This action is to recover damages for the cutting and carrying away of a quantity of timber by the defendants, from lands of the plaintiff. These were swamp lands, were conveyed to the plaintiff by the state, and the patent therefor is dated January 18th, 1871. The timber in question was so cut and taken away during the winter of 1869-70.
The action was brought under the provision of chap. 620, Laws of 1865. The portion of that act which is applicable to the case is as follows: “ Any person who shall - hereafter enter and receive a patent for any school, university, swamp or other state land, shall thereby also acquire the right to all timber, lumber, trees, wood, bark, stone, earth,-mineral,or other materials, cut upon-or removed from such land before the issue of such patent, unless the same shall have -been cut or removed with the assent of the proper state authorities, or sold by the state; and he may seize, sue for and recover such materials, as if the same had been cut or removed from such land after the issue of such patent. The person so obtaining a patent may also bring an action for any trespass upon .or other injury-to such lands committed before such patent shall issue, against the person or persons committing such trespass or other injury, in the manner and with like effect, and he shall be entitled to like damages, as if such trespass or other damages- had been com - *479mitted after tlie patent Rad issued; provided, that .any such purchaser of land previously reported to the commissioners, of school or university lands as trespassed upon, shall pay, in addition to the price thereof, the penalty of fifty per cent, fixed hy chapter 233, General Laws of 1864, and. thereupon any material seized shall be. released to him.”
The patent to the plaintiff from the state was read in evidence under objection, and the plaintiff introduced testimony tending to prove the cutting and taking away of the timber in controversy by the defendants.
A motion for a nonsuit was made on behalf of the defendants,. and denied by the court.
The defendants then offered evidence to prove that a certificate of purchase of the same lands, bearing date July 20th, 1857, had been.issued by the school land commissioners to one Tracy; that Tracy made all payments thereon which became due to the state up to January 1st, 1870; and that, for non-payment of interest, the land was forfeited, and resold to the plaintiff.
The admission of this evidence was objected to by the plaintiff, except to show that the trespass was not willful. The attorney for the defendants then stated to the court that the same was not offered for that purpose, and thereupon the court sustained the .objection, and rejected the evidence so offered. The defendants also introduced testimony on the question of damages. One of the defendants, W. G. Whorton, was called, as a witness .by the defendants, and testified on his direct examination to the value of the timber in controversy. On his cross-examination, he testified that they sold some of it, and he was then asked, “ What did you get for the timber you sold? ” The court overruled an objection that the' question was irrelevant, immaterial and incompetent, and permitted the witness to answer it.
The jury found for the plaintiff and assessed his damages at five hundred dollars. Judgment was entered upon.the verdict, from which judgment the defendants have appealed to this court.
*480I. Conceding that all of tbe timber was so cut and taken during tbe time Tracy beld tbe certificate for tbe purchase of tbe land and before tbe same was forfeited, can tbis action be maintained?
Unless it is defeated by Tracy’s certificate, there seems no doubt that the plaintiff has a right of action against tbe defendants for the timber, although they took it before be became tbe owner of tbe land from which it was taken. Tbe statute above quoted gives that right in plain, unmistakable terms. It is not necessary that the patent should contain an assignment of a right of action in such a case. Such right is acquired by the purchaser by the express terms of the law.
How is the plaintiff’s right of action affected by Tracy’s certificate ? This question is not a difficult one. The certificate contains a provision that in case of the non-payment of any interest on the unpaid purchase money within the time prescribed by law, the certificate, from the time of such failure, shall be utterly void and of no effect This provision is doubtless in strict accordance with the law in that behalf. There was such failure by Tracy to pay interest, by means whereof the certificate became utterly void and of no effect After the resale of the land to the plaintiff, his rights as the patentee of the state were precisely the same as though the certificate had never been issued. If this were not so, then, notwithstanding the broad and emphatic language of the law and of the contract contained in the certificate, such certificate, after forfeiture, would not be “ utterly void and of no effect.” Had the timber been cut and taken away by Tracy, the state, after forfeiture, and before a resale of the land, would have had an action against him therefor ; and when the land is re-sold, the law transfers the cause of action to the patentee. In like manner, in this case, where the timber was cut and removed by the defendants, the state, after forfeiture of Tracy’s certificate, and before the sale to plaintiff, had, and since the issuing of the patent, the plaintiff has, a right of action therefor. It is not necessary to consider what the *481rights o£ Tracy were, during the life of his certificate. Whatever they might have been as regards any claim for damages against these defendants, they reverted to the state by the forfeiture, and by means of the patent passed to the plaintiff under the law of 1865. It necessarily follows from these views that the circuit court was correct in admitting the patent to plaintiff in evidence, and also in rejecting the offered testimony in regard to the certificate of Tracy and the forfeiture thereof.
IL It is claimed that the plaintiff should have been nonsuited because he failed to show affirmatively that the state officers had not sold the timber to the defendants or their assignors ; or that the timber was not cut with the assent of the state authorities; or, that the trespass had not been reported to the state; or, if reported, that the plaintiff had paid the fifty per cent, penalty.
If it was necessary in the first instance for the plaintiff to prove the existence or non-existence of either or all of these conditions (a point which we do not decide), the legal presumption from the record before us is, that he made the requisite proofs. The bill of exceptions does not purport to contain all of the testimony; and, in the absence of a statement therein to that effect, we must presume, in support of the verdict and judgment that every fact which was essential to a recovery by the plaintiff, was duly proved on the trial. This rule is too well settled to require the citation of authorities to sustain it The motion for a nonsuit was, therefore, properly denied.
III. It is objected that the damages assessed by the jury are excessive. But an application of the rule stated in the last preceding paragraph will preclude us from so holding. We must presume that the evidence, in this particular also, sustains the verdict
IY. The only remaining objection is, that the court erred in permitting the defendant Whorton, when on the stand as a witness, to answer the question mentioned in the statement of the *482case. We think it entirely clear that, when a witness has testified in chief to the value of a piece of property which he has bought or sold, he may be asked, on cross-examination, what he paid for it -or what he got for it, and that it is not error to permit the question to be answered.
Finding no error in this record, we must affirm the judgment of the circuit court.
By ike Court.— Judgment affirmed.