54 N.C. 21 | N.C. | 1853
The case is stated in the opinion of the Court then delivered, and on the allowance of the exception to the report of the Master, the report was set aside, and the cause was referred back to the Master to state the account between the parties, with instructions to proceed upon the principle, "that the defendants are to be charged with the value of the timber while growing, as a rent of the timber."
In pursuance of the reference, a report was made to December Term, 1853, stating the balance due the plaintiffs, and concluding as follows: "These accounts have been made upon the principle that the defendants were chargeable only with the value of the timber while growing, as a rent for the timber. And that value has been gathered from the average estimate made of the same by John Watts, Finley W. Moore, and George H. Pippin, whose depositions are on file, and the substance of them given in the opinion of the Court. This report was excepted to by the defendants, on account of the mode stated by the Master of arriving at the value of the timber. The cause was again heard upon the exception at this term. The defendants except to the principle by which the Master arrived at his result, in charging them with rent for the shingles, staves and ton timber, which they got upon the swamp lands of the plaintiffs. Upon this subject two witnesses were examined for the plaintiffs, and one for the defendants, of whom one for the plaintiffs, Mr. Moore, estimated the rent higher than the other two, whose estimates were the same. The Master took the average of the three, which is objected to by the defendants as being wrong in principle, and they insist that the weight of the testimony ought to have induced (23) the Master to adopt the lower estimate.
This objection we must decide to be unfounded, so far as the principle is concerned, upon the authority of Morrison v. McLeod,
Decree for plaintiffs.
Cited: Pilkington v. Cotton,