the
judgment was affirmed except as to the amount remitted.
In
State v. Harrington, 44 Mo.App. 297, it was held,
referring to the cases above cited from 63, 64, and 73 Mo., that
where an action
ex delicto is based upon the simple
negligence of the defendant, to whom no benefit had accrued or
could accrue by reason of the injury or wrong, interest was not
allowable.
It may not perhaps be possible to reconcile with one another all
of the foregoing cases, but on the whole we regard it as an
established rule of the Supreme Court of Missouri, in the
construction of the state statutes, that the jury is
Page 147 U. S. 622
not warranted in allowing interest in a case like the present
from the time suit was brought. When property is wrongfully injured
or destroyed, it is supposed that the wrongdoer derives no
benefit.
The defendant cites the case of
Shockley v. Fischer, 21
Mo.App. 551, as holding that interest is not allowable when it is
not claimed in the petition.
It is well settled as a general rule that the measure of damages
in the case of a common carrier is the value of the goods entrusted
to it for transportation, with interest from the time when they
ought to have been delivered.
Mobile & Montgomery Railway
v. Jurey, 111 U. S. 584;
Gray v. Missouri River Packet Co., 64 Mo. 47;
Dunn v.
Hannibal & St. Jo. Railroad, 68 Mo. 268; Hutchinson on
Carriers, 2d ed., § 771; 1 Sutherland on Damages 629. But when
the matter appears to have been regulated by statute in the state
and the statute has been interpreted by its highest court, the
regulation of the statute will be followed in the court of the
United States.
We have considered all the questions raised by the defendant,
and do not think it necessary to discuss them further.
The judgment in the Estill case is affirmed as to the $8,750
damages, but it is not affirmed as to the amount of interest, or
any part thereof, awarded by the verdict or judgment. That judgment
is modified as to such interest, and the case is remanded to the
court below with a direction to enter a judgment for the plaintiffs
for $8,750, being the damages assessed by the jury, with interest
on such judgment from the time it shall be entered until it shall
be paid, and for the costs and charges of the plaintiffs in the
circuit court.
The judgment in the Leonard case is affirmed as to the
$44,000 damages, but it is not affirmed as to the amount of
interest, or any part thereof, awarded by the verdict or judgment.
The judgment is modified as to such interest, and the case is
remanded to the court below with a direction to enter a judgment
for the plaintiffs for $44,000, being the damages assessed by the
jury, with interest on such judgment
Page 147 U. S. 623
from the time it shall be entered until it shall be paid,
and for the costs and charges of the plaintiffs in the circuit
court.
The costs of this Court of the plaintiffs in error and the
defendant in error shall be paid one-half of them by the plaintiffs
in error and the other half by the defendant in error.
*
"In these cases, there is no controversy over the fact that the
respective plaintiffs delivered to the defendant certain cattle to
be by it transported over its railroad, and delivered at the
terminus of its line to plaintiffs, or to some connecting carrier.
Estill and Elliott appear to have delivered to the defendant 67
head of cattle, and Leonard Bros. appear to have delivered about
306 head of cattle."
"[1. Having received the cattle for the purpose of
transportation, the defendant was bound to deliver the respective
herds of cattle at the terminus of its line in as good condition as
it received the same.] The complaint made is that defendant did not
deliver the property in question at the terminus of its line in the
condition that it received the same, and damages are claimed by the
respective plaintiffs on that account."
"It is practically admitted, and you may take it as a conceded
fact, that while these two herds of cattle were in defendant's
custody and in transit to their destination, a collision occurred
at Nankin, Ohio, between two freight trains of the defendant in
which the cattle were being transported. Now the main and about the
only question you will have to consider is the nature and extent of
the injuries, if any, that were sustained by the cattle immediately
in consequence of the collision. When you have settled those
questions, you will have practically decided the case, and it is to
be hoped that you will give these questions a careful and fair
consideration, and decide the same according to the evidence, and
rules of law which I will now state for your guidance."
"The law is that a common carrier like the defendant must pay
the market value at the point of destination of all property
entrusted to it for transportation which, through its fault, is
lost or destroyed and is not delivered. [2. The law also is that if
a carrier receives property for transportation and delivers it at
the end of its route, but through its fault it is damaged, and it
fails to deliver it in the same condition as when received, it must
pay the difference between the value of the property in its damaged
condition at the point of destination and what the value of the
property would have been at that place if delivered in the same
condition as when it was received for transportation. These are the
general rules of law which must be applied in the assessment of the
damages in the two cases now on trial.]"
"[3. The testimony tends to show that seven (7) head of Leonard
Bros.' cattle (5 heifers and 2 bulls) were left at Nankin, Ohio,
where the collision occurred, either killed or very badly hurt, and
were never delivered at the point of destination or at the end of
defendant's line. If you find such to be the fact, you will allow
Leonard Bros., for those seven (7) head, their market value, as
shown by the evidence at the point of destination, in Saline County
at the time they should have arrived.]"
"The other damages claimed by Leonard Bros. may be conveniently
divided into three classes. [4. In the first place, it is contended
by Leonard Bros. that some of the cattle in question died after
they reached the point of destination, of injuries received in the
collision at Nankin, Ohio. Abiel Leonard claims that 3 Galloway
bulls died from such cause on his place. William H. Leonard claims
that 3 heifers died from such cause on his farm, and Leverett
Leonard says that 7 heifers died on his place after their arrival.
Now if the evidence in the case satisfies you that any of the
cattle did die, as stated by these witnesses, and that their death
was the direct result of injuries sustained by the collision, then
you will allow Leonard Bros. the market value in Saline County, as
shown by the testimony, of the cattle that so died.]"
"[5. In the second place, it is claimed by Leonard Bros. that
some of the other cattle received injuries of various kinds by the
collision, which did not terminate fatally, but nevertheless
lessened the market value of the cattle so injured. The class of
injuries to which I now refer are strains, bruises, etc., which
some of the cattle are said to have received. The plaintiffs
themselves, and Dr. Glover and Judge Sparks, have spoken of about
48 head, altogether, that are said to have received such injuries,
including, no doubt, the 13 head that are said to have died. Dr.
Glover and Judge Sparks say that they found 25 or 30 head of
injured cows and heifers, and 5 or 6 injured bulls. The plaintiffs
themselves make the number of injured bulls somewhat greater. Abiel
Leonard says he had 5 injured bulls in his portion of the herd. W.
H. Leonard says he had 5 injured bulls in his herd. Leverett
Leonard says that he had two bulls broken down in the back and
loins, and 8 others that were unserviceable for a year or more. You
will recall their evidence on this branch of the case. I call your
attention to this testimony for the purpose of saying that you
should weigh it carefully and determine how many cattle, if any,
received injuries by the collision of the character last described,
and to what extent, if any, such injuries lessened their market
value."
"If you are satisfied by the evidence that any of the cattle
received injuries, such as strains, bruises, etc., which rendered
them less valuable in the market at the point of destination than
they would have been but for such injuries, then you may allow
Leonard Bros., on that account, such reasonable sum as will, in
your judgment, under all the evidence, make good such depreciation
in value.]"
"[6. In the third place, it is claimed that certain cows and
heifers that were with calf at the time of the collision, in
consequence of the collision, lost their calves, and damages are
claimed on that account. There is evidence tending to show that
about 94 or 95 head of the Leonard Bros. cows lost their calves
after the collision. Abiel Leonard says that 25 head lost their
calves on his place; Wm. H. Leonard says that 27 head lost their
calves on his place, and Leverett Leonard says that 43 head lost
their calves on his farm. With reference to this matter, I will say
that if Leonard Bros. have satisfied you, by the evidence, that any
cows or heifers that were with calf when the collision occurred, as
the direct result of that collision, lost their calves, and that
such premature casting of their calves made the animals less
valuable in the market than they would have been but for such loss,
then they are entitled to recover the amount of the depreciation in
value of any of the animals that so lost their calves.] In this
connection, I instruct you, however, that the burden is on them to
show not only that the cattle sustained injuries, but to furnish
the evidence as to the result of such injuries, and evidence that
will enable you to assess the damages with reasonable accuracy.
Inasmuch as the cattle came into their possession shortly after the
collision, and they thereafter had the custody of the cattle, the
rule should be strictly enforced, requiring them to show by
satisfactory evidence the nature of the injuries received, the
result of the injuries, and to what extent the market value was
thereby impaired."
"What I have said about the assessment of damages in the case of
Leonard Bros. applies equally well in the case of Estill and
Elliott. This difference is to be noted in the two cases, however:
none of the Estill and Elliott cattle appear to have been kind in
the collision, or to have subsequently died from injuries claimed
to have been received in the collision. You will have no claim of
that kind to consider in the Estill and Elliott case. In this case,
there is evidence tending to show specific injuries sustained by
three bulls, one of which was injured in the testicles, and two in
the back or loins. W. N. Marshall and Benjamin E. Nance, who claim
to have examined the Estill and Elliott cattle on their arrival,
describe injuries to three bulls said to have been hurt in the
back, loins, or testicles. They also say, generally, that from 10
to 15 cows and heifers were in very bad condition, and that one cow
had lost an eye. The plaintiffs themselves have given some
testimony as to the condition of their herd on arrival at Estill's.
I call your attention to their testimony, and ask you to consider
it carefully."
"[7. In the Estill and Elliott case, there is also evidence
tending to show that 5 of Estill's and Elliott's cows aborted their
calves before they reached Estill's; that 4 or 5 aborted their
calves prior to October 26, 1883, when a portion of the herd was
taken to Kansas City, and two afterwards, making 11 or 12 in all.
With reference to these two kinds or species of injuries claimed to
have been sustained by the Estill and Elliott cattle, I instruct
you, as before, that if the evidence shows to your satisfaction
that any of the animals sustained such injuries, as the immediate
result of the collision, and that the injuries so sustained
lessened the market value of the stock so injured at the point of
destination, then you will be authorized to allow Estill and
Elliott such reasonable sum as in your opinion, under the evidence,
will make good the depreciation in the value of any of the animals
that you find to have been injured either by strains, bruises,
etc., or by losing their calves.]"
"Now gentlemen, on the other side of this case you have
testimony of Mr. Baldwin, Mr. McCullough, and Mr. Geagan, who claim
to have examined the stock of Estill and Elliott and Leonard Bros.
on the 27th and 28th days of September, 1883, 11 and 12 days after
the collision, with a view of ascertaining the injuries the stock
had received. I will direct your attention to the salient points of
their testimony: Mr. Baldwin says that among the Estill and Elliott
cattle he found, in a lot of 49 cows and calves, one or two a
little lame. In another lot, consisting of two bulls and one
heifer, he found the heifer had a sore foot, and the bulls were a
little stiff, and that one other heifer was pointed out as having
lost her calf. McCullough's testimony with reference to the same
herd is to the effect that he found one bull a little stiff, one
(1) cow very stiff, two other bulls, one in a stable and one in a
pasture, both a little stiff, and one heifer with a sore foot."
"In relation to the Leonard cattle, Mr. Baldwin says he found 3
stiff or lame heifers in a herd of 35 animals; one cow a little
stiff in a herd of 29 cows, and three that were said to have lost
their calves; one heifer also that was said to have lost her calf;
one lame cow in a herd of 30 animals; one other cow in a herd of 32
animals that was said to have lost her calf; one bull in a herd of
17, lame in the fore leg; two other bulls in a herd of (9) animals,
slightly injured, one lame or stiff, and one with slight flesh
wound; one other bull with hoofs swollen, and wound in left hind
leg. Mr. McCullough's testimony as to the same herd (that is, with
reference to the Leonard cattle) is to the following effect,
namely, that he found 3 footsore heifers, one very sore, in a herd
of 35 animals; 3 heifers said to have lost their calves in a herd
of 29 head; 2 lame bulls in a herd of 5 animals, one footsore, and
one said to be not fit to serve cows; 2 lame cows in a herd of 26
cows and calves; 1 bull noticeably lame in a herd of 17 bulls; 1
bull with a slight wound in his thigh, and one other with a slight
flesh wound."
"All three of these witnesses say that the injuries to the two
herds were not greater or different than might be expected to
result from an ordinary long railroad journey, and that none of the
injuries, in their judgment, was serious, or liable to produce
permanent disability."
"From a summary of the evidence, as I have noted it, gentlemen,
the testimony for the plaintiffs tends to show that about 48
animals in Leonard Bros.' herd, 18 bulls and about 30 cows, after
their arrival in Saline County, showed visible evidence of having
been injured in the collision, whilst, according to the evidence
for defendant, there were only 10 animals, 5 bulls and 5 cows and
heifers, which bore any visible marks of having been hurt. In the
Estill and Elliott case, it appears from the plaintiffs' testimony
that 3 bulls, and from 10 to 15 cows, sustained injuries, the
injury to the bulls being of a serious character, whilst, according
to the testimony of defendant's witnesses, only 4 animals (3 bulls
and one cow) bore any evidences of injuries. In the foregoing
summary, you will understand that I do not include cows or heifers
that are said to have lost their calves. I refer only to animals
that are said to have shown outward signs of injury."
"[8. In the light of the testimony, both for the plaintiffs and
defendant, to which I have alluded, and in the light of any other
testimony in the case which you may recall, and bearing in mind
that the burden of proof is on the plaintiff to show that the
cattle in question received injuries, and the extent and result of
such injuries, you will have to determine the following important
questions of fact, namely: (1) how many cattle in each herd were
injured in any manner, in consequence of the collision, to such
extent as to lessen their market value at the point of destination?
(2) how many of Leonard Bros.' cattle were killed or badly injured,
and left at Nankin, Ohio, in consequence of the collision, and what
would have been the value of such cattle in Saline County at the
time they should have arrived, if they had been delivered in the
condition in which the defendant received them? (3) how many of
Leonard Bros.' cattle, if any, died of injuries received by the
collision after they had been delivered to Leonard Bros., and what
was the reasonable market value in Saline County of those cattle,
if they had arrived uninjured? (4) how many animals in each herd
lost their calves as the direct result of the collision, and to
what extent did such loss of their calves lessen their market value
at the point of destination? (5) what number of cattle in each
herd, besides those that are said to have died or lost calves, were
otherwise injured by the collision, by strains, bruises, etc., so
as to materially lessen their market value, and what was the amount
of such depreciation in value?] To arrive at a just and intelligent
verdict in these cases, you will have to determine from the
testimony each of the foregoing questions."
"There are one or two other matters to which I will refer
briefly. There is testimony in the case tending to show that in the
last days of August, 1883, some of Leonard Bros.' cattle (and
possibly some few of Estill and Elliott's cattle) found some Paris
green and ate it at Concord, Mass. The proof tends to show that 5
head of Leonard Bros.' cattle died of poison at Concord, and that
about 30 other animals were made sick by it, and were treated. You
will understand, of course, that if any of Leonard Bros.' cattle
that are said to have died after they reached Saline County, or if
any of the cows in either herd that are said to have lost their
calves died or lost calves in consequence of eating Paris green,
then the railroad company is not responsible for the loss so
occasioned."
There is also some testimony tending to show that when one or
more cows in a herd give birth to calves prematurely, or abort, as
the saying is, other cows in the same herd, unless separated from
the cows that have aborted, are liable to cast their calves,
through sympathy or contagion, although they have themselves
received no physical injury. This is a matter that requires your
attention. If it be true, and you so find, that cows will abort
through sympathy or by contagion, then it was the plaintiffs' duty,
if they could have done so, to have separated cows that had aborted
from other pregnant cows, and to have done so with reasonable and
ordinary diligence, and if plaintiffs failed to exercise reasonable
and ordinary diligence and caution in that regard, and any cows
lost their calves in consequence of such negligence, then the
defendant is not liable for such losses, as they were not the
immediate and direct result of the collision, but the result of
plaintiffs' neglect.
"I will also say that defendant cannot be held liable for losses
occasioned by premature birth of calves or by the death of stock if
such births or deaths were the result of overfeeding, or the result
of change of climate, or fatigue or heat, or of a long voyage on
the ocean or by rail, or of all such causes combined. In other
words, gentlemen, the defendant is only liable for such premature
births and deaths as are shown by the testimony to have been
directly occasioned by injuries sustained in the collision. [9. The
question as to what causes led some of the animals in the two herds
to lose their calves or to die after arrival is a question which
you may find some difficulty in solving, in the nature of things,
these are questions that do not admit of solution by positive or
direct proof. I will only say that you must apply your best
judgment and your experience to the solution of these questions,
giving to all the testimony, including that of the experts, such
weight as you think it fairly deserves.] If, upon a fair
consideration of the subject, you deem the evidence insufficient to
establish what was the cause of the abortions, then it will be your
duty to disallow the plaintiffs' claims for damages on that
account. If the evidence establishes to your satisfaction that some
of the abortions were the direct result of the collision, but
leaves you undecided as to the cause of other abortions, then you
should allow damages for such as you are satisfied were the result
of the collision, and disallow the plaintiffs' claims as to the
residue."
"[10. When you have assessed the damages in each case, you may
compute interest on the damages in each case at six (6) percent per
annum from the time suit was brought, on November 21, 1883, in the
Estill case, and November 27, 1883, in the Leonard case, to this
date. I will further direct you to state in your verdict the amount
of interest which you award in each case.]"
In conclusion, I ask you to give the cases a careful and
unbiased consideration. Consider the evidence in behalf of both
parties in the same spirit of fairness that you would have it
considered if you were yourselves personally interested, as
plaintiffs or defendants, in the result of the suit.