3 S.W.2d 623 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1928
Affirming.
This action was instituted in the Carter circuit court by the Little Fork Coal Company against the Johns Run Coal Company, to recover damages in the sum of $25,000 for an alleged willful trespass by the defendant upon the adjoining coal lands of the plaintiff.
The answer presented a general denial of the allegations of the petition. A trial by jury resulted in a verdict for $1,000 in favor of the plaintiff. Motion for a new trial was denied, and this appeal has been prosecuted from the judgment entered upon the verdict.
The bill of exceptions is incomplete. It does not contain any of the evidence offered on the trial except a mine map, but shows affirmatively that several witnesses were introduced and testified. In such situation it is presumed that the missing portions of the record sustain the action of the trial court. Trosper Coal Co. v. R. C. Tway Mining Co.,
This rule is subject to the limitation that, when a judgment or an instruction properly shown by the record is so palpably illegal or erroneous that no possible evidence that could be offered would authorize it, the presumption is ineffective to avoid a reversal. Johnson v. Louisville City Ry. Co., 10 Bush, 232; McAllister v. Connecticut Mutual Life Ins. Co.,
But obviously the instructions given in this case were correct, if the evidence heard on the trial warranted them, as will be presumed under the circumstances here appearing.
Appellant complains that a map introduced by a witness and attached to the record was incompetent, but it was competent if correct, and it will be presumed that the other evidence which was heard and not brought here showed the accuracy of the map and rendered it admissible in evidence. Gambrell v. Gambrell,
Complaint is also made of an argument to the jury made by counsel for plaintiff. It appears that an objection thereto was sustained by the court and the offensive statement withdrawn. Under the circumstances it cannot be said that any error in that respect was committed. Apart from the presumption that the evidence heard justified the statement, or rendered it harmless, the court did not permit the argument, and it was not persisted in by the attorney.
Appellant further insists that the petition fails to state a cause of action, and that is the only question properly presented by this record.
The petition alleges that the defendant, well knowing the location of the line dividing the lands of defendant and plaintiff, wrongfully, unlawfully, without right, and against the will and without the consent of plaintiff, entered upon plaintiff's land and removed therefrom large quantities of coal, which it carried away and converted to its own use, to the value of $25,000, that said acts were willful, wrongful, unlawful, and forcible; and that, in addition thereto, the defendant injured the mining property of plaintiff by removing its underground support and by reckless and careless mining operations thereon.
It is clear that the petition states a good cause of action, and is adequate to support the judgment. The rule prevails in this state that, where one trespasses upon the lands of another and takes his property, he is liable in damages therefor. The measure of damages, if the trespass is intentional, and without claim or color of right made honestly and in good faith, is the market value of the mineral mined, without any allowance for the expense of mining. If the trespass is innocent a more moderate measure is applied, based upon reasonable *233
and customary royalty, or the value of the mineral in place. Jim Thompson Coal Co. v. Dentzell,
The pleadings in this case warranted the judgment, and, no error appearing in the record, the action of the circuit court cannot be disturbed.
Judgment affirmed.