80 N.Y.S. 334 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The plaintiff has recovered a judgment for damages for the wrongful entry upon her lands by the defendant, and for the unlawful raising, removing therefrom and converting to his own use of a large quantity of the earth and soil. The complaint charges that the defendant took 6,000 cubic yards of the value of seventy-five cents per yard. The answer is a general denial. The judgment is for 3,135 yards at twenty cents a yard.
The learned counsel for the appellant claim that the only action maintainable is for injury to the freehold resulting from the trespass and that an action for conversion will not lie. There are few authorities on the subject in this State, but I think the case is within the principle of Hoy v. Smith (49 Barb. 360). That case
In the case at bar no claim is made by the plaintiff of injury to the freehold, and no claim of title is made by the defendant. Whatever earth the latter took from the land in question was used by him in fulfilling a contract he had taken for grading a public street and in the filling of an excavation or hollow in such street at the contract price. The case is, therefore, distinguishable from American Union Tel. Co. v. Middleton (80 N. Y. 408), relied on by the appellant, in that there no actual conversion of the poles took place after they were cut- down and thus severed from the freehold. (P. 411.) That an action for conversion is maintainable under the circumstances of this case is indicated by the case of Deverell v. Bauer (41 App. Div. 53, 55).
A -number of exceptions taken by the appellant to the rulings of the learned referee are assigned as presenting reversible error, but need not be considered in detail inasmuch as a new trial is necessary
There is, of course, nothing in the record to indicate what personal knowledge and experience the referee had on either .question to which the statement quoted refers, and consequently no means of determining whether the judgment is well supported in so far as it is confessedly based thereon. The knowledge and experience of a court, as of a juryman, must, it is true, be applied to the facts of. a case in reaching á determination from the evidence, but the determination when reached must be based solely upon the evidence, however it may be aided by the exercise of that good judgment which knowledge and experience are calculated to ripen and mature. While such knowledge as the referee may have acquired by experience of the value of soil may indeed assist his judgment in determining the truth or falsity of what the witnesses testify to upon that subject, the judgment must rest finally upon the testimony alone, if for no other reason than that the litigants cannot measure the wisdom of his individual transactions, nor point out the extent to which their value may be affected as controlling factors in the controversy by the conditions surrounding them. What was said of a somewhat similar situation in Claflin v. Meyer (75 N. Y. 260) is pertinent and applicable. In reversing a judgment on the ground that a nonsuit should have been granted, the court, per Hand, J., said (p. 266): “ I have so far left out of view a feature of this case which has caused us a good deal of embarrassment. I refer to the inspection of the warehouse and its roof and scuttle by the referees in the presence of counsel, and the statement in their report that their findings are based upon the proofs and £ such view.’ If the intention of the parties was to submit themselves to the decision of the referees absolutely, irrespective of the evidence, these would
In that case it is to be noted that the extraneous “view” upon which the findings of the referees were partly based, was with the consent and in the presence of counsel, and, further, that the court in deciding that a nonsuit should have been granted, could and did exclude from its consideration everything but that which appeared upon the record. In this case, however, the review of the judgment cannot be dissociated from the personal considerations upon which it is in part supported, and which are, therefore, necessarily fatal to its maintenance.
The judgment should be reversed.
Goodrich, P. J., Bartlett and Woodward, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed and new trial granted before another referee, to be appointed at Special Term, costs to abide the event.