30 Wis. 570 | Wis. | 1872
This case has been before this court at a previous term, and will be found reported in the 24 Wis., 299. The facts as developed on the second trial, were substantially the same as are the first. Among other things, the court charged, in respect to the rule of damages, as follows : “ When a person cuts logs upon the land of another, without a lawful right so to do, but in good faith, believing that he has the right to, he is entitled to have deducted from the value of the property replevied, such cost and expense and labor as he has bestowed upon the property to get it into its enhanced value. But on the other hand, if knowingly and wilfully, without color or claim of right, he cuts logs upon the land of another,
The sole question in the case arises upon the last paragraph of this charge, which was excepted to on the trial. The jury found under this charge that 58 M. feet of the logs were cut by the defendants in good faith by mistake, and that a little over 59 M. feet were cut wilfully -and not by mistake; and the plaintiff had judgment for the improved value of the property on that quantity.
The counsel for the defendant contends that, so’ far as the measure of damages is concerned, it is quite immaterial whether the logs were cut intentionally or through mistake — - that the damages given in law as compensation for an injury should be precisely commensurate with the injury, neither more nor less; and that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover the value of the property in its improved state, under the circumstances of this case. He concedes that, if there w-as anything tending to show that the. trespass was wanton or malicious — -committed under circumstances of insult or aggravation, then, upon the authorities, exemplary damages might be' allowed in the discretion of the jury, which might exceed or fall below the value of the property enhanced by the labor of the defendants. But he claims that when a person, though intentionally, cuts pine logs upon the wild, unoccupied land of another, to say, as a matter of right, the owner shall recover the enhanced value of the property manufactured into lumber, or into the most expensive furniture, is a rule contrary to the principles of natural justice, and not in accordance with the doctrine of the common law.
We are inclined to adopt this view of the matter, although we are well aware that by so doing we lay down a rule in conflict with some adjudications, which may be found. But it seems to us that, if the owner is entirely indemnified for the injury he has sustained, it is quite immaterial whether the logs were cut by mistake or intentionally, unless in the latter case
This was the great question discussed in the celebrated case of Silsbury v. McCoon, reported in 6 Hill, 425, 4 Denio, 332, and 3 N. Y., 379. The question in that case was, whether, if one wrongfully took another’s grain and manufactured it into whisky, the property was changed by the process of manufacture into a different species of property, so that it could not be retaken by the former owner in its changed or improved condition. The case was argued by the most eminent counsel— twice in the court of appeals — and underwent a most thorough examination by the judges, who were divided in opinion, both in the supreme court and the court of last resort. Bronson, Ch. J., who delivered the prevailing opinion when the cause was before the supreme court the second time, and also delivered a
By the Court — Ordered accordingly.