40 Conn. 318 | Conn. | 1873
In 1868 the plaintiff conveyed to the defendant a small tract of land; and this action of trespass grows out of a dispute as to its northern boundary line. The lands of the parties are adjacent to each other, the plaintiff owning on the north, the defendant on the south.
Soon after this conveyance was made, the defendant put up a slight pole fence, some feet north of a certain ash tree, claimed by the plaintiff to be in the north line of the lot conveyed; and thus the locus m quo was enclosed with the defendant’s other land. The plaintiff subsequently took down these poles, regained possession as owner, and ploughed up the locus in quo with his other lands adjoining it on the north. The defendant in a few days replaced the poles, and the plaintiff soon after took them down again and sowed the piece which he had ploughed with rye. In a few days thereafter the defendant replaced the poles on the rye, in the same place as before, where they remained when this suit was brought.
The evidence offered by the parties is stated at some length, and though this might be necessary in states -where the evidence is reported and a new trial granted if the charge is not in accordance with the evidence, no useful purpose is accomplished by it here, as our practice is different. A new trial cannot be granted' unless the rulings and decisions of the court below, on matters of law, are found to be incorrect or erroneous.
The defendant claimed “ that the plaintiff was not in possession of the locus in quo at the time the alleged trespasses were claimed to have been committed, and requested the court so to charge the jury, and that the question of fact -was one for them to determine; and that the plaintiff, in order to maintain his suit, must have been in possession of the locus
The court charged the jury that “ in this species of action the gist of the action is the injury done to the plaintiff’s possession, though the right of property, the title, may also come in question, as in the case at bar it had been, as matter of fact, the chief point in dispute; that under the general issue the plaintiff must prove that the property was in his possession at the time of the injury, and this rightfully as against the defendant; that the injury was committed with force; that a legal title in the plaintiff, without such pos- ■ session, was not sufficient; and that if the plaintiff had been disseized or dispossessed, at the time of the alleged trespasses, he could not maintain this action.” The court further charged “ that if the jury found that the plaintiff had title to the land in question at the time of the alleged trespasses, his having been previously disseized and dispossessed of it by the defendant would not prevent a recovery, provided he had previously to such acts of trespass regained and retaken possession, so that he was in actual possession at the time said acts of trespass were committed.”
This instruction affords, we think, no ground of complaint to this defendant. At all events we do not hesitate to give it our sanction, believing it to be sound law and appropriate to the occasion. • ■
We deem it unnecessary to spend much time upon the other legal points raised' on this motion. The case really turned on the question of possession, and the law regarding that was correctly laid down as we have seen.
The defendant’s claim, that all parts of the description of the land .conveyed in the plaintiff’s deed to the defendant, should be given effect to,- if possible, was correct, and was substantially complied with, for the jury were told that “ every expression in the deed was to be given its just weight.”
The court declined, and very properly, to charge, "as matter of law, that the description in the deed would make a three-sided, or four-sided lot, or one of any other form; that question belonged to the jury as a matter of fact.
The claim of the defendant as to the boundaries of said tract of land, and how their location was to ho determined, was, it seems, assented to by the court, and the charge made accordingly.
The final claim of the defendant, that if he was liable at all in this action, he was, under the circumstances as claimed by him, liable only to nominal damages, we regard as untenable. The plaintiff, if entitled to recover, was entitled to recover at least the damages ho had actually sustained; less than such au amount would not be reasonable damages ; and so the instruction prayed for on that point was properly refused.
We see no grounds for a new trial, and one is therefore not advised.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.