25 Conn. 165 | Conn. | 1856
The third count of the declaration in this case, on which alone the questions, which have been made before us, arise, is founded on the statute which provides that “ every person who shall set fire on any land, that shall run upon the land of any other person, shall pay to the owner all the damages done by such fire.” Rev. Stat. tit. 1, § 27?, p. 148.
The first question is, whether this statute gives an action
That this is the true meaning of this law, is yet more clear if we look at the mischief intended to be remedied by it. It is a purely remedial statute, the object of which plainly was, to furnish a remedy to the owner of land where he had previously no redress, in the case of an injury done to it by fire communicated to it, which had been set on the land of another person. By the common law there was no redress in
The plaintiff claimed on the trial, that the defendant was in the possession of that part of the lot of the plaintiff on which the fire was set by him, and that therefore, as to such part, it was the land, not of the plaintiff, but of the defendant. The court charged the jury that if the defendant was in the use of the lot of the plaintiff only for the limited purpose of cutting wood, and manufacturing it into coal, under and according to the contract which has been made between the parties, and the plaintiff was in possession of the lot for all other purposes, it was not a case where the fire was set upon the land of the defendant and ran upon the land of the plaintiff. This instruction was, in our opinion, correct. On the facts upon which it was predicated, the part of the lot on which the fire was set, was not, in any sense, the land of the defendant. The contract impliedly gave him a licence to go upon the lot and do the acts required by it; but it conveyed no estate or interest in the land or any part of it. • It did not amount to a lease, or even to the grant of an easement. Nor did the use of the land by the defendant, for the purpose only of doing such particular acts as those specified in that contract, constitute a possession of it by him, or displace the possession of the plaintiff. It was only a transient and temporary use of the land by him, not as the owner or proprietor of it,
We do not advise a new trial.
In this opinion, the other judges, Hinman and Ellsworth, concurred.
New trial not to be granted.