October 29, 1909. The opinion of the Court was delivered by The allegations of the complaint, on which the plaintiffs recovered judgment for fifteen hundred dollars, are: That the Flint Hill Baptist Church owned a lot of land containing about twelve acres, on which was situated the church building and cemetery, "surrounded by a beautiful and valuable grove of oaks and other trees, which had been cared for and nurtured by the congregation of the said Flint Hill Baptist Church, some of them more than a hundred years, and which added greatly to the value and attractiveness of said property;" that the defendant is a corporation, doing business in the State and owning a pole line through the lands of the church; "that said defendant, on or about the 9th day of July, 1907, wilfully, unlawfully and wantonly, and in total disregard of the rights of plaintiffs and others, members composing the congregation of the Flint Hill Baptist Church, went upon said premises and cut down and destroyed about one hundred or more valuable trees in the grove above mentioned, clearing, through the entire length of said premises, a strip of land over a hundred feet in width, to plaintiffs' damage two thousand dollars; that the members composing the congregation of said Flint Hill Baptist Church are very numerous, aggregating more than one hundred and ninety in number, and that it is impracticable to bring them all before the Court in this action; wherefore, the plaintiffs above named are suing for the benefit of all, and in pursuance of a resolution regularly adopted at a business meeting of said congregation, regularly called and held for said purposes on the twentieth day of July, 1907."
By a motion for nonsuit, by requests to charge, and by a motion for a new trial, the defendant made these questions:
Did the evidence admit of no other inference than that the trees were cut by the American Telephone and Telegraph Company of South Carolina, and not by the American Telephone *Page 105 and Telegraph Company? Was there an entire absence of evidence tending to show that all or any of the trees were cut in wanton or wilful disregard of the rights of the plaintiffs?
If in the first inquiry it be assumed that the two companies named were entirely independent corporations, yet there was abundant evidence from which the jury might infer that the building of this telephone line and the cutting of these trees was the work of the defendant company. The witnesses, Boyd and Faris, testified they went to defendant's office in Charlotte and were told by Reeves, the man in charge, that the trees had been cut by defendant company. Graig, a witness on behalf of defendant, testified he was employed by both companies, and could not tell whether the defendant company embraced the American Telephone and Telegraph Company of South Carolina. As the representative of the defendant company he wrote about the claim of the church for damages to Mr. Wilson, attorney for the plaintiffs, giving as his address the address of the defendant company in Atlanta. All this was certainly some evidence that those who cut the trees were the agents of the defendant company, acting under its direction.
The question whether there was any evidence of wilfulness or wantonness presents more difficulty, and requires a statement of the evidence. The telephone line was constructed over the church property in 1899 under a paper, in form a grant of a right of way to the American Telephone and Telegraph Company of South Carolina, which provided for the construction of the line, but with respect to the trees it conferred only the right "for the trimming of any trees along said lines necessary to keep the wires cleared at least eighteen inches, and with the right to set the necessary guy and brace poles, and attach to trees the necessary guy wires, and with the right to cut down trees necessary to clear the line." This paper was signed by only one of the three trustees of the church *Page 106 While dissatisfaction was expressed with the action of the trustee, Blankenship, in signing the paper, the minutes of a church meeting, held on 12th March, 1899, set forth that "the church endorsed his action, provided they didn't cut down any trees more than eighteen inches from the wires."
The church made no complaint of the use of its land to the extent stipulated in this paper, and there is no notice that the telephone company ever had notice of any dissatisfaction. In 1907 an enlargement of the rights of the company was desired, and one Kitchens, who was in charge of the matter for the telephone company, procured the signatures of L.B. Glover and Z.T. Bailes, two of the three trustees, to a paper which purported to give the same rights as those expressed in the paper signed in 1899, with this important addition: "And it is further agreed that all trees may be cut to a distance of fifty feet from line of poles, and all other trees within falling distance of line may also be cut."
The evidence was plenary and uncontradicted that under the polity of the Baptist Church the trustees have no authority to grant such a right as this paper imports, unless specially authorized by a meeting of the congregation. But there is no ground for the inference that Kitchens, the agent of the company, did not believe the trustees had power to grant the right of way. The trustee, Glover, testified he signed the paper on Kitchens' representation that he would cut only a few trees. The parol representation, alleged to be false here, was not one as to location, where the written instrument was silent on that subject, as in Burnett v. Tel.Co., 71 S.C. 146, 50 S.E., 780; Mason v. Tel. Co., 71 S.C. 150,50 S.E., 781, and Voyles v. Tel. Co., 78 S.C. 430,59 S.E., 78; but it related to a matter so plainly set out in the written instrument that Glover could not have failed to understand it, if he had made the least effort to inform himself Besides, there was nothing to show that when Kitchens obtained the signature he did not in good faith suppose it would be necessary to cut only a few trees. *Page 107 We think, therefore, there was no evidence of fraud in this representation warranting the finding of punitive damages.
But Glover testified that it was expressly agreed that his signature was to be of no effect unless the other trustees signed; and Kitchens admitted this to be true. After making some effort to obtain the signature of the three trustees, Kitchens, without giving any notice to Glover, went forward with the work of cutting the trees, with the signatures of only two trustees. It was certainly some evidence of bad faith and reckless indifference to the rights of the owners of the property that Kitchens acted under this paper and destroyed the property of the church, with the full consciousness that he had not complied with the conditions on which Glover's signature was obtained.
But if this be left out of view, the conduct of the agents of the telephone company, after they entered, was evidence of wantonness. Judging from the description of the church and cemetery given by the witnesses, even those most regardless of the value of trees for their practical use and for their beauty, could not have failed to be impressed with the value to the church of every one of the large trees standing within as well as without the limits mentioned in the paper. Yet there is evidence that at least one of these large oak trees was cut which was not only beyond the fifty feet, but so far away that any measurement would have shown that its fall could not injure the telephone line. This evidence went to show that no care at all was exercised, where the mind even of a careless man could not have failed to advert to the duty to take careful measurements so as to spare all valuable trees not endangering the line. In addition to this, just before the cutting began, Pulliam, the foreman of the men who were about to commence work, was warned by Mr. Blankenship, a member of the church, that the trustees had no authority to give a right of way, and that he was about to commit a very serious trespass on the church property. No attention was paid to the notice. The evidence tended to show that the members *Page 108 of the church did not know that the cutting was to be done. Pulliam, it is true, was only a subordinate agent of the telephone company, but he was the agent whom the company had sent to enter upon the property of the church and cut the trees, for the superior agent, Kitchens, testified he was not there until the work was about over. Pulliam must, therefore, be regarded the agent of the telephone company, empowered by it to assert and exercise the right it claimed to cut the trees. Under these conditions, the warning to him that the trustees had no authority to give the right of way was warning to the company. It was evidence of a wanton disregard of the legal rights of the church that this agent of the telephone company, in the face of warning, went forward to destroy the trees without even an investigation of the authority of the trustees to grant the right of way. This, with the other evidence we have set out, we think, was some evidence on the issue of wilful and wanton violation of the property rights of the plaintiffs. Whether it was sufficient to warrant a finding of punitive damages was a question for the jury.
Defendant's counsel has argued another exception, alleging error in the refusal of the Circuit Court to order a new trial because of improper remarks made by counsel for the plaintiffs in his argument to the jury. The remarks alleged to be objectionable are not set out in the record, nor does it appear that any objection was made to them at the time plaintiffs' counsel was arguing the case. For these reasons the exception on this point cannot be considered.
The judgment of this Court is that the judgment of the Circuit Court be affirmed. *Page 109