63 N.J.L. 243 | N.J. | 1899
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The declaration in this case charges the defendant company with breaking and entering the plaintiffs’ «lose and mutilating and cutting a number of shade and ■ornamental trees.
The writ of error is prosecuted to review the judgment rendered for the plaintiffs in the trial court.
The plaintiffs owned the premises in fee on which the trees ■stood, subject to a mortgage. The defendant offered to prove that at the time of the alleged trespass the mortgage exceeded the value of the property, and that the mortgage had been .•subsequently foreclosed and the premises sold pending this
This is assigned for error. There can be no question that the owner of the fee in possession of real estate can maintain an action of tresj^ass quare clausum fregit, although it is encumbered by mortgages.
It has also long been the accepted law in this state that a mortgagee may maintain an action against the wrongdoer for an injury to the mortgaged premises. Jackson v. Turrell, 10 Vroom 329; Schalk v. Kingsley, 13 Id. 32.
The question of difficulty arises in ascertaining the rule of damages to be applied to such cases.
In the case now under review the mortgagor under the direction of the trial court recovered compensation for the entire damage done by the trespass; and if the trespasser, after satisfying this judgment, is still subject to a suit by the mortgagee in which a like amount may be recovered and made out of his property, it is obvious that great injustice has been done, and that the correct legal rule could not have been applied in this cause.
But to the assumption that this liability exists on the part of the defendant to the mortgagee, and that the trial court is without power to furnish adequate protection to the trespasser, we ca'nnot assent.
In Jackson v. Turrell, 10 Vroom 329, which was a suit by a second mortgagee, Mr. Justice Dixon said that “the damages recoverable are to be measured by the injury to the mortgage as a security; and if it be doubtful whether the damages should not go to the first mortgagee, the court will exert its equitable powers to control the disposition of the fund so that no injustice may be done.”
In Martin v. Franklin Fire Insurance Co., 9 Vroom 140, it was declared that a like equitable power inhered in the trial court.
In the later case of Schalk v. Kingsley a like remedy was accorded to the mortgagee, and it was adjudged that his
When the mortgagee has instituted the prior suit and recovered his damages, as he may, there is no difficulty about the rule. The owner may still maintain an action for the injury, and the trespasser can protect himself by giving in evidence the recovery by the mortgagee in mitigation of damages.
The owner has suffered damage to the full extent of the injury, but his claim has been satisfied pro tanto by payment to the mortgagee for his loss.
But when the owner alone sues and the case goes to trial upon the issue therein joined, the damages must be commensurate with the loss which falls upon the land by reason of the wrongful act. The damage committed upon the locus in quo is none the less because it is encumbered by a mortgage. The owner suffers to the extent of the entire loss. His premises are diminished in value to the full amount that will compensate for the injury. He is entitled to redeem the mortgage, and he may compel the wrongdoer to restore to him all that he has destroyed and deprived him of.
In Massachusetts, by force and effect of the mortgage, the legal estate vests at once in the mortgagee, and there the mortgagee recovers the full amount of damages done to the mortgaged premises. Gooding v. Shea, 103 Mass. 360; Byrom v. Chapin, 113 Id. 308; Page v. Robinson, 10 Cush. 99.
The damages must be a recompense for the injury done to the property. Thompson v. Morris Canal Co., 2 Harr. 480; Berry v. Vreeland, 1 Zab. 183.
When the owner sues, the property injured is the tract of land, and when the mortgagee is the plaintiff the property injured is his mortgage. In either case the entire injury to the property of the plaintiff is recovered.
When the mortgagor of chattels prosecutes a stranger for taking the mortgaged goods, the established rule of this court is that he is entitled to recover their full value without regard to the mortgage; he must recover all the damages that both
No reason appears why a different rule shall prevail when, the action is for trespass upon lands.
The right both of the mortgagor and mortgagee to seek redress in a court of law being conceded, the equitable power must reside in the court, in a just administration of the law, to control the judgment and proceedings in such a way that the amount recovered shall be appropriated to satisfy the demands of each in accordance with their respective rights, and with the rights of the defendant wrongdoer.
There was, therefore, no error in this regard in the trial bjlow.
A further objection to the legality of the proceedings on the trial is that William A. Elvins, a witness produced on the part of the plaintiff, was permitted, notwithstanding objection to his evidence, to testify to the value 'of the shade trees.
This evidence was excepted to by the counsel of the defendant on the ground that it was incompetent, and it is now insisted that it was inadmissible because it was not a subject for expert testimony, and if it was a matter upon which expert testimony could be received, that the witness did not appear to be possessed of the requisite knowledge to qualify him to testify as an expert.
It certainly requires some special knowledge to be able to estimate the value of trees.
If they are to be cut into cordwood, the witness must have some experience to enable him to say how many cords they will make. Whether they can be more profitably disposed of for cabinetmaking purposes, for railroad uses, or to the carriage builder, requires still more experience.
The value of trees as shade trees cannot be so accurately computed as their value for commercial purposes, but still that value depends upon the size and variety of the trees, their,location on the premises, the time it takes to grow them and the price which well-shaded residence lots in the same
Before the witness was permitted to testify to the value of the trees, he was asked whether he had any knowledge of the value of real estate around Hammonton, to which he replied, “Yes, some.”
He was then asked whether he knew anything about trees, to which he answered, “ Ho, I don’t know as I know much about them.”
It did not appear that he knew anything about the prices at which real estate had been sold, or about its value, or that he had any knowledge of the subject which was not possessed by everyone in that locality.
While in respect to expert testimony it is somewhat within the discretion of the trial judge whether a witness shall be allowed to give his opinion (30 Vroom 189), still to render such testimony competent it must be made to appear that the witness has some special knowledge of the subject. In this case there was an entire absence of any fact to show that the opinion of the witness was entitled to be regarded as evidence. Farmers and landowners may have some special knowledge of the value of real estate in their locality, but that does not imply ability to estimate the cost of erecting a dwelling-house or the value of trees as shade or ornamental trees.
It was error, therefore, in the trial court to allow the witness to testify as to the value of the trees as shade trees, and for that reason the judgment should be reversed.
For affirmance — Hone.
For reversal — The Chancellor, Chief Justice, Collins, Dixon, Garrison, Gummere, Lippincott, Van Syokel, Adams, Bogert, Hendrickson, Hixon, Vre-DENBURGH. 13.