Gunn v. Parsons

104 So. 390, 213 Ala. 217, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 217
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 16, 1925
Docket8 Div. 739.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 104 So. 390 (Gunn v. Parsons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gunn v. Parsons, 104 So. 390, 213 Ala. 217, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 217 (Ala. 1925).

Opinion

THOMAS, J.

The action -was to recover damages for cutting and removing timber. The trial by the jury was on counts 6 and 7, trespass to land or actions on the case; 9, for money had and received; and 10, for conversion of oak and hickory timber. The general issue was pleaded, “with leave to offer in evidence any matter or thing that, if specially pleaded, would be a good defense.” There was verdict for plaintiff. Counts 5 and 8 were eliminated by the charge of the court.

The evidence showed that plaintiff owned the land indicated in the counts during the years 1919 to 1922, inclusive; that for the same period defendant owned adjoining lands to the east, south, and west of plaintiff’s said 80-acre tract of land. The exact' dividing line was apparently unknown to the parties at the time; it being wild or uncultivated woodland. The lines were thereafter established by a surveyor in 1923. A line along the “bluff” or gaps or passes therein was marked by a wire fence, and supposed by a prior owner and one of the parties to have been the line between the respective properties. To this line defendant and Lipscomb, his predecessor in title, had pastured cattle, and such was the fact according to defendant’s evidence at the time the timber in question was cut between the bluff and the east line established by the surveyor, Mr. Jones. Plaintiff admitted he saw the wire before the timber was cut. There was con *219 flict in the evidence as to whether plaintiff told defendant this dividing line — east and west — was along the bluff.

The witness May testified that the timber was cut considerably east of the bluff; that defendant said he did not know where the dividing line “was until it was run out”; that defendant told plaintiff “that before the line was surveyed he thought it ran along the edge of the bluff, and that he, the defendant, owned the land up to the bluff.”

Plaintiff’s witness Glen Parsons testified of conversations between defendant and his (witness’) father in the nature of admissions and offer to pay the damages; that before the timber was out defendant proposed to plaintiff that they run the line between them, “and build a fence there and go fifty-fifty on it”; that they admitted they “didn’t know where the line was,” but that “they thought it was somewhere below the bluff.” That witness also- stated that there were wires in “two places along the bluff,” and when the south end of the bluff was reached the wire proceeded in a southern direction.

Defendant’s witness Gibson testified he was an agent of Holland-Blow Stave Company, purchasing the oak timber from defendant; that his company cut to said line “up to the bluff” and east thereof; that when he was preparing “to cut this timber, and after Mr. Gunn had showed us where he thought the line was, the plaintiff and myself (Gibson) went all over the mountain * * * around the bluff, * * * and plaintiff showed me (witness) where the line was, or where he thought it ran. There were two strands of wire strung along this bluff, and he pointed that out, and told me (witness) that the line was somewhere near that fence, and the timber which we cut was east of that fence, and east of the line as pointed out by Mr. Parsons where he said he thought the line was. * * * We cut up to within about ”>0 or 40 feet of the fence, east of it.” The same witness testified on cross-examination that “defendant, before we cut this timber, showed me where he thought the line was, or where it was supposed to be, and the plaintiff showed me the same line, and in cutting the timber we cut up to this line on the east of it on the side where we thought the defendant’s land came to, and as pointed out by the plaintiff and the defendant to me. Mir. Gunn and Mr. Parsons, neither one, seemed to know exactly where the line was.”

Defendant’s immediate predecessor in title, John Dipscomb, testified he owned the land 5 or 6 years before he sold to Gunn; that he built the pasture fence on the bluff on the west side of the tract sold Gunn; that he was in possession of the land up to this fence until he sold to Gunn; that he purchased the land from Brooks, whose agent (Gardner) told witness the line between these tracts of land “was above and along the top of the bluff,” and, when witness “built the 'cattle or pasture fence,” he built it “on my (his) side or east from where Gardner said the dividing line was,” and “where -Mr. Cobb said it was.”

The witness Baker testified he pointed out the line to Dipscomb when purchasing from Brooks “as lying along the bluff,” an-d there was a fence there at that time; that Lipscomb built the fence there and pastured his cattle within the inclosure. The witness declared on cross-examination: “I knew where the line was as good as anybody else”; that there was a corner rock north of this 80-aere tract which Parsons told witness “was a corner rock,” and the corner rock as then located was “about a quarter of a mile from where they have the line now.”

The witness Clarence Gardner testified he sold the Brooks place to Lipscomb, and “we all were informed and thought that the line lay along the bluff.”

The witness Drake testified that he asked plaintiff about buying his timber, and how far it “ran east of the bluff,” and he replied “at the time that Gunn’s timber had been cut to the line, and for me to cut to the bluff; that the timber had been cut east of the bluff’*; and that he did not know exactly where the line was until a survey was made.

The witness John Davis testified that he, defendant, and plaintiff were on the land in 1921, and Parsons said the line was along the edge of the bluff; that this was at the time the Holland-Blow Stave Company were cutting their timber east of the bluff. “Mr. Gunn and Mr. Parsons were talking about the line; * * * that is what they went there for. Mr. Parsons is the one that said the line was along the edge of the top of the bluff, and at that time Parsons didn’t claim the timber that the Holland-Blow Stave Company was cutting east of the bluff, and didn’t tell Mr. Gunn that it was his timber. * * * I went up there because Parsons and Gunn asked me to go. Mr. Gunn said he didn’t know where the line was.”

The testimony of Robert Russell tended to. show the possession of the land to the wire fence along the bluff when the hickory was cut, and so of the possession when the stave company cut the oak; and Earl Gunn testified he always “understood that the bluff was considered the line between the property of the defendant and the plaintiff”; that the fence was placed along the bluff when Lipscomb “owned the place.”

Defendant, as a witness in his own behalf, testified that he purchased from Lipscomb; that there was a fence along the bluff, and the lands east thereof were in pasture; that when the “bluff turned west the fence continued south”; that, when the timber was cut, he did not know about the line, “except what people told” him; that Baker and Parsons had “pointed out the line to” him as being “along the bluff” ; that witness thought the line between the lands “was along the *220 top and near to the bluff”; that when he and Parsons were- there looking “at his timber we walked along the bluff, and at the time Mr. Parsons said that the bluff was the line.” Witness denied that he made positive promises to pay for the timber, and stated that he was willing to do what was right.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dungan v. Early
142 So. 3d 1135 (Court of Civil Appeals of Alabama, 2013)
Hood v. Hornsby
475 So. 2d 550 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1985)
Watson v. Price
356 So. 2d 625 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1978)
James v. Mizell
265 So. 2d 866 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1972)
Smith v. Brown
213 So. 2d 374 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1968)
Lay v. Phillips
161 So. 2d 477 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1964)
McNeil v. Hadden
76 So. 2d 160 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1954)
Upton v. Read
56 So. 2d 644 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1952)
Milstead v. Devine
48 So. 2d 530 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1950)
Isaacks v. Clayton
48 So. 2d 536 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1950)
C. L. Gray Lumber Co. v. Johnson
195 So. 731 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1940)
Watt v. Lee
191 So. 628 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1939)
Stanley v. People's Sav. Bank
157 So. 844 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1934)
Clarke v. Earnest
139 So. 223 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1932)
Treadaway v. Hamilton
129 So. 55 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1930)
Smith v. Cook
124 So. 898 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1929)
Copeland v. Warren
107 So. 94 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1926)
Hodges v. Sanderson
105 So. 652 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1925)
Home Loan Co. v. Calhoun
104 So. 797 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
104 So. 390, 213 Ala. 217, 1925 Ala. LEXIS 217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gunn-v-parsons-ala-1925.