132 Minn. 155 | Minn. | 1916
This is an action in claim and delivery, or replevin, in which plaintiff demands judgment for the immediate return and possession of two million feet of lumber or the value thereof, stated to be $20,000. The complaint alleged that defendant wrongfully caused to be sawed into lumber logs of plaintiff wrongfully taken from the Big Fork river, and caused the lumber to be piled in the mill yard of the State Lumber Company near the town of Gemmell .in Koochiching county. The sheriff took the lumber under the writ of replevin, but defendant rebonded. The answer alleged that defendant was the owner of the lumber in question, except a small amount, not exceeding 2,000 feet, which belonged to plaintiff, coming into defendant’s possession inadvertently and through mistake, for which defendant was and is ready and willing to pay plaintiff. The reply was a general denial. The case was tried to a jury, and the result ivas a verdict for defendant. Plaintiff moved for a new trial, the motion ivas denied and judgment entered on the verdict. This appeal is bjr plaintiff from the judgment.
Plaintiff’s case is based upon the doctrine of confusion of goods. It was admitted in the answer and on the trial by defendant that a few of plaintiff’s logs were taken from the river by defendant, shipped to Gemmell, sawed into lumber at the mill of the State Lumber Company there and piled with defendant’s own lumber in the yard at Gemmell.
(if it appeared that defendant wilfully and fraudulently mixed plaintiff’s lumber with its own with the result'that there was an inextricable confusion of goods, plaintiff would have been entitled to recover the entire
We have mentioned the inconsiderable amount of plaintiff’s lumber contained in the piles when compared to that admittedly owned by defendant, and that this fact has a bearing upon whether the confusion was the result of mistake or negligence, or of a wilful intent to deprive plaintiff of its property. There was a mass of evidence directed to the extent of defendant’s appropriation of plaintiff’s logs, and the amount of the lumber sawed therefrom and contained in the yards, but the net result of our consideration of this evidence is the statement that it was conflicting and that the jury was clearly warranted in finding that a comparatively very small portion of the total contents of the lumber piles was lumber sawed from plaintiff’s logs.
Logs belonging to plaintiff, to defendant and to other owners, were being floated down the Big Fork river. Plaintiff’s logs were marked on the ends with its log mark, which was known to defendant. Defendant had sorting and hoisting works at Big Falls, and took the logs bearing its mark from the logs floating down the river; hoisted them from the river; loaded them upon flat cars and transported them to the mill at Gemmell. It is not denied that from time to time it hoisted, loaded and transported some of plaintiff’s logs with its own. It is a bit difficult for us to see how defendant could do all this and follow by sawing the logs into lumber, through mistake or inadvertence; but we are not the jury, and there was evidence tending to show that it was not unusual to find among the logs of one owner, taken out of a common mass in this way, logs with the marks of other owners upon them. According to the testimony of an experienced lumberman, this is almost always
We need not refer to the other evidentiary facts bearing on the question of defendant’s good faith. We have carefully considered the entire record and reach the conclusion that the question was for the jury and that the evidence sustains the verdict. Under the familiar rules which control our action in regard to disturbing the verdict of a jury after the trial court has approved it, we are forced to the result stated.
Judgment affirmed.