48 W. Va. 108 | W. Va. | 1900
John P. Bodkin, surviving co-tenant and heir of George Bodkin, deceased, instituted his suit in the circuit court of Lewis County to recover the mesne profits accruing to him in the case of Bodkin v. Arnold, 45 W. Va. 90, (30 S. E. 154), arising out of the case of Boggs v. Bodkin, 32 W. Va. 566, (9 S. E. 891), 5 L. R. A. 245, and recovered judgment on the verdict of a jury for seven thousand dollars. The facts will be found fully set out in the foregoing cases, and it is not necessary to repeat them at length.
The question now presented to the court is nothing more than the true measure of damages controlling a recovery in cases of this character. On the part of the defense it is insisted that actual receipts is the true measure, while the plaintiff insists that the rental value on a speculative basis, augmented by waste for failure to keep in repair, and neglect and abuse of the prop-ert}', without deduction for improvements, is the true measure. The defendant's position is wrong, for the reason that he was at no time ignorant of plaintiff's claim of title, but was entirely cognizant thereof. To be a bona fide purchaser or possessor, so as to make him answerable only for actual receipts, the defendant must not only believe his own title to be good, but he must be ignorant of the existence of plaintiff's claim of title. If he has notice thereof, or of facts that put him on inquiry, he is not a Iona fide holder, within the meaning of the law. Cain v. Cox, 23 W. Va. 594; Id., 29 W. Va. 258, (1 S. E. 298), Haymond v. Camden, 22 W. Va. 180; Lynch v. Andrews, 25 W. Va. 751; Dawson v. Grow, 39 W. Va. 333, (1 S. E. 564); Hall v. Hall, 30 W. Va. 779, (5 S. E. 260); Williamson v. Jones, 43 W. Va. 563, (27 S. E. 411), 38 L. R. A. 694. In these cases it is finally settled that plaintiff's belief, to be bona fide, must be founded on ignorance of facts, and not ignorance of law. In Williamson v.
The plaintiff’s fourth instruction is as follows, to-wit: “(4) The court instructs the jury that, if they believe from the evidence that the plaintiff is entitled to recover, the measure of damages in this case is the rental value of said land, and any damages done thereto 'by Arnold, his agents or tenants, either by their pósitive acts, or their negligence in their manner of cultivating said land or using the same. And, in ascertaining the rental value of said land, the jury should take into consideration, not only the profits, if any, which the evidence shows the plaintiff could easily have made in the ordinary mode of cultivation, but also any profits which the jury believe from the evidence the plaintiff could reasonably have made by the use of said farm and the spring thereon as a summer resort in connection with his hotel. And in ascertaining the damages done to said land by the acts and negligence of Arnold, his agents or tenants, if they believe from the evidence that there were such acts and. negligence on their part, the measure of damages is what it would cost to restore said land, the spring and hotel, and surroundings, to the condition in which they were at the time
Plaintiff’s instruction No. 3 is as follows, to-wit: “(3) The court instructs the jury that, if they find for the plaintiff, in ascertaining and fixing the damages to which he may be entitled it is proper for the jury to consider the revenues derived by Bodkin from his spring and hotel on the property in the declaration mentioned.” This instruction should have been refused, because misleading. It instructs the jury to take into consideration the revenues, without regard to the expenses. In fixing a
The defendant asked the court to instruct the jury that, upon the question of defendant’s good faith, they had the right to consider the fact that the ease of Bodkin v. Arnold was decided by a divided court, reversing the judgment of the circuit court. This was improper, for the reasons heretofore given,—that notice of plaintiff’s -title destroyed defendant’s good faith, it matters not how honestly he believed he held the superior title. The facts being known and undisputed, he cannot predicate good faith on ignorance of law. The case of Bodkin v. Arnold was decided in this Court wholly on questions of law, and not of facts; and ignorance of law on the part of this Court or any of its members affords neither protection to themselves nor litigants, unless such ignorance is perpetuated by final decree, which becomes irrevocably the law of the case. Then it cannot be called in question. Defendant’s instruction No. 6 is subject to the same objection.
Defendant took numerous exceptions to the evidence, which are unnecessary to repeat at length, but some- of which should have been sustained, for the reason that such evidence was not pertinent to the issue, and tended to mislead the jury into giving speculative and punitive damages. The evidence should have been confined to the issue. Punitive damages were not recoverable, without the conduct of the defendant was alleged to have been without probable cause and with malice, for the purpose of injuring the plaintiff. There is no such allegation in the declaration. Glen Jean, L. L. & D. R. Co. v. Kanawha, G. J. & E. R. Co. (decided at this term), 35 S. E. 978. The pamphlet published by the defendant, and introduced in evidence, was purely speculative, and could have no weight or bearing in reaching a fair rental 'value of the property, and should have I teen excluded, as it could have no other than a highly-exaggerated and misleading tendency. The evidence of W. H. Boggs as to when and how the defendant became interested in the .property, and the payment of costs prior to the time the plaintiff was dispossessed, was not proper on the issue as presented, but would have been, had the action been for malicious prosecution without
The plaintiff, in addition to rental, asks damages for waste and failure to repair; and while the defendant is not entitled to his improvements, if rental alone were demanded, yet, in estimating the damages for injury to the premises caused by the neglect and abuse of the defendant, the jury must take these improvements into consideration, in making up their estimate; for, to the extent they enhance the value of the property, they necessarily diminish the neglectful or willful damage thereto. Tn all actions of trespass, void or malicious aggravation, the true nature of damages is compensation. 26 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, 674. The plaintiff is compensated for the damage sustained, and if he has sustained none, by reason of the damage being cured by improvements made by the defendant, he has no cause of complaint, because he is fully compensated. If his property is just as valuable to him after as before the alleged damage, he has suffered no loss, and the defendant has incurred no liability, other than nominally. 10 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law (2d Ed.) 546. While plaintiff is debarred from speculative profit, he is entitled to interest on the rent accruing annually. Bolling v. Lersner, 26 Grat. 36. Plaintiff may recover in this case: (1) The fair rental value of the property in the condition it was in, and for the purposes it was used, at the time he was dispossessed, with interest on the annual rentals as they fall due. (2) Damages for waste, arising from the failure to repair and the abuse of the property by the defendant or his tenants; being the net damage thereto, after deducting from the gross damages the en
Reversed.