22 Ga. 353 | Ga. | 1857
By the Court.
delivering the opinion.
What was the measure of the damages in this case ? The value of the trees at the time when they were felled, and at the place where they were felled. This we think was the measure of the damages. Martin vs. Porter, 5. Mees. &
The Court below told'the jury, that their verdict could .not exceed the value of-the land with the treesstanding.on.it That would depend .upon whether the trees as they lay felled, ..were worth no more than the land with the trees standing on ..it; that is, upon the cost of felling the trees. The,charge may possibly have been true, but it.does-not state the-.rule.
Was the verdict contrary to the evidence ?
Was there any evidence to show, that the amount, of the .verdict was the value of the trees, as they lay felled?
We. think not. There was evidence showing that the trees were cut from four acres, and a half of -land, and thafthe ..land,, with the trees standing upon it; was worth ten dollars -an-acre. The amount of the verdict was, Hi 54. This-evidence, then, was not calculated to show, that the trees as they lay felled, were worth the amount of the verdict.
There was also evidence showing, that the number of trees cut, was about one hundred and fifty; that the trees were each made into from five to twenty cross-ties; and that each cross-tie was worth from twenty-five to thirty-one and one quarter cents; and that the laps of the trees were cut up into wood, and that the lap of each tree would make a cord of wood, worth one dollar and a quarter. But there was no evidence showing what it cost to make a cross-tie, or what it cost to cut up the laps into wood. Therefore there was no evidence showing how much had to be deducted from the value of the trees in their new form of cross-ties,-and wood, to get at the value of the trees, in their old form, viz: form they ha'd as they lay felled on the ground. Consequently, there was no evidence showing, that first so much had to .be deducted, as would leave Hi54, the amount of the verdiet.'
The verdict then, was not supported by the evidence. We may say that much of it.
The declaration was for carrying, away trees,, not cross-
The judgment granting the new trial, will not be disturbed.
It may not be amiss to say, that in finding what was the value of the trees, as they lay on the ground, the fitness of the trees for cross-ties or for fire wood, or for any other useful purpose, as Avell as the convenience of their situation to a market, ought to be taken into consideration. And showing the value of that into which the trees might be converted, and the cost of the process of conversion, might be one way of arriving at the value of the trees.
Judgment affirmed.
Judge Lumpkin was absent during this Term of the Court, on account of indisposition.