Boon v. Orr

4 Greene 304
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJuly 1, 1854
StatusPublished

This text of 4 Greene 304 (Boon v. Orr) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boon v. Orr, 4 Greene 304 (iowa 1854).

Opinion

Opinion by

Hall, J.

Orr commenced this suit before a justice of the peace of Keokuk county. This cause of action is stated in the transcript as trespass and damages. There appears to have been a regular petition filed by the plaintiff, which was mislaid during the 'trial. There was a judgment for the plaintiff before the justice, and an appeal taken by defendant to the district court, whore a rule was made .upon the justice to send up the petition. This rule is answered by the justice, by sending up the original petition, stating that it had been on the trial, but accidently put up with some papers of the plaintiff.and carried off.

On the trial in the district court, in the place of issues, eight interrogatories were propounded to the jury, as follows:

“ 1. Did the defendant take rails, as charged, off from the land described ? ”
“2. Was the plaintiff in possession of the premises described in the petition, at the time the rails were taken %
“ 3. Was the agreement between Huston and Boone, that Boone should enter the said land upon equal shares— Huston to have his choice of shares.
4. At the time the rails were taken off, had Huston notified Boone that he would take the land described as his.
[305]*3055. At the time the rails were taken, had Orr any written contract with Boon for the land ?
6. At the time the rails were taken, had Boon the legal title to the land ?
7. What was the value of the rails taken by Boon ?
8. What damages did plaintiff sustain by reason of Boon’s taking the rails, in addition to the value of the rails?'

The jury returned an affirmative answer to all the-interrogations, except the 4-th and 5th, and assessed fifteen-dollars or the value of the rails, and five dollars damages;upon which judgment was rendered for plaintiff.

There are several errors assigned against this record, all of which are embraced in two points. 1. It is objected that the justice’s docket does not chow a cause of action against the defendant. 2. That the court below erred in rendering a judgment for the plaintiff below, upon this verdict.

Hie justice’s docket is certainly up to the ordinary standard of those official documents, and. the petition having been found, removes the otherwise plausable causes for complaint. The law does not require a justice to copy the petition into his docket, where it is filed in writing. If the petition, with the docket, shows a cause of action, the law is satisfied.

Hie finding of the jury, under the interrogatories propounded by the court, ascertains that Boon, the defendant below, held and owned the title to the land on which the alleged trespass was committed. That Orr, the plaintiff below, was in possession of a close upon the land, and that the defendant below, entered the close and carried off the rails, thereby exposing the crop growing within the enclosure to damage. That the value of the rails taken, was fifteen dollars, and the damage, aside from taking the rails, was five dollars■ The court rendered a judgment upon this special finding for twenty dollars and cost of suit.

The doctrine is well settled, that rails laid into a fence [306]*306upon land are a part of the freehold, and the property of the owner of the soil. Burleson v. Teeple et al, 2, G. Greene, 542;

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Bluebook (online)
4 Greene 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boon-v-orr-iowa-1854.