Court Opinion

ID: 6606083
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:12:20.996909+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:58:11.418304
License: Public Domain

Lyon, J.
I. The title to the lands alleged to have been injured by the negligence of the defendant company is put in issue by the pleadings. Such lands were vacant and uncultivated. On the authority of several cases heretofore adjudicated by this court, it was incumbent upon the plaint*402iff to prove his title. McNarra v. C. &. N. W. R. Co. 41 Wis. 69; Hungerford v. Redford, 29 Wis. 345. Moreover, the plaintiff claims for continuing damage by reason of the reduced productiveness of his land. Probably, on the authority of Winchester v. Stevens Point, 58 Wis. 350, it was incumbent upon him to prove his title, even though he was in actual possession of the land at the time of the alleged injury.
It is maintained on behalf of the defendant that the plaintiff made no proof of any title to the lands in question, and that a motion for a nonsuit, made during the progress of the trial, although based only upon the alleged •want of pi’oof of defendant’s negligence or of damage to ■the plaintiff, should have been granted for such want of proof of the plaintiff’s title. Counsel for the defendant invoke-the rule laid down in Maxwell v. Hartmann, 50 Wis. 660, and since followed in many cases, that the respondent’s exceptions are available to sustain a judgment in his favor.
To prove his title, plaintiff offered in evidence a certificate signed by the chief clerk of the state commissioners of public lands, to which was affixed the seal of such commissioners, to the effect that in October, 1873, one Thomas Miller purchased the lands described in the complaint from the state,, and that patents were duly issued to him therefor. This certificate was received in evidence against the objection and exception of the defendant. It is very clear that the admission of this document was error. We are aware of no law giving the force of evidence to such a certificate.
The plaintiff also read in evidence a quitclaim deed of the same land, duly executed by Miller to him June 22, 1881, and testified, without objection (as did several other witnesses), that he owned such land. It also appeared that he had an agent in the vicinity to look after the land, and *403that be contracted with such agent to gather the berries therefrom in 3885 and 1886. The crop was gathered by the agent in 1885, and the plaintiff received a share thereof pursuant to such contract. The crop of 1886 was destroyed by the fires.
We think the above testimony, excluding such certificate, proved, prima facie, the title of the plaintiff, and cast the burden of proof .upon the defendant to show, if it could, that some other person was the owner of the land. To hold otherwise, especially when there was no suggestion of an adverse title, would be altogether too strict and technical an application of the rules of evidence on the subject of proof of title in actions for injuries to real property.
II. It is well settled that if a new trial be granted solely by reason of a misapprehension of the law, the order granting the same will be reversed on appeal. Bushnell v. Scott, 21 Wis. 451; Jones v. Evans, 28 Wis. 168; Duffy v. C. & N. W. R. Co. 34 Wis. 188; Walter A. Wood R. & M. M. Co. v. Stenel, ante, p. 71. But the above cases, or at least some of them, hold that it must clearly appear that such was the sole ground of the order. Failing in this, the hypothesis that the discretionary power of the court was also exerted is not excluded. It is elementary that the exercise of discretion by the court in a proper case will not be disturbed unless it clearly appears that the court has exercised its discretion improperly. We are of the opinion that this rule is unaffected by the circumstance that the order granting a new trial is based in part upon an erroneous proposition, either of law or of fact.
True, the order appealed from in the present case recites, in substance, that the judge was of the opinion that there was sufficient testimony tending to prove the negligence of the defendant, as charged in the second and third causes of action in the complaint, to send'that question to the jury; but it does not state, and there is nothing in the record to *404warrant the inference, that this was the sole ground upon which the new trial was granted.
See note to this case in 37 N. W. Rep. 335.— Rep.
Without going into an extended discussion, it may justly be said there is sufficient in the case to preclude a ruling that the granting of a new trial was an abuse of discretion; but, without determining the question whether the testimony does or does not tend to show that the fires were negligently set, we are constrained to sustain the order as a proper exercise of the discretion of the court. Considerable testimony was introduced on the trial by the plaintiff for the purpose of proving the alleged negligence of the defendant as charged, and which had a bearing upon that question. It is probably true that there is some doubt as to what inferences may properly be deduced from such testimony. In such a case, if the circuit court holds, on a motion for a new trial, contrary to his ruling on the trial, that the testimony was sufficient to send the question to the jury, we are inclined to think, and for the purposes of this case we hold, that the appellate court should not review such conflicting rulings on an appeal from an order granting a new trial, but should permit the case to go to another jury unembarrassed by any intimation of an opinion upon the weight and effect of the testimony given on the former trial.
For these reasons we must sustain the order granting a new trial, without determining the question of negligence.
By the Gourt.— Order affirmed.