This is an action by Winnie Tate, Mary B. Tate, Susan A. Tate, Arthur H. Tate, Caleb R. Tate, Samuel Tate, and Winnie Tate as next friend of Daniel J., Willie C., and Winnie Tate, against the Western and Atlantic Railroad Company, to recover damages resulting from the firing of the growing timber upon land owned by the petitioners, by sparks emitted in the negligent operation of the defendant’s train of cars.
1. A new trial is asked, “because, as movant insists, the plaintiffs brought and have prosecuted their said action as joint owners of the lands and timber growing thereon, described in the petition in said case; whereas, as movant insists, the evidence introduced on the trial of said case before the jury conclusively established the fact that one of said plaintiffs, to wit, Mrs. Winnie Tate, was and is the owner of a life-estate onty, in the undivided one-ninth ^of said land and growing timber, the other eight plaintiffs owning the estate in remainder in and to said undivided one-ninth of said land and growing timber, and also owned the remaining eight-ninths of said land and timber in fee simple.” We do not agree to movant’s contention that the. pleadings necessarily set out that the plaintiff’s title is joint. The allegation in the petition respecting their title is “that they are the owners of and are in actual possession of” certain described land. This is an alie? gation of ownership, but not necessarily that plaintiffs are joint tenants or tenants in common. These plaintiffs have a joint interest in the damage flowing from the alleged injurious act of the
2. The court charged that a railroad company should use ordinary care in keeping its right of way clear of combustible matter, but that the law does not require a railroad company to keep its right of way absolutely clean; but it “should use ordinary care to do so, and if it used ordinary care to do so, and leaves still accumulated, the road would not be liable; but if it did not use ordinary care in doing so, and the leaves accumulated and caught on fire from sparks from the engine, then it would be liable whether the engine was properly equipped or not.” The criticism of this charge is that it was calculated to impress the jury that the railroad company was under a duty to exercise ordinary care in keeping its right of way absolutely clean. We think, when the charge in its entirety is considered, that it only amounted to an instruction that the duty imposed by law on the railroad company is to exercise ordinary care in keeping its right of way clear of combustible matter, and not to keep it absolutely clean, and was not calculated to otherwise impress the jury.
3. The charge must not withdraw from the consideration of the jury any evidence which may property enter into the solution of any issue comprehended in the pleadings. Thus, where one of the parties relies, in part, on documentary evidence to sustain his contention, the judge should not instruct the jury that the evidence is what the witnesses swear upon the stand. Bowden v. Achor, 95 Ga. 245; McLean v. Clark, 47 Ga. 26; Myers v. State, 97 Ga. 79. When an attack for this cause is made on the charge, the excerpt criticised must be considered in its appropriate context. It is frequently impossible for a judge to state an entire legal proposition with all its qualifications and exceptions, in one clause or one
4. The defendant orally requested the court to charge “upon the subject of the tax books in evidence,”which the court did as follows: “There are some tax books introduced in evidence. While you will consider that evidence with the other evidence in the case, and determine for yourselves what the truth is, the fact that a man may give in his taxes one year high, and one year low, does not necessarily bind him by that fact, but that is a circumstance that you may consider with the other circumstances in the case.” The criticisms of this charge are, (1) that it did not give the jury any definite and intelligible rule on the effect of such evidence; 1 (2) that it minified the probative force of the evidence; (3) that the court should have instructed the jury that they could consider the tax returns as an admission. The returns appear to have been made by Arthur II. Tate as agent for Mrs. Winnie Tate. Arthur Tate had testified as a witness. The tax returns are in the nature of an admission by the taxpayer of the value of his property. It is not a conclusive admission of the true value of the property returned, but the admission in the return may be considered by the jury in estimating the value of the property. It
'5. The court charged the jury that if the value of the land Was diminished by the negligent firing and destruction of the timber thereon, the measure of damages was the diminution in the value of the premises resulting from the injury caused by the fire. He also charged that if there was no diminution in the market value of the land by reason of the burning of the timber, the measure of damages would be the proved value of the timber destroyed by tjie fire. Plaintiff in error insists that these two principles are contradictory, and tended to confuse the jury as to the rule to govern them on the measure of damages. There was no contradiction in the charges given. Each was applicable to a peculiar phase of the evidence. If the jury should have found, from the testimony submitted, that the burning of the timber on the land diminished the market value of the land, then the measure of damages was the diminution of the value of the land resulting from the injury caused by the fire. L. & N. R. Co. v. Kohlruss, 124 Ga. 250. On the other hand, if the jury should find that the growing timber was destroyed by the fire as a consequence of the negligent tort of defendant, and there was no depreciation in the market value of the land by reason of the destruction of the timber, the measure of damages in such a case is the value of the timber destroyed in its then state as attached to the land on which it grew. Central R. Co. v. Murray, 93 Ga. 256. The evidence was conflicting as to the effect of the fire on the market value of the land; and in such a case it is proper for the court to give in charge the measure of damages appropriate to either of these phases of the evidence.
6. Complaint is made that the court failed to charge certain appropriate principles of law. In so far as these were applicable to the case, they were covered by the general charge; and if the plaintiff in error had desired a more specific instruction with respect to the particular matter, a timely written request for such instruction should have been submitted to the judge. The verdict was approved by the trial judge; there is evidence to support it;
Affirmed.