Court Opinion

ID: 6516904
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:27:30.093657+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:55:02.915341
License: Public Domain

HEAD, J.
This is an action of trespass to coal lands. The defendant, in working its own mine, inadvertently encroached upon the coal imbedded in the adjoining land of the plaintiff, and severed and carried away therefrom a large quantity of plaintiff’s coal. The plaintiff proved these facts, and then offered testimony to show the market value of coal during the time this coal was mined, and the cost of mining, to the introduction of which testimony defendant objected, and the court sustained the objection, to which plaintiff excepted. It was not offered to prove the market value of coal at any particular place, so it was unknown to the court whether the value in, or at, the mine, or at the place where the coal was actually marketed, or elsewhere, was intended to be shown; and as the grounds of objection to the testimony are not stated, and indulging all presumptions in favor of the court’s ruling, it may be assumed that this generality was a ground of objection, and being so, it was, of itself, sufficient to support the ruling. There was evidence to prove that coal lands similarly situated had been leased during the time of these trespasses, to-wit, during the years 1893 and 1894, at from five to seven and one-half cents, per ton, royalty. It was also shown that plaintiff had agreed to lease its said lands to one Harrison, at a royalty of ten *626cents per ton on all the coal mined by him therefrom, but that when it was discovered, in August, 1894, that the coal was being mined, Harrison refused to take the lands under the lease.
The court, sitting without a jury, held that the measure of damages was seven and one-half cents, per ton, on the quantity of coal actually mined from plaintiff’s land by defendant, and also on the coal left in the walls or pillars which was not mined, but made worthless by defendant, and rendered judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of $556.50 ; to which ruling and judgment the plaintiff excepted.
Inasmuch as the court awarded to the plaintiff all (if not more) that the only evidence which was introduced reasonably permitted; and as no evidence was legally rejected which might have justified a larger assessment, the plaintiff cannot complain of the sum awarded, even though the rules of law for the admeasurement of damages, in cases of this kind, be as contended for by its counsel; and affirmance of the judgment is a necessary result.
We call attention, however, to what we said in White v. Yawkey, 108 Ala. 270, in reference to the measure of damages where timber had been severed from the freehold by an inadvertent trespasser and converted, and the action was trover. We there noticed that, in our practice, different from that in many of our States, the common law distinguishing characteristics of the action of trespass, trover and detinue are fully maintained, and the principles governing the cause of action, and the rules for measuring damages, appropriate to the particular form of action pursued, are applied. In trespass to realty the measure of recovery is, where the trespass is inadvertent, the actual damage done to the land. If the trespass consisted of a severance of a part of the freehold from the rest, for instance growing timber or minerals, the value of the thing severed, while it constituted a part of the freehold, at the time of the, severance, and not as a chattel after severance, may be regarded as a proper measure of recovery. For instance, a valuable shade tree, worth, as a chattel after severance, an insignificant sum, may have been of great value to the land while growing. The action of trespass to land treats of the damage to the land, and has no refer*627ence to chattels ; hence in that action, the value of the shade tree to, and as a part of the land, would be recoverable, not limiting the plaintiff to its value as a chattel after severance. If, however, the action pursued be trover or detinue or trespass de bonis asportatis, for the conversion, detention or taking of the tree, it would be treated as a chattel and valued accordingly. In trover or trespass de bonis, where the thing converted or taken was severed from the freehold by the wrongdoer, the manner of the severance — whether intentional or otherwise — may be looked to, to determine the animus of the conversion or taking, justifying, or not, the imposition of more than actual damages. In this case the plaintiff, suing in trespass to the realty, was entitled to recover the amount of the damage actually done to the land. It was not proper, in such an action, to consider the coals taken as chattels, and to suffer a basis of their larger value as such. Their value in situ, and any other injury shown to have been done to the land, were as much as the plaintiff could lawfully demand, and this was accorded to it by the trial court.
There is a conflict in the decisions of the highest courts in this country, on this subject, but those which lay down other rules are where the distinctions in the several forms of action are not observed as they are with us.
Affirmed.