84 Vt. 266 | Vt. | 1911
The defendant is charged with having set fires on his land which he negligently left unattended, and suffered to spread upon and injure the plaintiff’s sugar place. There was evidence tending to show that the damage resulted from one or more of several fires, some of which were set by the de
The court submitted a general verdict, and four special inquiries, which were as follows: (1) Did the defendant kindle the fire which spread to plaintiff’s land and did the burning infquestion? (2) If your answer is “No,” then did his agent kindle that fire, and if so, who was it? (3) If your answer is “No,” to the first question and “Yes” to the second, then was the agent authorized by the defendant to kindle it? (4) Which fire, if either, meaning the fire set at the spring, the fire set on the plowed ground piece, the fire set 'on the flat, or the fire set near the road just south of the defendant’s grove, spread to the plaintiff’s land and did the alleged injury? The jury returned a general verdict for the plaintiff, and returned the special inquiries without answers, reporting that they were unable to answer them.
Fire reached the plaintiff’s sugar woods from defendant’s land September twentieth. The fires complained of were set to stumps and old logs in different parts of the defendant’s pasture between August twenty-fourth and September thirteenth. The plowed ground piece, so-called, was a piece of about five acres ¡.which had been marked out for plowing by running a few furrows. The road spoken of was a farm road running through the pasture. The fire at the spring was set by the defendant. Some of the fires on the plowed ground piece were set by the defendant, and some by Clinton WbdeY and Harlow Eastman, boys who were at work for defendant in this pasture cutting brush. The fires on the flat were set by these boys. The fires near the road, just south of the defendant’s grove, were set by Sumner Eastman, an employee of the tenant of defendant’s farm. Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that the fire that damaged him was caused by the fire set by defendant at the spring or by other fires set by the defendant, or by the fires set by the Willey and Eastman boys, or by two or more of these or all combined. Defendant’s evidence tended to show that the fire which damaged the plaintiff came from the fires set by Sumner Eastman near the road just south of the defendant’s grove.
Plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that early in the last
It cannot be said that the inability of the jury to determine whether the fire which damaged the plaintiff was a fire set by the' defendant or one set by his agent was necessarily incon■sistent with the return of a general verdict for the plaintiff; for the jury may have found facts which justified the conclusion that the injury was caused wholly or in part by one or more fires set or authorized by the defendant without being able to determine which, and may have found that the claimed agents had authority for setting all the fires that they did set. But, upon this basis, it would be essential for the jury to find that all the fires held chargeable that were set by persons other than the defendant were set by his authority, and unless the court can be satisfied that this was found the failure to answer the special inquiries will be fatal. All the kindling on the flat was done by the two boys, and all the kindling near defendant’s grove was done by Sumner Eastman, and the plaintiff could not recover on account of either of these without a finding that the setting of the fire was authorized, or a finding that some fire set by the defendant or by his authority combined with such fire to cause the damage. We have seen that the questions
But it does not follow from this holding that the defendant’s motion for a judgment in his favor should have been granted. It is argued that the jury’s inability to answer the special inquiries conclusively shows that the plaintiff failed to establish the facts necessary to entitle him to recover; that the failure to answer them was equivalent to a finding against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant as to each inquiry; and that when a general verdict and special verdicts are in conflict the special verdicts control. The ground on which the previous question was disposed of affords a sufficient answer to this claim.
The court charged that the plaintiff was entitled to recover
One whose trees have suffered through the wrongful act or omission of another is entitled to a fair compensation for his actual loss. The difficulty lies in framing an instruction which will give him his actual loss and nothing more. No specific instruction can be formulated that will be of general application. The elements of damage vary with the kind, condition, location and use of the trees. The cases deal with young and growing trees, and trees which have reached their maturity; trees valuable only for wood and timber, and trees mainly or solely valuable for their annual product; trees which from their detached location or the extent of the wooded tract are valuable merely as woodland growth, and trees which are needed to give to a farm its proper proportion of woodland; trees which have no direct commercial value, but which add to the market value of a place and the comfort of its owner by furnishing shade and ornamentation. The value of a young or fruit-bearing tree depends upon its connection with the soil, while the value of a fully grown forest tree is realized only by severing it from the soil. In the destruction of trees by fire there may be an injury to the soil as well as a loss of wood or timber.
The sugar maple is a source of income while standing, and is valuable for wood or timber when severed from the soil. It thus combines the advantages of the forest tree and the
In view of the nature of the case, we think the charge of the court as before stated was correct. It may be, however,
Under the rule adopted it was competent for the plaintiff to testify that the sugar was the principal income of his farm, and give an estimate of the damage to the farm; and also to show by a witness familiar with the sugar place the characteristics of the part left uninjured.
After the plaintiff had testified as above stated, and given the amount received from the sugar place, and described the farm as very stony and rough, he was inquired of by the defendant as to the location and acreage of the farm, the proportion under cultivation, the quantity of hay cut and amount of stock kept, and on inquiry gave an estimate of the income of the farm exclusive of the sugar place but said that he could not give this positively without his figures. On being recalled by his counsel he was permitted to give the amounts received from the cows and the sales of calves and pigs, and the amounts paid out for feed and help in haying. After a cross-examination like that above summarized the plaintiff was entitled to support his direct testimony by a production of these figures.
The defendant claims that the declaration is not sufficient to justify a recovery in accordance with the charge. The only allegation of damage is that the fire “spread upon said land of the plaintiff, and consumed and wholly destroyed a large portion of a very valuable sugar place thereon, and wholly destroyed a large amount of growing trees on said farm, and damaged a large area of the soil on said farm.” There was nothing in the objections to evidence, the discussions regarding them, the requests to charge, or the exceptions to the charge, that could have suggested to the trial court the claim now made. So the question is not before us; and we do not feel called upon to give any intimation regarding it, for the plaintiff can easily protect himself from all uncertainties by amending the declaration in this respect.
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
The matter of costs makes it necessary to dispose of the petition for a new trial. We think the case discloses evidence which would have an important bearing upon the main issue on a retrial, and certainly would be likely materially to change the result as regards the amount of the damage sustained. The desired proof was something which the petitioner believed to exist, and knew where to look for, but was unable to get at. He seasonably moved for a continuance which would enable him to procure it, but was required to go to trial without it. He now produces evidence of conditions which he was then unable to establish. This evidence is newly discovered within the spirit' of the rule, if not within the letter of it. •
It appears that the writ was served December third, that counsel was employed the next day, and that on the day following there came a heavy fall of snow which remained on the ground until after the term at which the case was tried. The plaintiff had prepared for the suit by having a plan made and the premises examined by persons who were afterwards called as witnesses. The petitioner knew of the plaintiff’s claim, but due diligence did not require that he incur the expense of preparation until suit was commenced. After the snow fell no adequate examination was possible.
The petition characterizes the refusal of the court to grant a continuance as an abuse of its discretion, and makes this the basis of the application; but the substance of the complaint is the petitioner’s inability to have certain evidence which a continuance would enable him to procure; and the question has been argued as one of newly discovered evidence. The petitionee contends that the new evidence is merely corroborative of that given on the trial by the petitioner in describing an examination he made soon after the fire, and that it does not appear but that the same facts might have been shown by some of
Petition sustained with costs.