Thompson v. Mattuschek

333 P.2d 1022, 134 Mont. 500, 1959 Mont. LEXIS 3
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1959
Docket9754
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 333 P.2d 1022 (Thompson v. Mattuschek) 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
Thompson v. Mattuschek, 333 P.2d 1022, 134 Mont. 500, 1959 Mont. LEXIS 3 (Mo. 1959).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES:

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on a verdict of a Fergus County jury awarding the plaintiff $1,400 compensatory damages, together with $2,500 punitive damages in a trespass action. A motion for new trial was made and denied.

The plaintiff resides in Winifred. The defendants, brothers, live on their respective homesteads, each having acquired substantial ranching properties. At the close of plaintiff’s case in chief, the defendant, Frank Mattuschek, was dismissed from the action on a judgment of nonsuit. He is of no further concern to this appeal. Otto Mattuschek is the only appellant and will be referred to as defendant. Respondent Thompson will be called the plaintiff.

The action was brought June 8, 1954, to restrain trespass by livestock and to recover for partial loss of a growing barley crop then being trampled and grazed down by livestock after the defendant had removed a long-standing section line fence bounding one side of a field which the plaintiff had just planted to barley. The fence was taken down by the defendant on May 14 and 15, 1954. The plaintiff did not specifically allege a secure *502 enclosure of the barley field but did so testify. He alleged a malicious removal of the fence.

The plaintiff’s witness indicated a crop loss of twenty percent, amounting to seventeen bushels per acre, calculated on standard hail loss adjustment procedures. The crop' covered eighty-three acres and the harvested yield was twenty-nine bushels to the acre. The field was seeded in two plantings, interrupted by a light snow, over a ten-day period beginning April 27. The witnesses stated the barley had sprouted to a height of from about four to seven inches by the time the fence was taken down. The fence was rebuilt by June 8. All damage occurred in the interim.

The crop was harvested on August 29. The yield was 2,400 bushels, valued at $1.01 per bushel. The barley was combined by plaintiff and partially binned in two tanks on the premises, whether as harvested or two or three months later being in dispute. Some was stored on the ground between the tanks. The following spring it was all trucked fifteen miles to an elevator in Winifred and there sold.

The compensatory damages allowed by the jury are within $25.11 of the alleged 1,411 bushel loss, calculated at plaintiff’s $1.01 figure; but under the prayer, as amended after the crop was combined, compensatory award for loss of grain was limited to the $1,400 recited in the amended prayer. Loss had originally been estimated at $1,000. Additional damages of $350 for destruction of fence and $200 for loss of pasture at $1.00 per head per month were asked, but clearly were not allowed by the jury.

Possibility of hail damage was raised by defendant’s testimony but was denied by plaintiff, and on this the jury accepted plaintiff’s position. As shown above, from the time of seeding until the crop had sprouted to from four to seven inches, the east side of the field was completely open to trespassing livestock.

Plaintiff purchased the field on which he seeded the barley as 180 out of 280 acres acquired on a sale contract made June *503 1, 1953. For some twenty years these lands had lain open to grazing livestock and had been treated-as essentially open, public range.

Plaintiff and his witnesses testified that by May 14, 1953, plaintiff had enclosed the north, west and south sides of the barley field with a three-wire fence. This was done before the land was purchased. Plaintiff testified he did no fencing thereafter. However, plaintiff’s own testimony and that of his witnesses confirms that while plaintiff tied the northeast corner of his closure to the existing east line fence, later removed by defendant, plaintiff left an eight-foot gap for a gate opening at the southeast corner of the field. This opening cornered with defendant’s deeded lands in the section adjoining on the east and with a school section adjoining defendant’s land on the south. The enclosure to which plaintiff testified was, therefore, not securely enclosed on the south.

Plaintiff claimed an interest in the east line fence saying he “figured” he “should own some of it for being there.” This fence had been constructed in 1931 by defendant, Otto Mattuschek, in agreement and cooperation with a lessee of the then owner of the property which plaintiff later bought in 1953. This lessee, who testified for plaintiff, had helped build the fence but knew nothing of it after that time. He added, “In them days it was cheaper to move than to pay rent, I kept moving. ’ ’ Defendant testified that the witness had sold him the fence. The witness mentioned an “agreement” but did not explain further and neither counsel questioned him nor defendant Mattuschek as to the details of the sale of the fence.

Testimony indicates the course of the east line fence was actually over to the east of defendant’s land in the next adjoining section, but that the fence had always been left as originally constructed in 1931 and had always been treated as a line division fence. The new fence built by defendant was fifteen feet east of the section line, which placed it fifteen feet over on defendant’s deeded property and fourteen feet beyond the line of the old fence defendant had removed. This is consistent *504 with defendant’s testimony that he and plaintiff had agreed to fence a fifteen foot lane on defendant’s land for defendant’s livestock to pass around plaintiff’s barley field.

The testimony also shows that the line fence constructed by plaintiff along the south side of the barley field veered as much as nineteen feet to the southwest, running first through twenty acres of plaintiff’s property and then on west within the public domain to the south of plaintiff’s property. The eight foot gap left by plaintiff in 1953 added to the fifteen foot opening left when defendant built the new fence in 1954 makes a total opening of twenty-three feet in the south line fence at the southeast corner of the barley field through which cattle could have strayed and trespassed. Obviously any such opening, whether eight feet or fifteen feet or twenty-three feet wide would make an irresistible entrance for winter-hungry livestock, even when not leading into a lush green spring barley field. Nevertheless, plaintiff’s case is that defendant’s removal of the line fence was a studied plan to harass plaintiff and is the sole and proximate cause of the trespass for which plaintiff claimed compensatory and punitive damages.

Defendant Otto Mattuschek readily admitted removing the east line fence. He claimed he had bought it and alleged that it was torn down under an agreement with the plaintiff to make the lane. Defendant strenuously denied all malice.

Plaintiff admitted discussing building a lane fence but denied any such agreement. He conceded he had neither repaired nor constructed any part of the east line fence nor built any fence to make a lane, and he also admitted that except on one occasion he had never done anything to drive out the trespassing livestock which he said he saw almost every day in his barley field. His testimony on cross-examination is as follows:

“Q. How many times did you see livestock in [the barley field] there! A.

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Bluebook (online)
333 P.2d 1022, 134 Mont. 500, 1959 Mont. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-mattuschek-mont-1959.