Moose v. Vesey

29 N.W.2d 649, 225 Minn. 64, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 570
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 14, 1947
DocketNo. 34,472.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 29 N.W.2d 649 (Moose v. Vesey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moose v. Vesey, 29 N.W.2d 649, 225 Minn. 64, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 570 (Mich. 1947).

Opinion

Matson, Justice.

Appeal from an order denying plaintiff’s motion for judgment non obstante or a new trial.

Plaintiff, who is the owner of the southeast quarter of section 35, township of Svea, in Kittson county, alleges in his complaint that defendants wantonly and maliciously destroyed his fence, to his damage in the sum of $100, and he requests treble damages. Along the southern boundary of plaintiff’s land, which coincides with the sec *66 tion line and also with the common boundary between Kittson and Marshall counties, is a drainage ditch and road running east and west, which prior to 1910 was known as judicial ditch No. 3. In that year, however, judicial ditch No. 10 was established, with the old judicial ditch No. 3 incorporated therewith as branch B. By these judicial ditch proceedings, a strip of land six rods wide, con-, sisting of two rods in Kittson county (inclusive of two rods of plaintiff’s land along its south boundary) and four rods in Marshall county, was condemned for ditch and road right of way. Along this right of way, the road and ditch were constructed, with the roadbed on the north and the ditch to the south.

Along the roadside, parallel to the southern boundary of his land, plaintiff had a fence, part of which had been erected by Charley Johnson, the former owner, and part of which had been put up by plaintiff himself. In November 1945, this fence was destroyed and removed from the land by defendants Hjalmer Lindblad and Nick Welter (deceased at the time of trial and represented by the administrator of his estate), acting as employes of the township of Svea. The other defendants are William Vesey and George Dahl, who ordered the removal of the fence in their capacity as members of the township board of supervisors. Plaintiff alleges that the fence so removed was located on his land outside of the road right of way, whereas defendants by their answer allege that the fence was located on the road right of way and was removed as the official act of the township board of supervisors in order to facilitate the cutting of weeds and the removal of snow. The trial court instructed the jury that plaintiff could not recover if the fence was located within the road right of way. The jury found for defendants, and this appeal followed.

Before proceeding to the fundamental issues as to whether the verdict is sustained by the evidence, we shall dispose of a preliminary motion before this court, as well as certain other minor issues.

In the trial below, the entire file pertaining to the establishment of judicial ditch No. 10 was offered and received in evidence, but no part of the file pertaining to original judicial ditch No. 3 *67 was offered or received. In fact, the entire file of judicial ditch No. 3 was at all times wholly absent from the courtroom and was in the custody of the clerk of court of the adjoining county of Marshall. In connection with this appeal, the trial court ordered that the plat found in the file of judicial ditch No. 3 be transmitted to this court to aid in determining whether the jury had correctly ascertained the location of the right of way. The trial court in its memorandum. stated that, although such plat in the file of judicial ditch No. 3 was not physically present at the trial, it was in effect a part of the evidence in the case, in that it properly belonged to the file of judicial ditch No. 10, since original ditch No. 3 was incorporated as part of ditch No. 10 when the latter was established. We do not agree. Plaintiff’s preliminary motion for an order striking such plat from the records of this court, as well as any other papers pertaining to the file of judicial ditch No. 3, is granted. An appeal must be decided solely upon the evidence actually produced in the court below, and any plat or instrument not so produced and received in evidence is a mere fugitive paper, which may not be considered by the appellate court, even though its intended use is solely for an illustrative purpose. 2 As an appellate court, we are confined to the record before us. Lindgren v. Towns of Algoma and Norland, 187 Minn. 31, 33, 244 N. W. 70, 71.

Plaintiff’s action was the only jury case for trial at the March 1946 term, and, in order to save the taxpayers the expense of calling a jury for only one case, the trial court, on its own motion, continued the case to the December term. Plaintiff contends that this continuance was an abuse of discretion and was prejudicial to him, in that Nick Welter had died between March and December 1946, *68 thereby depriving plaintiff of his right to cross-examine Welter under the statute. If plaintiff has been prejudiced, what is to be accomplished by a new trial ? Welter will not thereby be brought back to life. The supreme court will not reverse an order of the trial court, although it is technically wrong, if no substantial benefit is to be accomplished by a reversal. State ex rel. Burrows v. Truax, 139 Minn. 313, 166 N. W. 339; 1 Dunnell, Dig. & Supp. § 416. We also note that plaintiff has made no showing as to whether Welter, had the case been tried while he was living, would have given any testimony bearing upon the vital issue involved herein, namely, the location of the fence with respect to the road right of way.

Lyman A. Brink, attorney for defendants, was also county attorney of Kittson county. Prior to the commencement of this action, plaintiff had consulted Brink in his capacity as county attorney about instigating a criminal prosecution against those who had destroyed his fence. No such action was ever begun. At the beginning of the trial below, plaintiff moved to disqualify Brink as attorney for defendants on the ground that to permit him to serve as defendants’ attorney after plaintiff had discussed the facts with him as county attorney constituted a breach of the attorney-client relationship and gave defendants an unfair advantage. The motion was denied, and plaintiff assigns this as error. This is not a disciplinary proceeding, and the question is not whether Brink’s conduct was improper, but whether, assuming (without deciding) that it was, plaintiff was prejudiced thereby.

“* * « ^ new trial upon the ground of misconduct is not granted as a disciplinary measure but because injustice has been done.” Hammel v. Feigh, 143 Minn. 115, 125, 173 N. W. 570, 574. See, Romann v. Bender, 190 Minn. 419, 252 N. W. 80.
«* * * the granting of a new trial on such grounds is not a disciplinary measure * * *. but a vehicle for the correction of wrongs in practice and the prevention of injustice, a means of restoring the status quo ante where, by his counsel’s misconduct, the successful litigant has gained an undue advantage and his defeated opponent has suffered an undeserved injury.” Bowers, Judicial Dis *69 cretion of Trial Courts, § 522. See, Hein v. Waterloo, C. F. & N. Ry. Co. 180 Iowa 1225, 162 N. W. 772.

We cannot say that the trial court abused its discretion in denying the motion for the disqualification of Brink, in the absence of a showing by plaintiff that he was thereby prejudiced.

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Bluebook (online)
29 N.W.2d 649, 225 Minn. 64, 1947 Minn. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moose-v-vesey-minn-1947.