DENHAM ET UX v. Cuddeback

311 P.2d 1014, 210 Or. 485, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 272
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1957
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 311 P.2d 1014 (DENHAM ET UX v. Cuddeback) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DENHAM ET UX v. Cuddeback, 311 P.2d 1014, 210 Or. 485, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 272 (Or. 1957).

Opinion

WARNER, J.

This is an action in trespass by the plaintiffs-appellants, Bert Denham and wife, against the defendant-respondent, Sol A. Cuddeback, to recover treble damages for cutting and removing timber from land alleged to he owned by plaintiffs. The jury found for defendant and from the judgment in favor of defendant, plaintiffs appeal.

The parties are the owners of adjacent tracts of land in Lane County. The defendant is purchasing his parcel under a sales contract from Geneva S. Seavey. Plaintiffs’ west boundary is defendant’s east boundary. The land trespassed upon, according to plaintiffs, and from which timber was removed by the defendant, consists of an area of about one to two acres laying along and within what plaintiffs claim to he their western boundary.

Plaintiffs’ complaint consists of two allegations: (1) that they are the owners of a particularly-described parcel of land, and (2) that the defendant cut and removed more than 65 M hoard feet of timber there *487 from to their damage. The defendant, Cuddeback, answered by a general denial, only. Under this traverse, the defendant offered evidence of the defendant’s ownership by adverse possession of the small timbered area in controversy.

The admission of this evidence under the circumstances is made the basis for plaintiffs’ first assignment of error.

Plaintiffs contend that such evidence of ownership in the defendant amounts to an affirmative defense and, if available to defendant, must be so pleaded. OES 16.290 (2) reads:

“(2) The answer of the defendant shall contain:
“(a) A general or specific denial of each material allegation of the complaint controverted by the defendant, or of any knowledge or information thereof sufficient to form a belief; however, nothing can be proved under a general denial that could not be proved under a specific denial of the same allegation or allegations.
“(b) A statement of any new matter constituting a defense or counterclaim, in ordinary and concise language, without repetition.”

The rule which permits defendant to controvert plaintiffs’ allegation of ownership by the introduction of evidence under defendant’s general denial showing title in defendant, although not universally applied, is an ancient one and long and firmly established in many jurisdictions. The fundamental reason being that both the act of trespass and the claim of title in plaintiffs are put in issue under a general denial and therefore any title in the defendant, whether freehold or possessory, is admissible in evidence. Reynolds v. Baker, DC 20 Fed Cases, Case No. 11,727, at p 619, 4 Cranch. CC 104; Van Doozer v Dayton, 45 Mich 247, 7 NW 814; Proprietors of Monumoi v. Rogers, 1 Mass *488 159; Murray v. Webster, 5 NH 391, 392; Babcock v. Lamb, 1 Cow. 238, 239 (NY); Altemose v. Hufsmith, 45 Pa 121, 128; Lacey v. Morris, 215 Ala 302, 110 S 379, 380; Floyd v. Ricks, 14 Ark 286, 293, 58 Am Decs 374. Also see 87 CJS 1036, Trespass § 85; 52 Am Jar 86, Trespass § 67. Some states have special statutory provisions for pleading answers in trespass and ejectment. Oregon has no statute of that character, but does have statutory direction for the contents of an answer in ejectment (OES 105.015).

In Hill v. Bailey, 8 Mo App Reps 85, the appellant plaintiffs’ claim of title to certain lands was denied on the ground that the defendants had acquired an absolute title by operation of the statute of limitations. The appeal was on the ground that the evidence of defendant’s title had been wrongly admitted under his general denial. Although the Hill case, supra, was not an action in trespass, the holding of the court is of pertinent interest here. The court in denying plaintiffs’ contention, said, at page 87:

“The plaintiffs insist that the finding and judgment were erroneous, because the answer did not set up the statute in defence. When the statute is relied on as a bar to the remedy merely, it must be specially pleaded. The rule is ancient, and needs no citation of authorities to sustain it. But where the title to real estate is in question, the operation of the statute is found to have a higher range. It is capable of conferring an absolute title. Hence it has long been held that a general denial of the plaintiff’s title will suffice for the admission of evidence of adverse possession for the statutory period; because this will not merely bar the remedy, but may establish a title in the defendant which will conclusively negative any ownership in the plaintiff. In other words, it sustains and verifies the denial of the plaintiff’s title. Nelson v. Broad- *489 hack, 44 Mo. 596. The rule is not confined to actions of ejectment. The reasoning upon which it is founded sanctions its application to any case wherein the title to land is in dispute. There was, therefore, no error in admitting this defence under the general denial.”

The Missouri holding has twice been cited with approval in this court, once in Stephenson v. Van Blokland, 60 Or 247, 255, 118 P 1026, and later in Quinn v. Willamette Pulp & Paper Co., 62 Or 549, 554, 126 P 1.

Neither of the parties have brought to our attention any trespass cases wherein this court has passed upon the precise question presented by appellants’ first assignment of error, nor has our own inquiry discovered any cases of that character.

We are, however, persuaded that our many prononcements defining the function of a general denial in answer to the allegations of a complaint, and what may or may not be offered in evidence thereunder, justify our holding that in an action for trespass, the defendant can prove under his general denial, title in himself, no matter how acquired, whether by deed, inheritance or adverse possession.

The defendant “has a right to give evidence under his denial controverting any fact necessary to be established by the plaintiff to authorize a recovery: Bliss, Code P. (2 ed.) §§ 330, 337; Pomeroy, Code Rem. (4 ed.) §664; * # Duff v. Willamette Steel Works, 45 Or 479, 483, 78 P 363. An allegation of title to or right to possession of the close is an element which plaintiff must necessarily establish if he would successfully recover. 52 Am Jur 885, Trespass § 66; 87 CJS 1020, Trespass § 74. We recently said, in commenting on another action of trespass for cutting timber, “* * * it is, therefore, elementary that to *490 establish the damage it was necessary to prove the ownership of the land from which the growing timber was severed.” Kline v. Elkins (1956), 207 Or 179, 181, 294 P2d 1118. Plaintiffs’ allegation of ownership, then, was not only a material, but an essential, allegation. By proving that title to the land was in a person other than the plaintiff, in this instance, in the defendant, it is obvious that defendant has successfully controverted plaintiffs’ allegation of ownership in themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
311 P.2d 1014, 210 Or. 485, 1957 Ore. LEXIS 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/denham-et-ux-v-cuddeback-or-1957.