W. K. Syson Timber Co. v. Dickens

40 So. 753, 146 Ala. 471, 1906 Ala. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 29, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 40 So. 753 (W. K. Syson Timber Co. v. Dickens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. K. Syson Timber Co. v. Dickens, 40 So. 753, 146 Ala. 471, 1906 Ala. LEXIS 60 (Ala. 1906).

Opinion

HARALSON, J.

This is an action of trespass by the plaintiff, against the defendant for a trespass “upon a certain boom in Chickasawbogue creek, in Mobile county, alleged to have been in the possession of the plaintiff at [473]*473the time of the trespass, and for cutting and breaking the fastenings of said boom, and for breaking or cutting the fastenings of certain logs in said boom, thereby causing said logs to' escape from said boom, and thereby damaging plaintiff on, to-wit, the 11th day of April, 1903,” the averment as to damage being, that “the plaintiff was put to great cost and expense in ascertaining the location of said logs, and repossessing himself thereof, and returning them to a place of custody and safety and caring for them while so doing.”

The complaint, as originally filed, bras demurred to and the demurrer overruled, but as amended, no demurrer avrs interposed, nor was the demurrer to the original complaint refiled. The defendant is in no condition to complain of the overruling of the demurrer. — L. & N. R. R. Co. v. Woods, 105 Ala. 561, 17 South. 41. Moreover, this ruling is not insisted on as error in argument.

The evidence tended to s1ioaa, that plaintiff bad some logs in Chickasawbogue creek, the last of the year 1902, consisting of 450 logs and timbers, and he aauis notified by one Byson that 35 sticks of the timber belonged to them, the defendant company, and if he did not turn them loose, they Avould sue him for them, and, Avithout more, suit Avas commenced against him for them,' and he put the timbers in a place he selected as a safe one for them to await the result of the suit. Plaintiff testified that he sent a man by the name of Lasseter, to a AAmman. named Victoria Bernard, who owned a lake, called Wiggins lake, which he thought Avas a safe place to store the timbers, and rented the same from her, and put his lumber, timbers, etc., in said lake. It appears from the OAridence that this boom Avas broken ojien and much of the timber taken aAvav and impounded in Svson & Co.’s boom. .After this, as the evidence tends to sIioaa', one Harry Gill, Syson’s "foreman, came in a naptha launch, —which belonged to the Syson Company, — to Avliere the timber Avas stored in the lake, and claimed it as belonging to Syson; that plaintiff notified him that the property was in litigation; that Syson had entered suit for it, and that aaTlíIc that suit was pending, he, Gill, could not [474]*474take possession of the timbers, and plaintiff proposed to hold them until that trial. - “Then (employing witness’ own language) apprehending that they might bother me again about it, I hired tugs and negroes and rafted it up, and put it in condition, and towed it out of Cliickasawbogue and up Mobile river into Bayou Sarah, and up the McKeon creek, where it would he close to my house, where I could watch it closer, and it stayed there until the litigation ended”.

That Harry Gill was the man who committed the trespass; that he did'it for the defendant company; and not for himself (though the. evidence as to this is somewhat in conflict) cannot be reasonably disputed. Lasseter had' no claim to the property, nor did the plaintiff owe him anything. He was simply sent by plaintiff, as appears, to the owner of Wiggins lake to rent the same from her for the plaintiff, and yet, we find him, as the evideuce tends to show, setting up a claim to the logs and timber in the plaintiff’s boom, and transferring the same to Gill. The evidence tends to show that this was done by procurement of the defendant company.

The defendant asked the affirmative charge, predicated on the proposition; first, because it was alleged in the complaint that the trespass was to a boom in Ohickasawbogue creek, and the proof was, that it was in Wiggins lake, and this constituted a variance; and,'second,' because, as defendant insists, there was no testimony in the record tending to show that Harry Gill acted in the trespass on behalf of defendant company. As to the first of these suggestions, — adverse to sustaining it, — it is sufficient to say, that the plaintiff’s boom, according to the evidence, was across the north of Wiggins lake. This lake was an inlet forming a part of the creek. C. C. Dickons testified, that the “lake is a branch off from Chickasawbogue creek, and up in the head of it, there are two prongs, one of them to the right, where, this boom was, is wholly within a piece of land that belongs to a colored woman named Victoria Bernard.” He was asked, “Is or is not, Wiggins lake, or the body of water spoken of as Wiggins lake, a part of Chickasawbogue creek?” His [475]*475answer was, “Yes, sir. It is a branch of Ohickasafbogue creek.”

Second, the testimony may be susceptible of some doubt, as above stated, as to whether Gill, when trespassing on plaintiff’s boom, represented himself or the defendant company, but the testimony does tend most strongly to show that he was acting for the company. Under these conditions, the* general charge, as to this contention, could not be given.

The plaintiff testified, that his boom was all broken up and eleven of the logs worth $3.00 each were lost; that the raft had been broken and loosened up and was otherwise in a bad condition ;that it cost him $45.00 to have it put in condition, which was as cheap as it could be done. He was asked by his counsel, “Now did you have any person to watch it until you could carry it off?” and the witness answered, “Yes, sir, we were there a week rafting on it. I had four or five men rafting on it, and watching it there night and day, and that cost me thirty dollars.” After the answer, the defendant objected to the statement that it cost him $30.00, on the ground that the cost of watching the timber is not a proper element of damage, and because it is not relevant and material. If the objection did not come too late, it may he said this was a step for the preservation of the property, necessary to prevent further damage. It was plaintiff’s duty to use all reasonable means to reduce the damage to the property as much as possible, and the reasonable cost in so doing, constitutes a part of the reasonable property damage.

The witness then testified, that “apprehending that they 3night bother me again about it, I hired tugs and negroes and rafted it (the timber) up and put it in condition and towed it out of Chickasawbogue (‘reek and up the McKeon creek, where it would be close to my house, where I could watch it closer, and it stayed there until the litigation ended and then I sold it.”

The plaintiff’s attorney then stated to the court, “that he offered to show what it would cost to carry the logs to a place of safety,” and then asked the witness the following question: “Now then, what did it cost you to [476]*476carry them to a place of safety?” and to this question the defendant objected, because it called for evidence which was not material and relevant, and also because, it is not a proper element of damages, and because it called tor the conclusion of the witness, which objections the court overruled, and to this action of the court, the defendant, excepted.” The attorney for the. plaintiff then stated, “that this was not offered for the purpose of claiming the amount of the cost,” and the witness answered the question as follows, viz: “It cost me $165.00 to put them where I did.” The defendant moved to exclude the answer because it was not responsive to the question ,and was incompetent and irrelevant evidence, which motion the. court overruled and defendant excepted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 So. 753, 146 Ala. 471, 1906 Ala. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-k-syson-timber-co-v-dickens-ala-1906.