108 Ala. 270 | Ala. | 1895
The case was tried in the lower court upon the second count of the complaint, which was in trover, and claimed damages “for the conversion of- one hundred pine logs cut and taken away’ ’ from the lands of the plaintiff. The material facts are that within a year prior to the commencement of the suit one Jack Brewer cut the pine logs from the timber lands belonging to the plaintiff, and sold them to the defendants to
It will be observed from the foregoing statement, that the record makes the case of a conversion by purchasers, innocent of wrong doing, from an inadvertent trespasser, who by the expenditure of time, labor and doubtless money, had enhanced the value of the pine logs, after their severance from the freehold and transformation into chatties. The effect of the ruling of the circuit court was to exclude from the jury all evidence upon the subject of value, except that confined and limited to the place of delivery to the defendants, and thereby to necessitate a verdict for the value at that place, as being the only authorized measure of damages, justified by the facts of the case. If the law authorized or required the recovery to be calculated upon the basis of the lesser value, under the circumstances stated, it is obvious the ruling of the circuit court was erroneous and prej udicial to appellants. No Alabama case has been found or,cited in which the question here presented has been adjudicated. In Riddle v. Driver, 12 Ala. 590, decided in 1847. where trover was brought for fifteen hundred bushels of coal into which the wood of the plaintiff had been transformed by the defendant, it was suggested by the court as a possibility, that the jury might consider the value of the defendant’s labor on the rough material in esti
The rule is different if the trespass is wilful or in bad faith. — Nesbitt v. Lumber, 21 Minn. 49 ; Parker v. Waycross & F. R. R. Co., 81 Ga. 395 ; Heard v. James, 49 Miss. 236 ; Tuttle v. White, 46 Mich. 485 ; Bolles Wooden Ware Co. v. U. S., supra.
The authorities do not agree upon the question whether, in trover against an inadvertent trespasser, or his in no-cent vendee, for severed portions of the realty, the rale is to allow the value of the property in place, as if it had been purchased in situ by the defendant, at the fair market value of the district, as for instance, the value of timber standing, or'for coal or ore mined; the value in place, or whether the value to be taken as the basis of recovery is that of the property converted, immediately after severance, when it become a chattel. The case of Wood v. Morewood, 3 C. B. 440, which is regarded as conflicting with the earlier English cases, is the leading English, and Forsyth v. Wells, 41 Pa. St. 295, (80 Amer. Dec. 617), subsequently criticised in that State, is one of the leading American cases, supporting the rule first snated arid they have been frequently followed. Many cases, which are often cited in favor of the same rule may be distinguished by noting they were not actions of trover, or that they arose in States which have abolished forms of action, or that the decisions were made in proceedings in equity where the courts were not influenced by the technical rules governing the various common law actions. In this State, forms of action have not been abolished, and parties must be here held to the legitimate and logical consequences of the particular action, which has been instituted.
Trover is brought for the conversion of personal property and it would seem incongruous to sav, that the damages could be assessed upon the principle adopted in actions of trespass quare clausum fregit, when the gravamen of the complaint is essentially different. Cases can be easily perceived, in which the value of the timber after, severance would very inadequately compensate the' owner for the trespass! This"would be so,' when the .trees .were prematurely' cut;' Or were valuable for sháde or.fruit..- Ünder such ‘circumstances, he may accommodate his selection ofa'for'm of action to the necessities of.'
The third plea was no answer to the complaint, and if it had been demurred to, would doubtless have been adjudged insufficient. Actual possession of land, if thereby is meant, possessio pedis, is not required to maintain an action for the conversion of timber severed from the freehold. The legal title, which draws to it constructive possession is, iu the absence of adverse possession by another, sufficient; — Cooper v. Watson, 73 Ala. 252. But the plaintiff took issue upon the plea, and the evidence left it a question for the jury whether the plaintiff had actual possession of the land at the time the trees were cut. Though the issue was, in law, immaterial, the parties made it material by their pleadings ; so that, if plaintiff was not in actual poosession, as alleged, the plea was established, and defendants were entitled to a verdict. The court, therefore, erred in refusing the firsG charge requested by the defendants.
The fourth plea was likewise demurrable. A mistake as to boundaries and an honest belief as to ownership would constitute no defense to the action, although it might affect the amount of recovery. There is, however, no evidence in the record that the defendants were engaged in cutting trees on- adjacent lands,,nor that they cut the trees, for whose-,cor].version tliesuit-was brought.
Before another trial, these insufficient pleas should be eliminated by a demurrer. Cases ought not to be tried on false issues. No good reason can be seen for filing special pleas containing averments of facts, that may be availed of under the general issue, and the practice of complicating and confusing a case, with numerous.unnecessary special pleas, upon which parties are often led, in the hurry of a trial, to take issue, to the detriment of the right of the cause, ought not to be pursued.
The court did not err in refusing the affirmative charge to the defendants.
We need not comment particularly on the charge requested by the defendants, upon the measure of damages, as what we have already said upon that subject will enable the circuit court to declare properly the law on another trial.
For the error in rejecting the evidence, designed to mitigate the damages, and in refusing said charge, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.