95 Vt. 454 | Vt. | 1921
This is an action of tort for the recovery of treble damages, under G. L. 6956. The case was tried by jury, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff to recover $175 actual damages, and also a special verdict, in substance, that the defendants did not commit the trespass through mistake, nor had reason to believe that the trees cut were on the premises of the defendants. The defendants severally moved at the close of all the evidence for a directed verdict. The motions were overruled, and exceptions were allowed the defendants. The grounds of the motions were that there was no evidence tending to show that either defendant cut any timber on the disputed territory, or authorized any one to cut timber on said territory.
After the general and special verdicts were rendered, the defendant Lowe moved to have the verdicts set aside, but the motion was overruled and an exception was allowed. The grounds of the motion were: “ (1) That said verdict is against the weight of the evidence; (2) that said verdict is not supported by the evidence in said case; (3) that the jury in rendering said verdict disregarded the evidence in said cause respecting this defendant: (4) that the jury in rendering said verdict disregarded the in
A careful examination of the evidence discloses that defendant Dailey did none of the cutting complained of, nor does the evidence disclose that he advised, commanded, countenanced, or approved of it after it was done. He had nothing to do with it. The court erred in overruling his motion for a directed verdict.
Turning to the evidence, we find the controversy was over the original range line betwen the plaintiffs’ and Dailey’s land. The plaintiffs’ land lay northerly of Dailey’s land, and was separated from it by the original range line, and no- question is made but that the original range line is the true, division line between those lands. The plaintiffs claim that there is a “jog” in the range line between their land and Dailey’s extending southerly three or four rods onto land claimed by Dailey. The situation can be better understood by referring to the following diagram:
The plaintiffs own the southerly part of lot 54, and. the defendant Dailey owns the westerly half of lot 41, and the Ice Company owns the easterly half of lot 41 and twenty-five acres of the easterly part of lot 42. The line claimed by the plaintiffs 'as the true division line between their land and Dailey’s is represented on the plan above by the dotted line, and the line claimed by the defendants is represented by the straight line separating lots 54 and 41.
It appeared that the line between 55, known as the Ducker lot, and 40, known as the Senter lot, and the line between lot 53, known as the Ladd lot, and lot 42, known as the Daniels lot, were parts of the original range line in the second division of lots in the town of Middlesex, and that the line claimed by the defendants coincided at each end with those lines, as represented on the plan above. The plaintiffs claimed, as we have seen, that there was a “jog” in this range line between their land and Dailey’s land, jutting onto land claimed by Dailey, three or four rods.
In this state of the evidence, the testimony of the plaintiff William and Pembroke respecting the spotted trees between the beech tree and stone pile was so uncertain and indefinite, that, in the light of the evidence and the circumstances of the case, it had no tendency to prove that there was any “jog” in the range line, and that the line claimed by the plaintiffs was a part of the original range line. Their testimony failed to show, whether those marks, if in fact they existed, were fresh or old.
The probative force claimed by the plaintiffs for the marked beech consists in the fact that it is marked on four sides and that those marks are old; but how old, or why marked on four sides as a corner of four lots, is not shown. While marked as a corner of four lots, at best it can mark only the northeasterly corner of the Dailey land, which is not, and never was, an original comer. As a witness so much relied upon by the plaintiffs, because of the manner in which it is marked, it must be admitted that it appears to be that which it is not. Its markings may as well be said to indicate a line tree as to indicate a corner claimed by the plaintiffs. In neither case is it marked as the evidence tended to show such trees are marked. Situated as it is, conceded to be in the division line between the Dailey land and the Ice Company’s land, it is more reasonable to presume that it was marked as a line tree than as a corner. Considered in connection with the facts that the old parchment plan of Middlesex and the proprietors’ records of the second division of that-town show that the range line between 54 and 41 is a straight line, that the line claimed by the defendants was recognized by Charles
The court instructed the jury,- without objection or exception, as follows: “If you find the line to be as the defendants claim it to be, or, if you fail to find the line as the plaintiffs claim
In the course of the trial, there was some evidence relative to a survey made by a Mr. Wheeler, but, as stated by the court in its instructions to the jury, neither side claimed “anything for that survey as fixing the location of the division line.” -
The foregoing holdings make it unnecessary to consider other questions raised in the exceptions.
Judgment reversed, and judgment that defendant Dailey recover his costs. As to defendant Lowe the cause is remanded for a new trial.