White River Sheep Co. v. Barkley

288 P. 1029, 37 Ariz. 49, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 114
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1930
DocketCivil No. 2895.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 288 P. 1029 (White River Sheep Co. v. Barkley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White River Sheep Co. v. Barkley, 288 P. 1029, 37 Ariz. 49, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 114 (Ark. 1930).

Opinion

ROSS, J.

The principal questions presented by this appeal relate to the sufficiency of the evidence and the measure of damages.

The plaintiffs are the lessees from the state of Arizona of ten and one-half sections of unfenced grazing lands, situate in Pinal county and south of Superstition Mountains. These lands are in compact form, two sections deep north and south and respectively five and five and one-half sections long east and west. Upon them grow wild grasses and herbage useful for stock feed. These sections constitute a part of plaintiffs’ cattle range and are more particularly designed and kept for a winter range upon which plaintiffs place and locate from four to five hundred head of cattle in the fall of each year for feeding and fattening for the spring market. The defendant sheep company has leased from the state twenty-five sections of land, just south of plaintiffs’ range, which are used as a sheep range during the winter months, beginning in December and extending to some time in May of each year.

On March 20, 1924, plaintiffs filed their complaint seeking an injunction restraining defendants from trespassing upon their said leased lands and for damages to “said land by said trespass in that said sheep did feed, pasture and browse- upon the herbage and grass thereon growing, and did taint said pasturage so as to render the same unfit for the use of the cattle of plaintiff, and did destroy and injure the same by cutting the same with the hoofs of said sheep, to plaintiffs’ damage in the amount hereinafter *52 stated, as nearly as such damages can be estimated.” The damages alleged are $2,000.

The case was tried before the court and a jury. The damages assessed by the jury were $2,000 and judgment was entered for that amount against the sheep company and Duffield.

At the close of plaintiffs’ case and at the close of the whole case defendants moved for an instructed verdict upon the ground that there was no damage proven and upon the ground of a variance between the allegations of the complaint and the proof. This motion was denied and among the fifteen assignments of error, two are directed at the court’s ruling denying such motion. We think the disposition of the points made by these two assignments, and the assignment as to the measure of damages, will decide the case and for that reason the other assignments will not be stated or noticed, at least for the present.

It will be noticed that the complaint confines the claim for damages to the injury to the land and the injury to and destruction of the herbage and grass growing on the land. Since the plaintiffs were the lessees of the lands and entitled to its possession for grazing purposes only, any damage thereto would not be to their estate but to that of the owner (17 C. J. 894, § 194) and we will therefore construe such averments as a claim for the eating and destroying of the pasturage. Damages to property or person are either general or special.

“General damages are such as the law implies and presumes to have occurred from the wrong complained of.” 17 C. J. 712, § 20._
“Special, as contradistinguished from general, damages are those which are the natural but not the necessary consequence of the act complained of. They are such as actually result from the commission of the wrong, but are not such a necessary result that they will be implied by law.” 17 C. J. 715, § 42.

*53 If a party would claim special damages or damages not implied or presumed from the injury, the rule is he must in his pleading inform his adversary of such claim of special damages and of what they consist. City of Pueblo v. Griffin, 10 Colo. 366, 15 Pac. 616. Plaintiffs claim in their complaint only general damages, and that they are entitled under such claim to he compensated for the loss they sustained by reason of defendants’ sheep eating and destroying their pasturage, we think goes without saying. Just how that compensation should be arrived at is the difficulty. It is said:

“Definite rules which will measure the extent of recovery in all cases even of a particular class are difficult to formulate owing to the consideration which must be given in each case to its specific and perhaps peculiar surrounding circumstances. Stated in broad terms, however, the measure of damages is such sum as will compensate the person injured for the loss sustained, with the least burden to the wrong’doer consistent with the idea of fair compensation, and with the duty upon the person injured to exercise reasonable care to mitigate the injury, according to the opportunities that may fairly be or appear to be within his reach. ...” 17 C. J. 844, § 166.

Our examination of the cases wherein damages have been sought and allowed for the destruction of native forage impresses us that no exact rule for the measure of such damages, for very obvious reasons, has been stated. The rule for measuring damages to those kinds of crops that are planted and harvested and sold in the market is not the proper rule. Fruits and vegetables and different kinds of grain have a market value because they are bought and sold and dealt with as merchandise, and damages to such farm products may well be computed, on the basis of their market value at the time of their destruction or an injury thereto. They not only have a market value *54 but their yield per acre in crates, bushels, pounds, tons or bales for any given season may be reasonably estimated.

“Verdure used for grazing purposes cannot be cut, stacked, and marketed by the ton or bale. It has no such market value. ... As the stock consumes the grass, the shoots spring up repeatedly, and the crop is thus renewed.” Miller & Lux v. Pinelli, 84 Cal. App. 42, 257 Pac. 573, 575.

In the last case the court adopted as the measure of damages for the appropriation or destruction of pasturage, it appearing that the grass could not be harvested or marketed, the reasonable rental value of the land in the vicinity for pasturage purposes. The rule declared is not the one generally adopted by the courts in the states having lands used for range purposes only. It has been said that where the pasturage is destroyed by flood or fire, the measure of damages is the value of the crop at the time and place of destruction, or if it had no market value, then its value in view of the use to which it was applied. San Antonio, U. & G. Ry. Co. v. Ernst, (Tex. Civ. App.) 210 S. W. 603. In another case it is said:

“ ... if there is no market value, then the recovery should be for the reasonable value of the grass for the purposes for which it is being used or for which intended. Any other rule would result in uncertainty.” Chicago, R. I. & G. Ry. Co. v. Word, (Tex. Com. App.) 207 S. W. 902, 903.

Another court has said:

“The measure of damages was the reasonable value to the plaintiff of the grass or pasturage eaten or destroyed by defendant’s sheep, together with the injury, if any, to the freehold.” Pacific Livestock Co. v. Murray, 45 Or. 103, 76 Pac. 1079, 1080.

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Bluebook (online)
288 P. 1029, 37 Ariz. 49, 1930 Ariz. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-river-sheep-co-v-barkley-ariz-1930.