Penix v. Pumphrey

188 S.W. 816, 125 Ark. 332, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 155
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 2, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 188 S.W. 816 (Penix v. Pumphrey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Penix v. Pumphrey, 188 S.W. 816, 125 Ark. 332, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 155 (Ark. 1916).

Opinion

Wood, J.

(after stating the facts). 1. On the issue of damages, the father of appellants testified that he had operated the land in question for about twelve years; that the effect of the cutting of the timber by the appellee was to continually wear the bank off there and destroy the bottom land below; that the piece of land in controversy was protection to the other bottom land belonging to appellants; that appellee had cut timber off of the land in controversy over his protest. He was asked what the timber was worth and replied: “I would not want it cut at all. It was a protection to my place and I would not have had it cut. I would not have had it cut for $100.00. I would say that.” Another witness, the former owner from whom the appellants deraign title, stated that he would not have had the timber cut, as it was done by the appellee, for less than $400.00 or $500.00. Another witness stated that, taking into consideration the value of the timber and the damage to the farm, he considered that adequate damages would not be less than $100.00.

It was shown that the land in controversy had on it walnut, hickory, ash and oak trees, some six, eight, ten and twelve inches in diameter. The appellants’ testimony tended to prove that the land itself in controversy was of no value for agricultural purposes; that the only value it had was the timber .and the protection that this timber afforded against the floods to other lower lands of the appellants, keeping the water from washing same away.

There is no testimony to show, specifically, how much the lands of appellants had deteriorated in value by reasoh , of the cutting of this timber; nor was there any testimony to show what was the value, specifically, of the trees that were cut. This evidence does not furnish a basis for estimating the amount of damages that the appellants sustained by reason of appellee’s.trespass in cutting the timber from the lands of the appellants. While one witness testifies that he would not want it cut at all, because he wanted it as a protection to the place and would not have had it cut for a hundred dollars, he does not testify that the land was damaged to the extent of $100.00, and does not testify that the timber cut had that value. Another witness testified that he would not have had the timber cut for less than $400.00 or $500.00; but the testimony of this witness, likewise, does not show that the land was damaged by reason of the cutting of the; timber in that sum, nor does he specify the value of We timber cut.

Now, the measure of appellants’ damage was the value of the timber itself which was cut and appropriated by the appellee, and the actual damage to the appellants’ land as a consequence of the cutting of this timber. No witness testified what the deterioration in the value of the land was or would be. The fact that witnesses would not have had the timber cut for certain amounts, if the land ha.d belonged to them, furnished no definite and accurate standard for estimating the value of the land after the timber had been removed from it. These two witnesses, it will be observed, had widely divergent views as to what effect the cutting of the timber would have upon the land, so far as the value of their individual preferences were expressed; but it is not what any particular individual would have preferred or desired had he owned the lands, nor the value of such estimated desires or preferences, of which the law takes notice. In measuring damages of the character under consideration, the law requires that the actual damage to the lands should be definitely stated and a value placed upon such damage. It would have been impossible for the court to have fixed an accurate amount of damages from the indefinite manner in which these witnesses expressed the value of what their desires with reference to the land would have been had they been the owners thereof.

The third witness, however, does furnish a definite standard for estimating the damages, and his testimony is nowhere disputed. He says that “taking into consideration the value of the timber and the damage to the farm, he considered that adequate damages would not be less than $100.00.” His testimony, taken in connection with the other testimony on behalf of the appellants showing that appellee had cut the timber, and that the cutting of the timber would damage the land, furnished a definite basis for ascertaining the amount of appellants’ damage. The appellee himself admitted that he cut the timber, and from all this testimony, which the trial court could not arbitrarily ignore, it was shown that appellants had been damaged by reason of the trespasses of the appellee in the sum of at least $100.00, and judgment should have been rendered in favor of the appellants for that amount.

2. The next question is whether or not the court erred in adjudging that the appellants should pay costs.

On the issue as to the ownership of the parcel of land in controversy the testimony was somewhat conflicting. The testimony on this issue is voluminous and it could ‘serve no useful purpose as a precedent to set it out. Suffice it to say, a decided preponderance of the evidence shows that the appellants were the owners, and the decree of the court in so holding was therefore correct.

It was in evidence that when the appellants first discovered that the appellee was cutting the timber from the land in controversy they disputed his right to do so. Even though appellee cut the timber under a bona fide claim of ownership he had notice from the appellants that they also claimed to own the land. They protested against his cutting their timber, and he persisted in doing so over their protest.

Appellee himself testified concerning this as follows:

“Q. Now, I will ask you if he (Charley Penix) did not dispute your right to cut wood there?
A. Yes, I believe the first time he talked he says it was his.
Q. Did he not ask you to stop?
A. He asked me to quit until we found, out whose land it was.
Q. I will ask you if he didn’t say to you: ‘Here, I think I have got a deed to it and you think you have got a deed to it and let us get some one to settle it and have them to settle it?’
A. I believe that was the last time we talked about it.”

He further testifies: “I suppose Charley claimed under the deed. He came down there and tried to settle it.” It appears, therefore, that appellee refused to settle the issue between himself and the appellants out of court, and that he persisted in cutting the timber upon and exercising acts of ownership over appellants’ land, and they were thus compelled to resort to the courts in order to have their rights ascertained and to restrain appellee from doing further damage to their land.

It is nowhere alleged in the complaint that the appellee was insolvent, and therefore the appellants’ cause of action for damages for the trespasses alleged was adequate at law. Davis v. Davis, 93 Ark. 93-101, and cases cited. There the action should have been brought and tried, in which case, upon appellants being adjudged the'owners of the land, the judgment for costs would necessarily have been in their favor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 S.W. 816, 125 Ark. 332, 1916 Ark. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/penix-v-pumphrey-ark-1916.