Hutto v. Kremer

76 So. 2d 204, 222 Miss. 374, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 654
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1954
Docket39354
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 76 So. 2d 204 (Hutto v. Kremer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hutto v. Kremer, 76 So. 2d 204, 222 Miss. 374, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 654 (Mich. 1954).

Opinion

*377 Kyle, J.

A. E. Kremer, as plaintiff, recovered a judgment in the Circuit Court of Harrison County against A. C. Hutto and A. Brooks, defendants, in an action for damages and the statutory penalty for the wrongful cutting of timber on the plaintiff’s land; and from that judgment Hutto prosecutes this appeal.

The plaintiff’s declaration was filed on December 26, 1952, against A. C. Hutto, A. Brooks, A. B. Kynes and Crosby Forest Products Company, Incorporated, as defendants; and the case was tried at the October 1953 term of the court. Many of the material facts in the case were not disputed.

The proof showed that Kremer was the owner of the 40-acre tract of land in the Handsboro area of Harrison County described as the Southeast Quarter of the North *378 east Quarter of Section 30, Township 7, Range 10 West, which was well wooded with pine timber. Kremer had acquired title to the land in 1947 and had been in possession of same since that time. A. C. Hutto, during the month of November 1951 purchased from Mrs. Amanda Robbins the timber on a 23-acre tract of land in the West Half of the Northwest Quarter of Section 29, Township 7, Range 10- West, lying immediately east of Kremer’s 40-acre tract; and on December 10, 1951, Hutto conveyed the timber on the 23-acre tract to A. Brooks for the sum of $3,850. In the timber deed which Hutto executed to Brooks the land was described as, “That part of the W% of the NW1^ of Section 29, Township 7, Range 10 West, Harrison County, lying south of Bayou Bernard, and described as being bounded North by Bayou Bernard, South by road, West by section line and East by Coleman, and comprising 23.23 acres, more or less.” The section line between sections 29 and 30 constituted the dividing line between Kremer’s land and the above mentioned 23-acre tract.

A few days after receiving his timber deed Brooks entered upon the land with other workmen and began cutting the timber. Brooks started his timber cutting operations on the east side of the 23-acre tract, but later moved over toward the west side, where he «continued to cut timber until Mrs. Coleman, whose land adjoined the 23-acre tract on the east, told him that the timber that he was cutting was not on the Robbins’ land. When Brooks learned that he was over the line, he stopped cutting the timber immediately.

Kremer discovered during the month of January that Brooks had cut timber on his 40-acre tract. Kremer went to the scene of the cutting and found that 209 trees had been cut, of which 130 were more than twelve inches in diameter. There were 87 logs or poles lying on the ground. The bark had been peeled off. Kremer talked *379 to Brooks about the matter, and Brooks admitted that he had cut the timber, but claimed that it had been cut by mistake.

During the trial Brooks was called to testify as an adverse witness for the plaintiff. Brooks testified that he learned from J. J. Whitten that Hutto had the tract of timber for sale; and after Brooks had inspected the timber with Whitten he called upon Hutto to find out something more about the boundary line of the 23-acre tract. Hutto and Brooks drove out to Handsboro to look at the lines. Whitten and J. O. Dawkins, who appears to have been an employee in Hutto’s office, accompanied them on the trip. Brooks stated that the parties drove northwardly beyond the Pass Road toward Bayou Bernard, and when they reached the point where the road turned eastwardly Hutto said, ‘ ‘ This is the section line going on to the north.” They then proceeded eastwardly along the public road, which constituted the south boundary of the property, to Mrs. Coleman’s land. Hutto talked to Mrs. Coleman about an old fence which appeared to be a boundary line fence for the Coleman land, and Mrs. Coleman told him that the fence had always been used as a line fence. Brooks testified that he was satisfied with the lines pointed out to him; that he had made arrangements to borrow the sum of $3,850 from the Bank of Picayune for the payment of the purchase price of the timber; that Hutto gave Whitten the timber deed, which was to be delivered when the bank issued its check for the $3,850; and that he and Whitten then drove to Picayune to get the check which the bank had made payable to Hutto. Brooks stated that he then proceeded to cut the timber and dispose of same as orders were received. Some of the logs were sold and delivered to Crosby Forest Products Company. Other logs or poles were sold and delivered to the American Creosote Works..

*380 Brooks stated that after Mrs. Coleman told Mm that he was cutting timber on Kremer’s side of the section line he requested Whitten to bring Mr. Hutto back out there; and that ‘ ‘ Mr. Hutto went back up there and I showed him where she said the old line was — the old section line. * * * But Mr. Hutto still said it was to the West.”

Hutto testified that he had sold the timber on the 23-acre tract to Brooks for the sum of $3,850; and he admitted that he had made a trip to Handsboro with Brooks and had talked to Mrs. Coleman about the east line of the 23-acre tract. But Hutto denied that he had ever undertaken to point out the boundary lines of the 23-acre tract to Brooks. Hutto stated that he had gone with Brooks to the courthouse on two occasions for the purpose of examining the map of the lands in that area and had shown the map to Brooks. He stated that he did not point out the section line as being on Pine Street, as Brooks had testified that he did. Hutto also stated, however, that on the occasion of his second trip to the courthouse with Brooks, he told Brooks this: “that I was thinking the street you go out there on was on the section line, see, but I says, ‘This map that we’re looking at now does not show any street on that line.’ ”

At the conclusion of all of the evidence the plaintiff took a voluntary nonsuit as to the defendants A. B. Kynes and Crosby Forest Products Company. The court gave a peremptory instruction directing the jury to return a verdict for the plaintiff against the defendant Brooks, and the case was submitted to the jury on the question of liability of the defendant Hutto for the actual damages alleged to have been sustained by the plaintiff as a result of the wrongful cutting of the timber. The court refused to grant the peremptory instruction requested by the defendant Hutto; but the court instructed the jury that neither Brooks nor Hutto was liable for the statutory penalty sued for in the plaintiff’s declaration. The jury under the instructions given returned a verdict for the plaintiff against both defend *381 ants for the sum of $1,800; and a judgment was entered for that amount. Hutto filed a motion for a new trial, alleging newly discovered evidence as one of the grounds for said motion. After a hearing on the motion, the court ordered a remittitur of $200, thereby reducing the judgment to $1,600, and overruled the motion for a new trial.

From that judgment Hutto alone prosecutes this appeal.

The first point argued by the appellant’s attorney as ground for reversal of the judgment of the lower court is that the court erred in refusing to grant the appellant’s request for a directed verdict.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 So. 2d 204, 222 Miss. 374, 1954 Miss. LEXIS 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hutto-v-kremer-miss-1954.