28 Minn. 299 | Minn. | 1881
Action for trespass upon real estate constituting a farm, by entering upon and constructing a railroad across it, without having secured the right to do so by ascertaining and paying
The evidence established the fact that, in addition to the excavations and embankments made by defendants on the land, they laid the track — that is, the ties and rails — across it. Defendants proved the value of the ties and rails, and insisted that, because by their being attached to the soil they became the property of the plaintiff, and he might take them up and sell them, therefore their value should be deducted from the injury done to the land by the trespass. The court below declined to give to the jury defendants’ request containing that proposition, and instructed, in substance, that the ties and rails had become part of the realty, and the jury, if satisfied that they increased the value of the farm, should consider that fact in determining the damages; but if they were satisfied that the farm was in no way benefited or enhanced in value by the ties and rails, then no deduction should be made on account of them.
We regard the charge of the court as conveying the proper rule applicable to the case. The proper measure of damages was the injury done to the farm — the depreciation in its value as a farm — by the trespass; and there is no rule of law by which, where the amount of such injury is ascertained, the trespasser may be allowed, by way of recoupment or counterclaim, any conjectural benefit, not accruing to the farm itself, and thus modifying the extent of the injury to it,
Order affirmed.