The plaintiff and defendants owned adjoining tracts of land. The jury find the facts in accordance with plaintiff's evidence, as follows: By agreement between them, which had been in force for several years, there was to be no division fence, but the defendants were to keep up the outside fence on their side and the plaintiff was to do the same on his side, so that the two tracts of land were under a ring fence. Indeed, before the plaintiff and the defendants went into possession, the whole farm was enclosed by one fence, and the plaintiff and defendants, to save expense, agreed that no dividing fence should be built.
The plaintiff kept up his part of the fence, but the defendants neglected to keep up the outside fence on their side, and let it go down for a long distance, whereby they permitted cattle and hogs to get into plaintiff's field and destroy his crop. *Page 152
Exceptions 1, 2, 3, and 4 as to the evidence of the contract cannot be sustained. The farm was managed by a board of trustees who were nonresident, except one (Lawrence), who had charge of the farm. He was general agent and acting in the apparent scope of his business. Besides, the agreement had existed since 1912 and the board of managers were presumably fixed with knowledge of the arrangement by reason of the fact that there was no division fence. The letter written by Lawrence giving instructions as to the fence was on the paper of the Grand Lodge, of which Lawrence was a high official. He admits his signature to be genuine, and is corroborated by the testimony of the plaintiff that Lawrence had authority to act, and in fact did act, as general agent in charge of the property. It could hardly be expected that an agreement of this kind should be made by a resolution of the Grand Lodge. It was a matter of adjustment between its agent in charge of the farm and the plaintiff as a neighbor.
The motion to nonsuit was properly denied. The court properly charged that the damages, if the jury found that damages were sustained by the negligence of the defendants, were the reasonable value of the crops destroyed. Hawk v. Lumber Co., 149 N.C. 10. The defendants insist that the measure of damages should have been the cost of repairing the fence and such damages to the crop as accrued before the plaintiff had knowledge of the condition of the fence. But the fence that was out of repair was on the defendants' outside line and the plaintiff could not cross the defendant's (141) line to make such repairs without being a trespasser. The plaintiff's fence was in good condition according to the contract.
The rule which requires a party injured by the wrongful act of another to do what he reasonably can to decrease the damages cannot be extended to a case like this. The plaintiff was not required to go upon defendants' land and put up defendants' fence for a mile or more to keep out the cattle. This would have been protecting the defendants' land at the plaintiff's expense. If the plaintiff's fence around his own crop had been thrown down by cattle, then the proposition that he was entitled against their owner only to the damage sustained on that occasion, and the cost of repairing his fence, would be reasonable. He should not let his fence stay down merely to enhance his damages. But here it is not the plaintiff's fence that was down, nor on the plaintiff's land, but the defendants' fence on their own land. The two cases are not analogous.
The other exceptions require no discussion.
No error. *Page 153
(142)