50 Wash. 456 | Wash. | 1908
This case was before this court on a former appeal where a statement of the issues will be found. Storseth v. Folsom, 45 Wash. 374, 88 Pac. 632.
The substance of the allegations of the complaint is that the plaintiff was the owner of a certain forty-acre tract of timber land, in Kitsap county, and was engaged in the logging business; that the defendant falsely and fraudulently represented that he was the owner of a certain fractional
On the former trial, an objection to the introduction of testimony under the complaint was sustained, and a judgment of nonsuit entered. That judgment was reversed on appeal to this court. Storseth v. Folsom, supra. On the trial from which the present appeal is taken, a nonsuit was again granted at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony, and the plaintiff has again appealed.
The chief contention of the appellant is that the court on the second trial disregarded the rulings of this court on the former appeal. The record does not sustain this contention. The appellant seems to contend that on the former appeal this court not only ruled that the complaint stated a cause of action in his favor, but that he was entitled to recover the several items of damage therein claimed. From the foregoing statement of the case, it will appear that the appellant
The testimony of the appellant is in a measure unintelligible, as he often refers to points and places such as “here” and “there,” while the record does not disclose the points or places referred to; but a reference to the plat offered in evidence by the appellant shows that the first roads and their branches, constructed by him over lot 12 and the forty-acre tract owned by him, were about two hundred and fifty rods in length, assuming that the plat is drawn according to scale. Of these roads and branches, approximately fifty rods were constructed on the twelve-acre lot and two hundred rods on the land owned by the appellant himself. After the first roads were obstructed on the twelve-acre lot, the appellant constructed a second system of roads over his own land, and around the north end of the twelve-acre lot. These second roads intersected the first roads at a point on the appellant’s land about fifty rods from Hood’s Canal. The only obstructions placed on the first system of roads was on the twelve-acre lot, and from this it becomes apparent that the greater portion of the roads first constructed by the appellant was on his own land, was not obstructed by the respondent, and the value and utility of the roads were in no manner impaired or lessened by any act of the respondent. Notwithstanding this fact, the only evidence of damage offered by the appellant was the entire cost of constructing the old
There is no error in the record, and the judgment is affirmed.
Hadley, C. J., Fullerton, Mount, Root, and Crow, JJ., concur.