Schreiner v. Deep Creek Stock Ass'n

217 P. 663, 68 Mont. 104, 1923 Mont. LEXIS 171
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1923
DocketNo. 5,170
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 217 P. 663 (Schreiner v. Deep Creek Stock Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schreiner v. Deep Creek Stock Ass'n, 217 P. 663, 68 Mont. 104, 1923 Mont. LEXIS 171 (Mo. 1923).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE' GALEN

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complaint, in this action purports to set forth three causes of action. The first is for wages due and unpaid, and the second and third for damages alleged to certain hay, pasturage and personal property belonging to the plaintiff, upon premises by him rented, by reason of alleged trespass by the defendants and their cattle. The second and third causes of action stated amount merely to but one cause of action alleged differently in separate counts. The first of these counts recites that defendants through their agents and servants, during the absence of the plaintiff from the premises, entered upon and into plaintiff’s buildings used and destroyed personal property therein contained, and herded defendants’ cattle on the premises in large numbers, thus consuming plaintiff’s hay and pasturage. The second count, being designated plaintiff’s third cause of action, is the one primarily involved on this appeal. Thereby it is alleged by plaintiff that the defendant, Deep Creek Stock Association, was an association of more than two persons “engaged in the business of raising cattle and running [106]*106and herding their joint cattle, * * * under herd and in charge of herders, upon certain designated areas of the National Forest in Broadwater county; that during the season, of 1921 * * * from the early part of May until the latter part of October * * * the defendants employed one Con Mahoney and one * * * Lee as herders and placed them in charge of the cattle of” the association, “said herders being * * * the agents of the said defendants and in full charge and control of the cattle”; that during all that time the plaintiff had under lease and was in the possession and control of certain lands known as the Dean place, in Broadwater county, within the National Forest, in which forest the defendants had permits to herd their cáttle; that the. plaintiff during the times mentioned had upon the premises, by him so held under lease, valuable pasturage and roughage, together with personal property in the house and outbuildings, also twelve tons of hay in stack; that in the latter part of September and the fore part of October, 1921, during plaintiff’s absence from the premises, “the said herders, willfully, negligently and wrongfully, and the said defendants, by and through their said agents and employees, willfully, negligently and wrongfully, permitted the said cattle to escape from herd, and to break into and enter upon the said premises and there remain for a long period of time,, and knowing the said cattle to be therein, willfully, negligently and wrongfully permitted the said cattle to be and remain therein and to break through and into * * * the corral around the said hay and to eat and destroy twelve tons of hay of the reasonable value of $150, and in some manner unknown to the plaintiff,” enter the house and blacksmith-shop, “eat and destroy all the salt therein and * # * destroy all the personal property therein, and to camp therein for a long period of time rendering the building unfit for the uses it was intended * * * until cleaned and repaired by plaintiff, to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of $75, and to eat and destroy all of the pasturage and roughage on said premises to the damage of the plaintiff in the sum of $100.” [107]*107There is no allegation in the complaint that the plaintiff’s premises were inclosed by a legal fence, and it was conceded by plaintiff’s counsel at the trial that they were not so inclosed.

The first cause of action, based on plaintiff’s claim for wages due, was admitted, the amount thereof, $109.35 having been tendered to the plaintiff, and subsequently deposited with the clerk of the court subject to plaintiff’s order. The reply admitted the deposit. There was no issue on this demand.

Defendant’s answer to the third cause of action admits that the defendant Deep Creek Stock Association was an association composed of two or more persons “engaged in the business of raising cattle,” running and herding cattle in certain designated areas of the National Forest in Broadwater county, and in effect denied all other allegations. Upon issue joined the cause was tried to a jury. At the conclusion of the testimony in support of plaintiff’s claim of damages, the defendants moved for a nonsuit as to the second and third causes of action because of failure of proof, and the court granted the motion as to the second cause of action, with the consent of counsel for the plaintiff. The cause was then submitted to the jury upon plaintiff’s first and third causes of action, and the jury returned separate verdicts in plaintiff’s favor — one for the amount admitted to be due for wages, and the other for damages assessed at $325. Judgment was regularly made and entered on the verdicts for the sum of $434.35, with interest and costs. A motion for a new trial having been denied, after the plaintiff had remitted- $46 from the amount of the judgment in pursuance of a' conditional order of the court, the cause is now before us on an appeal from the judgment.

No objection is raised or argued with respect to the verdict of the jury as to the amount due plaintiff for wages, or to allowing judgment to stand for that amount. Therefore there is, in fact, nothing before this court on appeal, other than the propriety of the verdict for damages on plaintiff’s third cause of action, and judgment for the amount thereof.

[108]*108Many errors are assigned, raising but a single question determinative of this appeal, viz.: What is the effect of the statute relating to lawful fences as applied to the facts of this case?

It appears that the plaintiff after putting up his hay in 1921, left the premises unoccupied by anyone, and returned thereto on October 4 and 19, on both of which occasions he found defendants’ cattle, numbering as many as forty head, upon his premises; that the hay and pasturage were completely destroyed, and other damage was done to his property as alleged. There is no evidence whatever tending to prove that the defendants willfully, negligently or wrongfully permitted the cattle to “escape from herd,” or to break into the plaintiff’s premises, or, knowing the cattle to be therein, willfully, knowingly or wrongfully permitted them to remain thereon or to do the damage alleged. And it appears without contradiction that the herders in charge of the cattle endeavored to keep them off the plaintiff’s lands, and drove them therefrom on several occasions. They also endeavored to protect the plaintiff’s hay in stack from damage by cattle by repairing the hay corral fence. The record does not disclose any duty imposed upon the herders to remain in constant attendance upon the cattle, but rather that their employment and duties incident thereto were, so far as reasonably possible, to keep the cattle upon their range obtained through forest reserve permit, and that they attempted to do no more.

However, it is argued by the able counsel for the plaintiff, and was so insisted at the trial, that the admission in defendants’ answer of the allegations of plaintiff’s third cause of action, to the effect that the defendants were “engaged in the business of raising cattle and running” and herding them “under herd and in charge of herders,” relieved the plaintiff of the necessity of proving that the cattle were placed on plaintiff’s premises by the defendants or their agents. There is no merit in this contention, for the admission is merely to the effect that the defendants did engage in such business, not [109]

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Bluebook (online)
217 P. 663, 68 Mont. 104, 1923 Mont. LEXIS 171, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schreiner-v-deep-creek-stock-assn-mont-1923.