Lemke v. Anders

53 N.W.2d 436, 261 Wis. 555, 1952 Wisc. LEXIS 300
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedMay 6, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 53 N.W.2d 436 (Lemke v. Anders) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lemke v. Anders, 53 N.W.2d 436, 261 Wis. 555, 1952 Wisc. LEXIS 300 (Wis. 1952).

Opinion

Fritz, C. J.

The plaintiffs, Albin and Rudolph Lemke, purchased an eighty-acre tract of timberland and began cutting the standing timber on the land. As the result of a recent survey which placed the east boundary of their property west of a fence which they supposed was the east property line, a dispute arose between them and the defendant, Edward Herman Anders, who owned the land to the east of plaintiffs’ tract. He endeavored to have plaintiffs stop cutting the timber on the land in dispute, but they continued to cut the trees.

On December 10, 1948, Anders’ attorney, Charles E. Stickler, prepared at the office of a justice of the peace, *557 Arthur Crawford, a complaint charging plaintiffs with wil-fully severing trees from the land of another in violation of sec. 343.511, Stats. 1947. Anders swore to the complaint and Crawford, as justice of the peace, issued a warrant, returnable before himself, charging the crime alleged in the complaint. Crawford delivered the warraht to a deputy sheriff who took Albin and Rudolph Lemke into custody at about seven o’clock the following Saturday morning and placed them in jail at Cornell at about eight o’clock. Before anyone else appeared before Justice Crawford, he went to the cell occupied by plaintiffs and suggested to them that the civil matter be settled. At ten o’clock a so-called preliminary hearing was held before Justice Crawford in a room adjoining the cell, and his docket shows that, in addition to Albin and Rudolph Lemke, Anders, Stickler, arid Alfred Tilbury, a surveyor employed by Anders, were present throughout the hearing and they testified concerning the crime alleged to have been committed by the plaintiffs. The justice’s docket shows that after testimony was taken at the so-called preliminary hearing, Crawford said to one of the plaintiffs, “You better settle this for $1,800;” and in the presence of Anders, Stickler, and Tilbury, the justice suggested several times to plaintiffs that the. matter should be settled. All of the testimony indicates that all of the conversations in respect to settlement were in that one room; that Anders and Stickler were at all times present, and the participants were from four to eight feet apart. In the presence of Anders, Stickler said to plaintiffs: “If we didn’t settle it was a Waupun charge and he would have to take us to jail. ... If we didn’t settle it was a criminal charge and we would have to be put further to jail.”

From the plaintiffs’ testimony Crawford seems to have been most anxious for a settlement, and it appears that he referred to it on several occasions. Crawford told Anders in the presence of the plaintiffs that they would not settle *558 for $1,800 and he asked Anders how much the damages were. Anders answered, “The law reads $1 an inch across the stumpage and that the damages would be approximately $4,000.” It was significant that the amount mentioned by Anders is the amount of the bail fixed by Crawford; and that in Anders’ complaint signed before the justice, he represented that the value of the timber taken was only $1,200. The father of plaintiffs appeared in the afternoon and after having talked with the plaintiffs he asked Crawford, “How much will it take to settle this?” And he asked further as to the amount of the bail and when he was told that it was $4,000, he replied, “How come that you ask such an enormous bail ? Have they killed anybody ?” The father testified also that Anders and his representatives “wanted to let us settle for $1,800 rather than take the boys to the Chippewa county jail; if the $1,800 were paid they wanted to drop the whole thing and forget about it.” Although it appears from Crawford’s docket entries that the preliminary hearings might well have been conducted in not more than a couple of hours, the plaintiffs were detained at Cornell from eight o’clock in the morning until between five and six o’clock in the afternoon without having had an opportunity to obtain any food, and that late in the afternoon they were taken to the Chippewa county jail.

Upon the trial of this action in the circuit court, Justice Crawford was called as a witness by both the plaintiffs and Anders, but Crawford was not asked by Anders’ attorney to relate what took place with respect to settlement negotiations and consequently did not deny the testimony of plaintiffs as to those matters. Stickler and likewise Tilbury were called as witnesses for the defendant but were not asked to testify about the negotiations with respect to settlement in the jail at Cornell; and they did not deny the testimony of the plaintiffs in that respect. It is undisputed that, as testified by plaintiffs, on several occasions during the hearing before *559 Justice Crawford offers were made by Anders to settle the matter by having the plaintiffs pay him $1,800 and recognize the property line as fixed by Tilbury’s survey; and that plaintiffs declined those offers. However, when Anders testified at the trial, it seems he apparently rather cautiously sought to avoid admitting or denying the facts testified to by the plaintiffs, by stating that he was hard of hearing and that he heard little, if any, of the conversation. But from the fact that Anders did testify at the preliminary hearing, as appears from the docket of the justice, it is apparent that he was not so hard of hearing as not to have heard the conversation in respect to the settlement sought by him. And he did not deny the testimony of the plaintiffs and their father that they were being pressed for settlement while they were held unlawfully in jail; and there is no evidence to refute their testimony.

During the hearing before Justice Crawford he concluded that he did not have jurisdiction to try the offense charged and that the plaintiffs would have to be bound over to the circuit court branch of the Chippewa county court for trial. The plaintiffs tried to secure bail, fixed by the justice at $4,000, and they were kept in confinement in jail at Cornell during an ensuing delay of several hours, and acceptable bail not having been furnished, they were then transferred during the afternoon to the county jail in Chippewa Falls, where they remained in confinement for about two and one-half days. They were then arraigned before the county judge, and entered pleas of not guilty, waived a preliminary examination, and were bound over to the circuit court for trial. Upon the deposit of $4,000 as bail, they were released from custody, three and one-half days after their arrest.

On March 10, 1949, Anders commenced a civil action against Albin and Rudolph Lemke to recover damages for the timber cut from the land in dispute, and claimed by Anders as his on the basis of the recent survey. As a result *560 of the commencement of that civil action, it appeared that the true location of the property line was questionable, and the criminal charge against the Lemkes was dismissed, on motion of the district attorney. Thereafter, Anders’ civil action was tried and judgment against him was awarded to Albin and Rudolph Lemke. They then commenced the actions now at bar to recover damages for Anders’ malicious prosecution and false imprisonment.

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Bluebook (online)
53 N.W.2d 436, 261 Wis. 555, 1952 Wisc. LEXIS 300, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemke-v-anders-wis-1952.