65 So. 353 | Ala. | 1914
The plaintiff proved title to the land and the cutting, by the defendants’ hands, of a number of trees or saplings, and the removal of same, as well as injury to the freehold in hauling over same. There was also proof of the amount of damages done the land as a result of the trespass. This evidence made out a prima facie case for the plaintiff.
The deed also gave the defendants, and their predecessors, the right to enter the land and cut and remove the merchantable pine timber during four years from the date of said conveyance, and which said time expired August 20, 1910. Therefore, after the expiration of said four years, the defendants were the owners of all pine timber that was merchantable and growing on the land on August 21, 1906, but they had no right to go upon the land to remove same after the expiration of four years without the consent of the plaintiff, and were liable for any injury done to the land as well as for cutting and removing any timber not covered by the deed of August 21, 1906.
As to what was merchantable pine timber in 1906, was a question of proof, and it was incumbent upon the defendants to show that the timber cut and removed by them came within the deed under which they were claiming. “Merchantable pine timber” referred to the sale and manufacture of pine timber, and included such timber as was ordinarily used for sale or manufacture in thát locality.—Tenny v. Mulvaney, 9 Or. 415. The trial court erred in so much of its oral charge as instructed the jury that the defendants had the legal title to all
There was no error in permitting the defendants to prove that the plaintiff’s husband pointed out the lines to the defendants’ hands and showed them where to cut, as this should go to the question of punitive damages under the trespass counts. If the husband consented to the entry, it should be considered by the jury in determining whether or not the defendants wrongfully entered upon the land, and whether or not there was such a malicious trespass as would warrant punitive damages. It may be true that any consent of the husband to the taking of the wife’s property, unless authority from her be shown, would not be binding on the wife, and it may be questionable as to whether or not anything short of a conveyance from her would justify the taking of trees not embraced in the defendants’ deeds. Yet his consent should certainly be admissible when the entry involves malice. The trial court properly refused the general charge for the plaintiff as to count 3, as it was solely for damages done to the land by the wrongful entry upon the same, and the hauling over same, and there was evidence from which the jury could infer the consent of the husband to the entry, and it was a question for the jury as to whether or not the land was damaged by virtue of hauling over same.
The trial court erred in giving the general charge as to count 1, for the defendants, as it was a question for the jury as to whether or not the defendants were liable under the statutory penalty. Whether or not the cutting was under a bona fide claim of right and ownership or was willfully and knowingly done was a question for the jury.
We doubt if the omission of the word “they” from the joint acknowledgment of the deed from William and
The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the. cause is remanded.
Reversed and remanded.