Elk Tanning Co. v. Brennan
Elk Tanning Co. v. Brennan
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
As stated in the printed brief of the appellant, “ the complaint here is that while the plaintiff was, in any event, entitled to damages for the trees cut, and the court so instructed the jury in answer to our second point and in portions of the general charge, yet in the portions of the charge assigned for error, the question of any liability was submitted to the jury.” These “inconsistent and contradictory instructions” of the court are the only errors assigned and raise the single question for consideration here.
The latter part of the learned judge’s charge to the jury was clearly erroneous, if he was correct in holding, as he did, that the plaintiff company was entitled to recover for the injuries it had sustained. After the court had determined that the plaintiff was entitled to a verdict, its only remaining duty was to instruct the jury as- to the proper measure of damages. The intimation to the jury in the last paragraph of the charge that under the evidence they could find for the defendant gave them an opportunity, which they readily embraced, to do what in effect the learned judge had repeatedly told them they could not do. This part of the instructions was clearly inconsistent with the other parts of the charge, and, as appears by the verdict, occasioned an erroneous conclusion by the jury and one in conflict with the law as construed by the learned
What has been said disposes of the only question raised by the assignments of error. It is not to be construed, however, as holding that the learned trial judge was right in the measure of damages submitted to the jury. That question is not before us and we do not decide it. The original narr as first amended declared for the penalty for the cutting and conversion of timber under the act of March 29, 1824. The amended narr of April 16, 1901, avers that the defendant “did injure, damage and destroy certain other hemlock timber trees upon the land of the plaintiff .... whereby the bark upon the said hemlock timber trees was injured and destroyed.” The plea was not guilty. On the retrial of the case the learned judge should consider the pleadings as well as the evidence in determining the right of the plaintiff to recover and the proper measure of damages.
The judgment of the court below is reversed and a venire facias de novo is awarded.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.