83 Me. 67 | Me. | 1890
Trespass qua,re clausum for breaking and entering the plaintiff’s close and carrying away therefrom certain wood and lumber which the defendants had previously cut thereon.
The disputed boundary line between the parties’ adjoining lands having been settled by a parol award, with which the plaintiff both by words and acts expressed satisfaction, he thereupon told the defendants to go on and cut the wood and timber in controversy, as it was theirs by the decision of the referees. Whereupon they went upon their side of the parol line and cut all the wood and timber mentioned in the writ before either of them was forbidden by the plaintiff or knew that he claimed to own it. However, they ceased cutting immediately on being forbidden, but subsequently entered and hauled away what they had cut before forbidden.
The defendants having waived, at the argument, their exception relating to the validity and effect of the parol award, they rely solely upon that taken to the refusal to give the requested instruction : "If all the wood and lumber sued for was cut by the defendants before they were forbidden by the plaintiff, they yet had the right to enter upon the land and take it off.”
In support of this requested instruction the defendants contend that, they were justified in entering and taking away the wood and timber severed before being forbidden, on the alleged ground that the plaintiff’s telling them to go on and cut it as it was theirs by the award, constituted a license; that forbidding further cutting was a revocation of the license ; and that having cut none thereafter, they had the right to enter and haul off such as they had cut before the revocation.
We are of opinion that the declaration of the plaintiff to the defendants did not, under the circumstances, constitute a license.
To be sure, a license may be a simple authority conferred by the owner of land upon another to do certain acts thereon which without such authority would be acts of trespass. 3 Kent Com. 452; Pitman v. Poor, 38 Maine, 237, 240. And if the plaintiff' had contracted to sell the wood and lumber upon this particular
In the case at bar there was no pretense of any contract in respect of the wood or timber on the lot. And the mere telling the defendants to go on and cut it for it was theirs under the parol award passed no title to the wood cut. The remark was obviously made under the mistaken belief that the land belonged to the defendants, and as an expression of such an opinion and of submission on the part of the plaintiff; and just as obviously the defendants so understood it. It cannot be considered for a moment, when viewed in the light of the attending circumstances, that the plaintiff intended thereby to give the defendants authority to cut the growth upon the land which he then supposed to be his.
As the jury must have found the land belonged to the plaintiff notwithstanding the parol award, and the defendants obtained no title to the wood, they had no right to enter the plaintiff’s premises and haul it away, especially if forbidden. Wheelden v. Lowell, 50 Maine, 499; Kallock v. Perry, 61 Maine, 273.
Exceptions overruled.