49 S.E. 946 | N.C. | 1905
Lead Opinion
PLAINTIFF'S APPEAL. DEFENDANT'S APPEAL. After stating the case: When this case was before us at a former term, the learned justice who wrote the opinion of the Court assumed in the course of the argument that the first issue, as prepared at the time of the agreement of counsel, embraced all the land described in the complaint and called for a finding of the jury as to whether the plaintiff was the owner of all, and not merely the owner of a part thereof, and that, afterwards, the issue was so divided as to require the jury to determine, not only whether the plaintiff owned all the land, but, if it did not, whether it owned any part thereof. And so the Court thought at the time. It now appears that no change was ever made in the first issue. It is in precisely the same language now as it was when (435) the agreement was made. The erroneous assumption of the Court led to the conclusion that the agreement of the counsel had been annulled, as the change in the form and substance of the issue rendered the contingency upon which the admission was to operate impossible. *323 The fact is, that as the agreement and the first issue were drawn, the parties intended, as the law construes their agreement, that if the jury answered "Yes" to the first issue, that is, if they found that the plaintiff was the owner of the land or any part thereof, the defendant had trespassed upon the land described in the complaint, and in that event there should be a reference to assess the damages. The Court was led into a misapprehension of the true state of the issues, we suppose, by reason of the fact that the second issue required the jury to find what part of the land was owned by the plaintiff, if it owned not all, but only a part thereof. But that was one of the issues when the first issue was prepared and when the agreement was drawn, and was intended only to complete and perfect the finding under the first issue, if the jury answered that the plaintiff was the owner only as to a part of the land. It now appears most clearly that the first issue was never so drawn as to be confined to all the land and require a response only as to the entire tract, but has remained intact from the beginning to this time and required the jury to find whether the plaintiff was the owner of the land or any part thereof. The jury answered that issue "Yes," and therefore the agreement between the parties became operative, but, as we will presently see, not in its entirety.
The defendant contends that we should not enforce the agreement, as the parties contemplated, at the time, that the question of trespass should be tried under the first issue, or, in other words, should be considered as of the substance of that issue and a material part of it. We cannot so hold. We are not permitted to introduce any new provision into the agreement of the parties without the consent of both, nor can we embody in the issue something that in law constitutes no part of (436) it, without a like consent of the parties. We cannot make a contract for the parties, but only construe it as they have themselves made it. Their words must be given their natural and ordinary meaning, and, in this case, the issue referred to in the agreement must be interpreted according to its plain legal import. How an issue as to ownership can involve the question of a trespass on the land we are unable to conceive. If the plaintiff is the owner of the land, he has the constructive possession of it, which will support an action of trespass to recover damages for an unlawful invasion of his right; but this does not include the idea that the defendant has made an unlawful entry on the land. Therefore, it follows that the question of trespass was not germane to the first issue, and we cannot consider it in passing upon the agreement of the parties. The fact, if conclusively established, that the parties actually intended to try that question under the first issue would not help the defendant. It is not the understanding, but the agreement, of the parties that controls, *324
unless that understanding is in some way expressed in the agreement. Even if the defendant had clearly shown that it so understood the agreement, it will not do, as the court proceeds, not upon the understanding of one of the parties, but upon the agreement of both. No principle is better settled. Brunhild v. Freeman,
While we are compelled to enforce the agreement, we do not concur with the plaintiff's counsel in his view as to its scope and extent. Parties undoubtedly have the right to make agreements and admissions in the course of judicial proceedings, especially when they are solemnly made and entered into and are committed to writing, and when, too, they bear directly upon the matters involved in the suit. Such agreements and admissions are of frequent occurrence and of great value, as they dispense with proof and save time in the trial of causes. The courts recognize and enforce them as substitutes for legal proof, and there is no good reason why they should not. "Admissions of attorneys bind their clients in all matters relating to the progress and trial of the cause, and are, in general, conclusive." 1 Greenleaf Ev., 186. "Unless a clear case of mistake is made out, entitling the party to relief, he is held to the admission, which the court will proceed to act upon, (439) not as the truth in the abstract, but as a formula for the solution of the particular problem before it, namely, the case in judgment, without injury to the general administration of justice." Ibid., 206. Wharton Ev., 1184, 1185, 1186. While this is so, the court will not extend the operation of the agreement beyond the limits set by the parties or by the law.
The agreement in this case contains two branches. The first is an admission of fact, to wit, that defendant had trespassed; the second is a stipulation to refer the question of damages. The parties had the right to make the admission, but did they have the right to agree to the reference without the assent of the court thereto? By the Code, sec. 416, it is provided that trial by jury may be waived by the parties to an issue of fact in actions on contract, and, with the assent of the court, in other actions. This section appears under the chapter entitled "Trial by the *326
Court," and that chapter further provides for the trial of the issue by the court when a jury trial is waived. Section 398 provides that an issue of fact must be tried by a jury unless a trial by jury is waived under section 416, or a reference is ordered. Section 420 provides that all or any of the issues, whether of fact of law, or both, "may be referred" upon the written consent of the parties, except in actions to annual a marriage, or for divorce and separation. This section is in the chapter entitled "Trial by Referees." The Constitution, Art. IV, sec. 13, provides, "that in all issues of fact joined in any court the parties may waive the right to have the same determined by a jury, in which case the finding of the judge upon the facts shall have the force and effect of a verdict of the jury." We do not think it was intended by this provision that the waiver should operate proprio vigore, and without the assent of the court, to dispense with a trial by jury. The Constitution confirmed and guaranteed the ancient right of trial by a jury, and section 13 of Article IV was (440) intended merely to permit that right to be waived and to substitute the findings of the judge for the verdict of the jury, with all the force and conclusiveness of the latter. To extend its effect and meaning so as to take away the power and jurisdiction of the court to control its own proceedings as it had theretofore been accustomed to do, is a construction not required by the exigencies of the case. What is saidarguendo in Stevenson v. Felton,
In Wittenberg v. Onsgard,
Having reached the conclusion that the court had the power to submit the third issue, notwithstanding the agreement of counsel, it only remains to be considered, what effect that issue and the response of the jury thereto have upon the result. The agreement admitted the fact of a trespass, and to this extent it is valid and effective, and the court could not in any way disregard it. The issue directs the jury to inquire, not only whether the defendant had cut any timber on the land described in the complaint, inside the Weeks and Valentine grant, which was the particular trespass alleged, but whether the defendant had committed any other acts of trespass. The finding of the jury, so far as it is (443) responsive to the last branch of the issue, is in direct conflict with the agreement of the parties as to the technical trespass, and must be disregarded; but the finding that there had been no substantial trespass upon the land is not at variance with any valid stipulation of that agreement, and it must stand and receive from us its proper weight in the determination of the case. The agreement ascertains only that there has been a trespass, that is, a technical violation of the plaintiff's right or a simple invasion of his possession. Nothing else appearing, this would entitle plaintiff to nominal damages only, and, as the finding of the jury excludes the existence of actual damages, the recovery must be confined to that compensation which the law gives for the technical wrong, or, in other words, to nominal damages. Chaffin v. Mfg. Co.,
We do not agree with counsel in the contention that the jury have found by their answer to the first issue that plaintiff is the owner of the land *329 on which the timber was cut. Defendant says in its answer that they have cut no timber on the land described in the complaint, and the jury have so found. The plaintiff must have shown, even if there had been a reference, that the cutting of timber was done on its land, (444) as described in the complaint, in order to recover actual damages. The agreement goes no further than to admit a technical trespass. There may have been such a trespass on the lands described in the complaint, and yet not a tree have been cut or other substantial injury done on the land. Because the defendant is admitted to have trespassed upon the lands described in the complaint, it does not follow, therefore, that those are the same lands upon which defendant cut the timber. Indeed, the verdict would seem to show that no trespass at all was committed; but we are bound by the admission to hold that there was a trespass, though there was none in fact, or at least a technical, though not a substantial trespass. Harrisv. Sneeden, supra.
The former decision is modified in accordance with this opinion and judgment will be entered in the court below in favor of the plaintiff for a penny and the costs. As there was, in contemplation of law, substantial error in the judgment of the lower court, to which exception was duly taken, plaintiff is also entitled to costs in this Court, although it does not recover more than nominal damages.
Petition allowed.
DEFENDANT'S APPEAL.
Addendum
The defendant has also asked us to rehear the decision in this appeal, though no separate petition has been filed, as should have been done. From an examination of the record and the former opinion, it appears that two points only were made and considered by the Court, namely: (1) Is chapter 243, Laws 1889, amending section 2522 of The Code, constitutional? This involved the question whether the Legislature could by said act declare a forfeiture of land to the State, and vest title to the same in the board of education, for failure to list and pay the taxes properly assessable against it, without provision for some judicial inquiry before condemnation of forfeiture. We decided (445) then,
We further decided that it was error to include in the judgment a declaration, although pursuing the language of the verdict upon the first and second issues, to the effect that the plaintiff is the owner of the land inside the Weeks and Valentine patent, not including any part of the land described in the Gregory and Burgess grants, because this is not an action for the recovery of real property (ejectment), but solely for the recovery of damages for an unlawful entry upon the land described in the complaint (trespass). The issue as framed was not appropriate to an action of trespass, which should be substantially, Did defendant trespass upon the land of the plaintiff, as alleged in the complaint? and this, coupled with an issue as to the damages, is quite sufficient to present the matter in dispute. Proof of title may be competent under the first of those issues, but an inquiry as to the title is no part of the issue itself.
The form of the issue, though, worked no harm to the plaintiff, as the answer of the jury merely ascertained that, being the owner, the plaintiff was entitled constructively to the possession, which will support trespass for an injury to the close. But the fact so found by the jury was not proper to be stated in the judgment, and it was ordered by this Court to be stricken out. We do not now see any error in this ruling. The (446) plaintiff's recovery must be limited to nominal damages for the admitted technical trespass and the costs, as we have held in the plaintiff's appeal, and this is all that should be stated in the judgment.
There is no other ruling of the court below, as far as appears in the defendant's appeal, which prejudiced the defendant, or to which it is entitled to take exception. This dismisses his petition.
Petition dismissed.