Appellant Russell was the owner of lands lying to the west and to the south of property owned by appellees. Thus, there were two common boundary lines. In 1971 and 1972, appellant engaged James Magsby, Morris Thompson and Tiny Ford to cut timber on his land. Appellees filed this action against appellant, International Paper Company, Southern Pulpwood Company, Arkansas Pulpwood Company, Morris Thompson and James Magsby in July, 1974. They alleged that Thompson, as employee and agent of Southern Pulpwood Company and International Paper Company and Magsby, as employee and agent of Arkansas Pulpwood Company and International Paper Company, had unlawfully cut and removed timber from the lands of appellees (hereafter called the Pryor land) at the direction and request of appellant Russell. It was alleged that the defendants wilfully trespassed and cut and removed the timber in violation of Ark. Stat. Ann. § 50-105 (Repl. 1971), and that appellees were entitled to treble the value of the timber cut. Appellees also alleged that they were entitled to double the amount of the timber cut and that the Pryor land had been permanently damaged to the extent of $50 per acre on 46 acres from which the timber was cut. The prayer sought recovery of treble damages under Ark. Stat. Ann. § 50-105 or, alternatively, double the value of the timber cut, or in the alternative, for the value of the timber cut as damages for its conversion and $2,300 for permanent damage to the land. Tiny Ford was added as a party defendant in June, 1975. Trial was had on February 5, 1976.
After the evidence had been presented and the jury had been instructed, the jury returned its verdict by answering interrogatories submitted to it. Its answers, so far as they are material, follow:
INTERROGATORY NO. 1
“Do you find, from a preponderance of the evidence, that Morris Thompson cut and removed from the Pryor land without the approval or knowledge of the Pryors?
Answer “Yes” or “No” Tes
INTERROGATORY NO. 2
If your answer to Interrogatory No. 1 is “Yes” then answer this question:
Do you find, from a preponderance of the evidence, that the cutting and removal of the Pryor timber by Morris Thompson was done at the direction and advice of George Russell?
Answer “Yes” or “No” Tes
INTERROGATORY NO. 3
If your answer to Interrogatory No. 2 is “Yes” then answer this question:
Do you find, from a preponderance of the evidence, that George Russell acted with the intention of depriving the Pryors of the value of the timber cut and removed from their land?
Answer “Yes” or “No” Tes
INTERROGATORY NO. 4
Do you find, from a preponderance of the evidence, that Tiny Ford cut and removed timber from the Pryor land without the approval or knowledge of the Pryors?
Answer “Yes” or “No” Tes
INTERROGATORY NO. 5
If your answer to Interrogatory No. 4 is “Yes” then answer this question:
Do you find, from a preponderance of the evidence, that the cutting and removal of the Pryor timber by Tiny Ford was done at the direction and advice of George Russell?
Answer “Yes” or “No” No
(Interrogatory No. 6 was to be answered only if No. 5 was answered “Yes.”)
INTERROGATORY NO. 7
If you have answered either Interrogatory No. 1 or Interrogatory No. 4 “Yes” then answer this question:
What do you find, from a preponderance of the evidence, to be the value of the timber as saw logs at the time it was cut and removed from the Pryor land?
$4,400.00
In spite of the jury verdict, the trial court entered judgment for $4,400 against George Russell, Morris Thompson and Tiny Ford, jointly and severally, and entered judgment against Russell in the additional sum of $8,800.
Russell filed a motion for new trial on the ground that the answers to the interrogatories submitted to the jury were inconsistent. The trial judge refused to grant a new trial, but entered its judgment in spite of the jury verdict for the reasons set out in its judgment, i.e.,:
“After the jury was discharged, the Defendant, George Russell, moved for an order granting a new trial on the grounds that the answers to interrogatories are inconsistent with each other. Said Motion for a New Trial is hereby overruled because the Court finds that Interrogatories No. 5 and 6 should not have been submitted to the jury since the evidence was without dispute that Morris Thompson showed Tiny Ford where to cut and that as a matter of law, the jury’s answers to Interrogatories No. 5 and 6 would have to be the same as the answers to Interrogatories No. 2 and 3 and they are by the Court held to be the same.”
Appellant admits that the court may have been correct in stating that Morris Thompson showed Tiny Ford where to cut, but says that the jury could and did find that the Pryor timber cut by Ford was not done at the direction or advice of appellant Russell. He refers to his own testimony in which he had stated that he had shown his property lines to Morris Thompson, James Thompson and Tiny Ford. He had testified that he showed them all the boundary lines between him and the Pryors “not just once” but several times. He said that he never took them across the Pryor land and claimed it as his land, that he did not tell them to cut across the Pryor land over to Norwood’s west line (which was the Pryor east line), and that he had showed them his line and told them to stop there. James Magsby, a man employed by appellant to cut timber at approximately the same time as Thompson and Ford, testified that appellant had shown him the true boundaries and told him not to cut across that line.
Appellant says that this testimony was clearly a sufficient basis for the jury’s finding that Ford did not cut timber from the Pryor land at his direction and advice. Appellant claims that, in effect, the court’s action amounted to a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and points out that when such a judgment is rendered, the testimony must be undisputed so that the court might declare as a matter of law, that the party in whose favor the judgment was entered was entitled to it, citing Satterfield v. Rebsamen Ford, Inc.,
It does seem that there was evidence from which the jury could find that Ford did not cut the timber on the Pryor land on the advice or direction of Russell if Russell showed Thompson and Ford the true lines, or if he showed Thompson the true lines and Thompson showed Ford the wrong boundary. Appellees say that it is clear from the evidence that a jury question was presented as to whether appellant instructed either Thompson or Ford to cut on the property owned by the Pryors and that the jury could easily have found that both Thompson and Ford cut timber from the Pryor property but that only Thompson did so at the direction and advice of George Russell. It also appears certain, as appellees say, that it is clear that the jury found that Russell had shown Thompson incorrect lines which included the Pryor land from which he and Ford had cut timber. Ford testified that Russell told him that he had shown thé location of the lines to Morris Thompson and his brother.
Appellees argue that the fact that the jury found that Thompson acted at the direction and advice of Russell, and that Ford did not, is really of no consequence because the jury found both Thompson and Ford cut and removed timber from the Pryor land without the approval or knowledge of the Pryors and that Russell acted with the intention of depriving the Pryors of the value of the timber cut and removed from their land. It is appellees’ theory that these findings, along with the finding that Thompson acted on Russell’s advice made all three joint tortfeasors and as such, jointly and severally liable to the Pryors, because they acted concurrently, even though some of them may have acted independently. For this reason, appellees say that it is immaterial that the court ruled that Interrogatories 5 and 6 should not have been submitted because the answers to the interrogatories are not inconsistent with a determination that Thompson, Ford and Russell were joint tortfeasors and, therefore, Russell would be liable for the acts of both Thompson and Ford upon the finding that either was acting at the direction and advice of Russell. Appellant, in turn, concedes that appellant could be held jointly and severally liable with Thompson and Ford for actual damages, but not punitive damages.
This is not a situation where the trial court amended a verdict incorrectly expressed under a mistake of law, in order to conform it to the manifest intention of the jury, such as we had in Traylor v. Huntsman,
We cannot agree that the verdict should have been permitted to stand on the basis that the answers are not inconsistent, when all the testimony of each witness is reviewed. In doing this, we also consider that the witnesses were all parties, whose testimony is not to be taken as uncontradicted. Raiborn v. Raiborn,
This issue then turns upon the question whether the inconsistent answers affected the result. The trial judge did not think so, but we disagree, although we feel that it is the duty of the trial judge to harmonize apparent inconsistencies in arriving at a judgment, if possible to do so. See Woodruff v. Webb,
The real question here is whether, in spite of the answer given to Interrogatory No. 5, the judgment entered was proper. West v. Matteson-Southwest Co.,
Since the jury verdict cannot be reconciled and since the verdict as to damages is not divisible, the trial court erred in denying the motion for new trial.
Appellant also contends that the court erred in refusing to submit interrogatories and an instruction requested by appellant. We cannot agree that the trial court erred in refusing the interrogatories or the instruction requested by appellant. The interrogatories and instruction would have left the question whether double damages or treble damages were to be recovered from Russell, if the jury held against appellant on the question of liability, without any guidelines whatever. It seems to be the position of appellant that the matter lies simply in the untrammeled discretion of the jury. We do not agree with this position. The distinction is a tenuous one, is rather difficult to describe, and is productive of insuperable confusion.
It is true, as pointed out in Stair v. Jones,
The trial court awarded treble damages against Russell, on the basis that Thompson (and Ford by reliance on Thompson) acted on the advice and direction of Russell and that Russell acted with the intention of depriving the Pryors of the value of the timber cut and removed from their land in answer to Interrogatories No. 2 and No. 3. The interrogatory submitted by the court was appropriate to Ark. Stat. Ann. § 54-203 which is based upon, and a part of, statutes pertaining to larceny of trees, timber, etc., i.e., §§ 41-4211 — 41-4225 (Repl. 1964).
But, according to one of our decisions interpreting § 50-101 in the light of previous decisions, we held that treble damages may only be invoked where one cuts timber with the intention of depriving the true owner of the value thereof. Callaway v. Perdue,
Perhaps the best solution to the problem, when interrogatories are to be used, is to phrase the inquiry in the specific language of the two statutes as interpreted by this court separately and to instruct the jury to answer only that interrogatory which seems to them to be most applicable to the evidence.
We should mention one other matter in connection with this case. When the case was submitted, we found an apparent non-fiagrant violation of Rule 9. We noted that a motion for new trial was not abstracted and that thejudgment itself was not abstracted. Since the record has been reabstracted, it is clear that the deficiency was not flagrant. It is now obvious that the motion for new trial was oral and the making of the motion and the grounds alleged were stated in thejudgment and that the pertinent part of thejudgment was quoted verbatim in appellant’s original brief. This information was included in the quoted portion of thejudgment. The assertions in appellant’s original brief relating to the motion for new trial and the court’s judgment were conceded by appellees in their brief, without any question whatever. Thus, the situation was unlike that in Manes v. M.O.V.E. Inc.,
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded for a new trial.
We agree.
Notes
These sections have now been repealed. Act 928 of 1975, § 3.
