200 F. 332 | N.D. Fla. | 1912
Gentlemen of the Jury; This is an action of trover, instituted by the government against J. J. McCaskili and R. E. E. McCaskili for the conversion to their own use of 746 cypress logs, which the United States alleges were taken from the S. % of lot 9, in section 25. and the N. E- % and the S. % of lot 1 and lots 4, 5, and 6, in section 36, township 3 N., range 17 W. The plaintiff is suing the defendants for the value of said logs, which it claims were cut and removed from the lands described during the years 1898, 1899, and 1900.
The defendants, the TVl cCaskills, have interposed the plea of not guilty, which in effect' is a fiat denial that they cut or removed any logs from the alleged descriptions, lands of the United States, or authorized or consented for any one else to do so for them; and this raises the issue which you are to determine from the evidence in the case.
The court instructs you that the title to the land described in the declaration was in the United States, and the timber was government property, during the years 1898, 1899, and 1900; so that leaves the only question for you to determine, is whether the defendants, during the years named, cut or caused to be cut and removed from the lands of the government the logs alleged to have been taken therefrom, or any portion or number of them.
The burden of proof is on the government to show by a preponderance of the evidence that the defendants cut or caused to be cut, or were responsible for the cutting and removing of, the alleged logs, or any of them. So your first inquiry will be directed to the question of whether the McCaskills cut or caused to be cut and removed any logs from the lands of the United States described in the dec
If you find from the evidence that the defendants’ agents cut and removed from the lands of the United States any of the cypress logs claimed, but that the defendants did not know that the logs were cut from the lands of the United States, and had not authorized or acquiesced in such cutting by Vaughn, the Russians, or Ward, then your verdict should be for the United States for such number of logs as the evidence shows were taken from the land, and such, value as the evidence shows was their value at the place of the conversion ; and to this valuation you may add interest, if you see fit, from the time of the cutting and removing.
If you find from the evidence that the defendants did not cause to be cut and removed from the government lands any logs as alleged, then your verdict should be for the defendants.
The jury is the sole and exclusive judge of the credibility of the witnesses and the weight to be attached to their testimony. You have seen the witnesses as they appeared on the stand, and have heard them testify, and it is your province, in looking into the faces of the witnesses testifying, to determine, from what they have said, what interest, if any, they may have in the suit, or bias or animus they may have shown in giving testimony before you, and credit as you may deem it to be worthy of credit.
You should weigh the evidence carefully, and consider it all tog-ether. You should not pick out any particular fact in evidence, or
(Orally:) However, if you find from the evidence that the defendants were innocent trespassers under the instructions I have given you, then you will find the measure of damages to which the United States is entitled to be the value of the logs on the ground as they were cut and severed from the soil; no deduction being allowed for the expense of deadening, cutting, or removing of said logs or sawing them.