Callen v. Collins

154 S.W. 673, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 316
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 19, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 154 S.W. 673 (Callen v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Callen v. Collins, 154 S.W. 673, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 316 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, C. J.

This suit was brought by appellees against the appellant to recover a tract of land on the John Kerge survey in Tyler county, and also to recover the value of timber cut from said land by appellant.1 This is the third appeal of the case. The opinion of this court on the first appeal is reported in 56 Tex. Civ. App. 620, 120 S. W. 547, and on the second in 135 S. W. 651. The only issue involved on the trial of the case from which this appeal is prosecuted *674 was the amount and value of the timber taken from the land by appellant. The trial in the court below with a jury resulted in a judgment in favor of plaintiffs for the sum of $450, with interest thereon from December 7, 1907, at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum. ■

[1] In answer to questions submitted by the charge, the jury found that 150,000 feet of timber was cut and taken from the land by the appellant, and that the value of the timber was $3 per 1,000 feet. Under appropriate assignments of error, appellant complains of the rulings of the court in permitting the witness McNeill to give his estimate of the number of feet of timber taken from the land by appellant, over appellant’s objection that the witness was not shown to be qualified to make an estimate or express an opinion as to the quantity of timber taken from the land; and in permitting the witness Barclay to testify as to the market value of the timber, over appellant’s objection that the witness had not shown himself qualified to testify as to the market value of this timber at the time and place said timber was cut and taken by the appellant. We think neither of these assignments should be sustained. In regard to his experience as an estimator of timber and the manner in which he made the examination and estimate of the timber in controversy, the witness McNeill, after stating that he had had very little experience in estimating standing timber, and in fact could not say that he had any experience in making estimates of this kind, and could not say he was as well qualified' as any other estimator to determine, with reasonable accuracy, how many feet of standing timber there was on any given tract of land by going through and looking at the timber, testified as follows: “The independent experience I have had is in scaling timber that is down by applying the measuring stick. I have had 20 years such experience. I have been scaling timber quite a while, but have had no experience in estimating. My business is scaling. The only experience I have had in estimating standing timber is scaling timber after it is down on other people’s estimate. Q. I will ask you if you can state, with any degree of accuracy, what certain amount of timber is on a tract of land. A. I don’t think that any estimator can do that accurately. Q. Xou don’t think you can do it? A. Not exactly to the foot; no man can do it. “ * * I did not estimate by individual trees; none do that. They generally measure off by strips. I can look at a tree and tell how many board feet in the tree within a very few feet. I can go to a tree and tell pretty well what it will scale with the Herring Scale. I arrive at this knowledge from my experience in scaling. I have had others scale for me while in the log. Prom my experience in scaling, I could look at a tree and tell how much timber is in it. I could size up an acre the same way, but I would have to be very careful. I could size up an acre and tell how much timber was on it. I did this estimating very carefully. To the best of my knowledge, it took me through the day to do this estimating. I did not count the trees. I looked at every tree and kept them in mind. I did not estimate the land into acres in my mind’s eye. I first run around the survey, the lines, then took it by strips backward and forth. I do not know how wide the strips, did not blaze them, just kept them in my mind’s eye. I could see all the timber on the land in the way I made the strips. * * * Prom observation and the estimate I took, I could tell as well as any other estimator what was there. I can tell from my experience as scaler. I can tell reasonably what is on that land. I know the estimate placed on timber. I have scaled it. I saw the timber before it was cut. * * * I estimated there to be 150,000 feet of timber on the 140 acres of the Kerge survey from 10 inches up. I applied the rule to the timber from 10 inches down. I made this estimate some 3 or 4 years past, not exact. I made the estimate before the timber was cut.”

Prom this statement of the testimony of the witness as to his qualification to give an estimate of the quantity of timber taken from the land, we think his testimony as to the quantity of said timber was admissible. On a former appeal of this case, we held that, this witness having stated that he could not, from his experience as an estimator of timber, state with any degree of accuracy the quantity of timber taken from this land, he should not have been permitted to give his estimate of the quantity of said timber (Callen v. Collins, 135 S. W. 651); but when he testifies, as he did upon the last trial, that he can look at a tree and tell how many feet of timber there is in it, that he looked at every tree on this land before they were cut down and taken off, and made a careful estimate of the. number of feet of timber taken from the land, and that, from his examination of the trees on the land and his experience as a scaler, he could tell, with reasonable, certainty, what amount of timber was taken from the land, his testimony was, we think, clearly admissible. His further statement that he had had little or no experience as an estimator of standing timber might affect the weight, but would not affect the admissibility, of his testimony.

[2] The witness Barclay testified that he knew the market value of the timber taken from the land by appellant, and that it was worth $3 per 1,000 feet. He also testified that he knew the location of this land, which' was situated about two miles from the railroad, and that he had been dealing in timber in Tyler county for about 10 years; and his recollection was that he had made sales *675 about the time this timber was taken. On cross-examination he testified that he could not remember how many sales of timber he had made, and he only knew sales were made by him. He could not recall the date of any sales he had made, and would not say whether he had made any sale within six months of the time this timber was taken. He further testified: “I have been keeping up with the price for the past 10 years. * * * I know, independent of the two or three sales I made, the price Mr. Carter paid. The price paid is what we call market price. * * * I had timber quotations from different purchasers of timber around, a good many millmen right around me, and they would give me quotations of what they wanted to pay for stumpage. I know from the quotations X had what they offered as the market value.” The fact that the witness did not remember any sales that were made at the very time the timber in question was taken, nor of any sales in the immediate vicinity of this timber, did not show that he was not qualified to testify as to the market value of the timber in question at the time and place it was taken by appellant His testimony showing that he had a correct idea of what constitutes the market value of an article, and knowledge of the timber market in that locality at the time in question, was amply sufficient to qualify him to testify as to the market value of the timber in question.

[3]

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Bluebook (online)
154 S.W. 673, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/callen-v-collins-texapp-1913.