Stearns & Culver Lumber Co. v. Cawthon

62 Fla. 370
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedJune 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 62 Fla. 370 (Stearns & Culver Lumber Co. v. Cawthon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stearns & Culver Lumber Co. v. Cawthon, 62 Fla. 370 (Fla. 1911).

Opinion

Hocker, J.

— The defendants in error, in May, 1910, sued the plaintiff in error in the Circuit Court of Walton County. The declaration contains six counts in tort, to eách of which the plea of not guilty was filed. The first count is as follows: “That the defendant, before thé [371]*371institution of this suit, wilfully and maliciously broke and entered certain lands of the plaintiffs known and described as follows: The NEJ of SW-|- and NWi of NE¿, Section 18, Township 5 North, Bange 21 West, in Walton County, Florida, and cut and boxed, felled and removed the timber and trees therefrom, cutting, felling and destroying the growing trees, timber and other growth thereon, to the great damage of the said lands, and to the damage of the plaintiffs in the sum of $5,000.”

The second count is like the first, except that it omits the allegation that the trespass was “wilfully and maliciously” committed. The third alleges that the defendant wilfully and maliciously broke and entered the described lands of the plaintiffs and cut down and removed therefrom 400 pine trees of the válue of $7.50 each, aggregating $3,000. The fourth alleges the wilful and malicious breaking and entering the same lands and the cutting and removal of 1,000 pine saw logs aggregating 200,000 feet of the value of $15.00 per thousand. The fifth alleges the wilful and malicious breaking and entering the same lands and extracting the turpentine and rosin from the pine trees thereon of the value of $916.00. The sixth count is as follows:

“And the plaintiffs further sue the defendant, for that the defendant, before the commencement of this suit, converted to its own use the following proyerty of the plaintiffs, to-wit: 960 gallons of spirits of turpentine of the value of 58c' per gallon, of the aggregate value of $554.80, 80 barrels of rosin of the value of $4.50 per barrel, of the aggregate valúe of $360.00, and also 200,000 feet of pine lumber manufactured from the pine saw logs, and wilfully and maliciously removed from plaintiffs’ property the said lumber, being of the value of $15.00 per thousand feet, of the aggregate value of $3,000.00, and also 88 cross-[372]*372ties cut from the timber on plaintiff's’ property, of the value of 15c each, of the aggregate value of $37.60, and wilfully and maliciously removed the same.”

The damage are fixed at $5,000.00. The case was tried on the plea of not guilty to each of these counts resulting in a verdict for $1,100, and a judgment for the same, including costs of $128.06. The judgment is here for review on writ of error.

There are three assignments of error: Two based on instructions given at request of the plaintiffs below, and the third on the action of the court overruling the motion for a new trial. There was no objection in the court below if one could properly have been made to the joinder in the declaration of counts for trespass and trover and conversation, or conversion, and the case was tried on the issues thus made. It is stated in the brief of the plaintiff in error that it admitted liabilitjr at the trial, and the only question at issue related to ihe amount of damages. The plaintiff in error also refers in his to the rules laid down in Wright v. Skinner, 34 Fla. 453, 16 South Rep. 335, for the ascertainment of damages against a wilful trespasser, and against an unintentional or mistaken trespasser, as affording guiding principles in this case.

The instruction complained of iip the second assignment is as follows: “The law makes it incumbent upon parties who have adjoining lands to ascertain in the manner provided by law the lines dividing their possessions or property, and if one negligently and without taking the precaution that the law requires enters upon the lands of another and commits a trespass, this in the eyes of the law would be wilful.”

The objections to this instruction in the brief of plaintiff in error, are, first, that it “does not define what acts [373]*373the law requires of the owner to ascertain the correct dividing line, nor what acts of precaution the law required to relieve him from the imputation of having wiL fully entered upon his neighbor’s lands. In other words the jury was told that the law regulated these things, but did not inform it what those regulations were. It was left with the jury to say what precautions were required to be taken, and what manner the law provided for ascertaining the land lines'. Neither of these things are provided for by any hard and fast rules.of law, so far as we are advised.”

The second objection to this instruction is that if had a tendency to impress the jury with the idea that a mere negligent entry and trespass would as a matter of law impose the liability which the law affixes to a uniful trespass. It is contended that in the case of Wright v. Skinner, supra, this court uses the phrase “wilful trespasser” in contradistinction to the phrase “unintentional or mistaken trespasser,” {and it is contended that a mere negligent trespass is not necessarily a wilful one. The defendants in error in their brief, cite no authority which supports the first part of this instruction. Some authorities are referred to as holding that ordinary care should be used in ascertaining boundary lines, and that where a trespass is committed without using ordinary care in ascertaining boundaries that would constitute a. wilful trespass. It seems to us this objection is well taken. The jury should not have been left to determine what the law requires of a party in ascertaining a boundary line. Under our system the jury pass on the facts of a case, not the law applicable thereto. That a negligent trespass is not necessarily a wilful one is shown in the case of Trustees of Dartmouth College v. International Paper Co., 132 Fed. Rep. 92-98-99.

[374]*374The other instruction complained of is as follows: “If you believe from the evidence that the defendant entered upon the lands of the plaintiff by its employees and servants and carelessly and without regard to the rights of the plaintiff, you will assess the damages if you find prop ■ erty was removed, at the market value of the property at the time of such removal.”

It seems to us that the meaning of this instruction was somewhat obscure and not calculated to enlighten the jury upon the difference between an “unintentional and innocently mistaken act of trespass,” and a “wilful” one. No authority is cited by defendants in error in support of this instruction.

The contention seems to be made by the defendants in error that the instructions we have considered, if erroneous were under the facts of the case harmless — in other words, that the jury as reasonable men could not from the evidence have found the trespass to be anything than wilful, and a verdict for a less amount could-not reasonably have been found. This involves a consideration of the evidence. To sustain the contention of the defendants in error, the testimony of Mr. Cummings and Mr. Paul is relied on. Mr. Paul was a witness for the plaintiffs and testified in substance that he had lived near the lands in question about six years; that he knew where the lands of the Cawthon heirs were; that he worked for the defendants and hauled logs from the land of the Cawthon heirs about three years before he testified and delivered them to the Stearns and Culver railway; that Mr. Cummings put him there to hauling; that he had a conversation with Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Fla. 370, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stearns-culver-lumber-co-v-cawthon-fla-1911.