66 Wis. 22 | Wis. | 1886
We have had some difficulty in ascertaining the facts as claimed by the respective parties in this case. Only a small portion of the evidence is printed. We regret that the learned counsel for the plaintiffs was detained from orally arguing the case. The only error assigned is that the court denied the plaintiffs’ motion for judgment for the value of the 25?,000 feet mentioned in the special verdict, and only granted judgment for the value of the 60,000 feet found in the verdict. The judgment for the 60,000 feet is based upon the correctness of the assumption or proviso contained in the fourteenth finding as above stated. That is claimed to be an error. For the purposes of this case we shall assume that it was. The question recurs whether it was such an error as was prejudicial to the plaintiffs. Unless it affected their substantial rights, it should not woi’k a reversal. Such is the mandate of the statute. Sec. 2829,
The assumption in the fourteenth finding that the north and south quarter-posts should be established equidistant from the northeast and northwest, and the southeast and southwest, section corners was undoubtedly correct. The error assumed in that finding, if any, consists in establishing the east and west quarter-posts equidistant between the northeast and southeast, and northwest and southwest, section corners, instead of making the south half of the section full, and putting the deficiency wholly in the north half of the section, as claimed by the learned counsel for the plaintiffs. In other words, the error claimed is that that finding is upon the assumption that the plaintiffs’ lands did not extend as far north as they in fact extended. But the difficulty grows out of the fact that Dayton & Baldwin owned the lands adjoining the plaintiffs’ on the east as well as on the north, and cut timber on the same .during that winter, according to Sturdevant’s survey; and according to Allen’s survey the east line of the plaintiffs’ land ran from their southeast corner iii an angle, far more to the eastward than the east line as found by the agreement of the parties. ' In other words, the amount and value of the timber found in the fifteenth, sixteenth, and eighteenth findings were upon the assumption that the plaintiffs’ land extended much further east than it in fact did, as appears from the findings agreed upon. That is to say, the fifteenth, sixteenth, and eighteenth findings were based upon the false assumption that the plaintiffs owned a large triangular piece of land, which, as appears from the agreed findings and the admitted facts, belonged to Dayton & Baldwin. From the record before us we cannot say but what all the timber men-
By the Court.— That part of the judgment of the circuit court appealed from is affirmed.