Gates v. Rifle Boom Co.

38 N.W. 245, 70 Mich. 309, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 817
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedMay 18, 1888
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 38 N.W. 245 (Gates v. Rifle Boom Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gates v. Rifle Boom Co., 38 N.W. 245, 70 Mich. 309, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 817 (Mich. 1888).

Opinion

Morse, J.

The plaintiff, in his lumbering operations, in 1882 cut over the line upon the adjoining land of Eust Bros. & Co., and thereby secured and marked as his own about

135.000 feet of logs belonging to the latter. These logs were mixed with the other logs of plaintiff, and banked on the west branch of the Riñe river. They were not run out the following spring, but remained in the rollway during the summer and fall of 1883. In that year Rust Bros. & Co. sent some scalers where the plaintiff’s logs were, who selected out, as best they could, logs of the same quality as those taken from the Rust lands by plaintiff, and about the same quantity, and marked them with the stamp of Rust Bros. & Co. Such logs then bore two brands, the mark of plaintiff, “C. O. W.,” and the Rust mark, “7 R. 7.”

•Under the usual contract by plaintiff with the defendant boom company, these logs, intermingled with other logs of the plaintiff, were driven down the stream in the summer of 1884, and received in the defendant’s boom. The defendant, was notified by Rust Bros. & Co. not to deliver the logs with, the double marks upon them to plaintiff. The boom company thereupon delivered the double-marked logs, about. 155.000 feet, to Rust Bros. & Co., who, finding that more were marked by their scalers than they were entitled to» returned to plaintiff 20,590 feet of the same. .

[312]*312The plaintiff, after demanding these logs of the boom company, and after its refusal to deliver them, brought this suit in trover in the circuit court for the county of Bay. The cause was there tried before a jury, and verdict and judgment passed for the defendant. The plaintiff in this Court assigns as error the following instructions given by the court:

“If the plaintiff cut the logs innocently, supposing them to be upon his own land, and mixed them with his own so that they could not be identified, and after they became mixed with his own, so that the logs cut from Bust Bros & Co.’s lands could not be identified, then Rust Bros. & Co. had the right to select from the common mass a quantity of an average quality of their own, equal to the quantity taken from their land.”

And also, in the same connection, after having stated the rule as to willful trespasses, instructing the jury further as follows:

“But a different rule prevails where a party innocently mingles his property with that of another, and where it is undistinguishable, and where the general quality and character of the property is the same, as in the case of the same kind of logs, white pine, if you please, and of the same general quality as near as may be. There, if the logs are confused, neither party loses his own. Both parties have a ¡right to their own; and, neither party being able to distinguish his own, the party whose property has' been mingled with another’s property by the act of that other party may take so much of the common mass as he has in it.”

It was claimed by the plaintiff upon the trial, and he so testified, that the logs taken by Rust Bros. & Co. were of •greater value in quality than those cut by him from their lands. The quantity cut by him on the Bust lands was not ■claimed to be less than the quantity taken by Bust Bros. & Co. It therefore became material to ascertain, upon the trial, whether the plaintiff was a willful trespasser, or cut the logs innocently, in good faith, believing that he was within the lines of his own land.

The court instructed the jury as to the difference between [313]*313a willful and an unintentional trespass, stating to them, in substance, that if the trespass was a willful one, if Gates knew he was cutting the logs of Eust Bros. & Co., and so, •knowing them not to be his, intermingled them with his own that they could not be distinguished, Eust Bros. & Co. had a right to take more than their own; and if, in order to get all that belonged to them, and without intending to take more than belonged to them, they did take a better quality of logs than they had lost, if they did not make the selection with that view, the plaintiff could not recover for such excess in ■quality; but if the plaintiff cut the logs, and marked and mingled them with his own, in good faith, believing them to be his own, then, if Eust Bros. & Co. took more than they were entitled to, the plaintiff might recover the excess.

The counsel for the plaintiff very ably and forcibly contended in the argument here that, if the plaintiff was innocent of any wrong, he was entitled to recover in this action, if Eust Bros. & Co. took no more logs in quality or quantity than were cut upon their lands, the difference between the value of the logs and the value of the standing timber; that Eust Bros. & Co. could claim no more than the value of the stumpage. He argues that if Eust Bros. & Co., under the same circumstances, had sued the plaintiff in trover for the value of the timber so cut, the measure of damages would have been the value of the stumpage, and that they could not have recovered what they obtained in this suit, the value of the logs, representing not only the value of the standing timber, but also the worth of the labor of plaintiff added thereto; citing Ayres v. Hubbard, 57 Mich. 322 (23 N. W. Rep. 829.) The object of the law being, in both cases, to enable the party deprived of his property to receive compensation therefor, he asks, “ Why should the man who strictly follows the law, and adopts a legal course of procedure ” to obtain his property, be in a worse position, and receive less, -than he who uses force or strategy to recover possession of [314]*314his property? He claims that in this case the plaintiff added innocently to the value of this timber the cost of cutting and putting in the logs, which was the sum of $2.25 per thousand feet, and also the value of the driving and booking charges.. He estimates this value at over $300.

But in the first place it seems to me that this amount, the-value of the plaintiff’s labor and expenses upon the logs, could not be recovered in an action of trover. The logs were still the property of Bust Bros. & Co. The trespasser, however innocent, could acquire no property in these logs, nor could; he acquire a lien upon them for such labor and expense. The-conversion of trees into saw-logs by a trespasser does not change the title to the property, nor destroy the identity of the same. The owner of the land is the owner of the logs, and the trespasser has no title to them. Therefore when he-regains his own, he has converted no property of the trespasser to his own use. Stephenson v. Little, 10 Mich. 433; Final v. Backus, 18 id. 218, 232; Isle Royale Mining Co. v. Hertin, 37 Id. 337; Arpin v. Burch, 68 Wis. 619 (32 N. W. Rep. 681); Winchester v. Craig, 33 Mich. 205; Grant v. Smith, 26 Id. 201; Tuttle v. White, 46 Id. 485 (9 N. W. Rep. 528).

In the case of Mining Co. v. Hertin, supra, the trespasser sought to recover in a special count in assumpsit for the value of his labor expended in cutting the wood. In this case, if any action would lie for the labor of cutting the logs and the-expense of getting them into the stream and down to the boom, it would seem that the plaintiff’s remedy would be in. assumpsit. But in the case above referred to it was held that he could not recover the benefit of his labor at all.

There can be no doubt that the rule is well settled in this State that, if Bust Bros. & Go.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 N.W. 245, 70 Mich. 309, 1888 Mich. LEXIS 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-rifle-boom-co-mich-1888.