Miller & Lux Inc. v. Pinelli

257 P. 573, 84 Cal. App. 42, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 285
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 17, 1927
DocketDocket No. 3271.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 257 P. 573 (Miller & Lux Inc. v. Pinelli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller & Lux Inc. v. Pinelli, 257 P. 573, 84 Cal. App. 42, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 285 (Cal. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J., pro tem.

In this suit for injunction plaintiff recovered a judgment restraining defendants from permitting their stock to trespass upon his land, and awarding him damages in the sum of $1,000. From this award of damages alone the defendants have appealed, claiming that the findings, in this respect, are not supported by the evidence.

During the years of 1922 and 1923 defendants owned a stock ranch in Merced County, consisting of 640 acres of land, which was entirely surrounded by grazing land belonging to plaintiff, known as the Los Banos farm. The ranches of the respective parties hereto were separated by wire fences. During the years mentioned the feed for stock was scarce, Defendants owned some 110 head of cattle *44 and horses. In spite of the fence-riders who patrolled the lines of plaintiff’s land, the fence wires were frequently-found cut, and the stock of defendants were found straying upon the land of plaintiffs, where the hay and grass was trampled down, eaten, and destroyed to a considerable extent. Upon the trial plaintiff was granted an injunction restraining defendants from permitting their stock to trespass upon his land, and $1,000 damages for loss of hay and feed was also awarded to plaintiff. The findings of the trial court supporting this award were as follows:

“The defendants above named caused certain animals belonging to them to run and trespass on the lands of plaintiff . . . which animals ate up, injured and destroyed the hay, grass and verdure being and growing thereon, to the damage of plaintiff in the sum of One Thousand Dollars. The amount which will compensate plaintiff for the detriment proximately caused by said animals so running and trespassing on said lands of plaintiff is said One Thousand Dollars. ...”

Appellants contend that these findings are not supported by the evidence; that there is absolutely no evidence of the quantity, or value of the hay, grass, or verdure which was eaten or destroyed by their stock, and that the only evidence of pecuniary damages sustained, was remote, uncertain, and speculative. It is further contended by the defendants that this testimony of estimated damages was erroneously admitted over their objections on the grounds that it was incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and that it was admitted without requiring a proper foundation for such testimony to be first proved.

Only two witnesses testified to the amount of damages. The first one was Mr. Mulkey, who testified that he had been a rancher for thirty years, and was formerly the superintendent of the Los Banos farm, and as such had charge of the grazing lands involved in this action. ]Je said that during the years of 1922 and 1923 he had seen the stock of defendants on the Miller & Lux premises, “many times—almost every day for about two years,” that he was acquainted with the land upon which the cattle trespassed, and was “familiar with the cost of feed.” The evidence of this witness respecting the damage sustained to the growing hay and grass was as follows: “Q. From *45 your experience in this business, as you have related, what do you think was the market value of the growing grass destroyed each year by the defendants’ cattle? . . . Mr. Bickmore: We object on the ground it is incompetent, irrelevant and immaterial, and object further that there is no proper foundation laid. The Court: Q. Now, what would you say would be the reasonable value, market value, that these cattle are alleged to have destroyed? A. It would be in the neighborhood of $1000 a year. . . . Q. I am asking you if you made any examination to see how much grass these cattle had eaten? A. Tes, sir. . . . Q. Upon what do you base your estimate of the damage, now, that was done there, how do you calculate that? A. Well, I know what feed will grow on that land, and I know what was there, and I know how much of it that Miller & Lux got. . . . Q. What did you see? A. I saw the land was trampled and the feed ate off the pasture land. Q. About how many acres were there, about what would you say was the pasture land or wild land these cattle were on? A. That (which) they damaged, was about 240 or 250 acres.

. . . They were on the pasture land and farming land long enough to get all the feed they lived on. . . . They had no feed anywhere else. . . . Q. Tou say that you estimate this damage that these cattle did to be the sum of $1000-. A. On the pasture and farming land. Q. How would you . . . itemize it, in what way was the damage? A. It would be about $300 on the pasture land, and the balance would be on the farming land. . . . Q. And 260 acres? A. On the pasture land. . . . Q. Could you say what proportion these cattle ate up on that? A. Two-thirds of it. Q. And did Miller & Lux have any cattle on that land during that time? A. A very few head at that time, in that small field, it was used mostly for work horses from the Ortigalita Ranch. Q. Tou turned the work horses out on it? A. Saturday nights, as a rule, we had to feed them hay, then, as there was no feed for them. Q. Tou go over to the cultivated land, you estimate $700 damages, now, what is the nature of that damage ? A. It was a grain field and they trampled it all up and ate the grain off of it. Q. How many acres did they have? A. Something over one section. . . . Sometimes I would see about thirty head of stock on there, . . . and sometimes I would see about eighty cattle and thirty *46 horses. . . . Sometimes we cut over some of (that land) . . . but not in the immediate vicinity of Pava and Pinelli’s place; they ate it off and there was nothing there to cut. ... At that time the pasture there was two dollars per month, for the same kind of pasture, ... I was renting the same kind of land for $8 an acre a year. . . . The standard market value, at that time, was seven or eight dollars an acre.”

Likewise, the witness Simmons testified that he had been engaged in the stock business for twenty-nine years; that he was employed by plaintiff during the years of the alleged trespass, and knew the land in question, the value of pasturage and the cost of feed. He was then asked: “What would you say was the market value of the feed destroyed by the defendant’s cattle during the year 1924?” The same objection on the part of defendants above mentioned was made to this question and overruled. The witness then answered, “Approximately $1,000.00, I would say. Q. How much per head was feed worth during the year 3924? A. Around $2.00. The Court: Q. I suppose you have had occasion to buy feed. A. Yes, sir. Q. Por stock, during that time? A. Yes, sir. Q. Have you had occasion both to feed stock upon the premises and also to run them on grazing land? A. I have. Q. Por how many years? A. Por a little better than five years for Miller & Lux. (Mr. Bickmore: I am not objecting to the man’s qualifications, no doubt he is properly qualified. . . . ) Q. That the land of this nature, how much per head, per month would it cost to feed on that kind of land, during the year 1924? A. I don’t think that you could get that kind of land . . . during the year Í924 to graze cattle for less than two and a half dollars an acre, per head, per month. ... It was a very poor year, a poor and bad year.”

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Bluebook (online)
257 P. 573, 84 Cal. App. 42, 1927 Cal. App. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-lux-inc-v-pinelli-calctapp-1927.