On Petition for Rehearing.
Lotz, J.The appellant has petitioned the court for a rehearing in this case, and makes an earnest and forcible argument in support thereof. It concedes that in the court below and on the former presentation in this court, greater stress was put upon the right of the plaintiff to maintain the action while he had an equitable title only to the lands, and as to the measure of damages. It is assumed that owing to such stress, this court overlooked the importance of other questions and was led into consequent error. As to this intimation, we desire to say that we gave each question a careful consideration and reached the conclusion that substantial justice had been done by the judgment rendered, and that no error intervened that would cause a reversal. In view of the earnestness of appellant’s *488argument, we proceed to give the points made in the petition a further consideration. It is conceded that no coal was taken from Block 16 since the appellee became the owner. Block 11 alone is in question. Upon the trial of the case the appellant produced two witnesses and propounded this question: “What is the market value of the fee simple of plaintiff’s real estate in Block 11, Lamasco, without considering any improvements upon it, and upon the supposition that the coal vein is untouched and that the coal is still there?” The plaintiff’s objection to the question was sustained. “The defendant company offered to show that the total value of the plaintiff’s real estate in Block 11, Lamasco, without the improvements upon it, and upon the supposition that the coal vein under it is untouched, and that all the coal is still there, is not more than $3,000; and that the market value of said real estate, with the coal mined out and taken away, is as much as $2,900; and that the difference between the mai’ket value of the real estate without any coal having been taken from it. by the defendant, and with the coal having been taken from it by the defendant, is not more than $75. The objection of the plaintiff to this question and to this evidence was sustained by the court, and the defendant company at the time excepted to the ruling of the court.”
In its motion for a new trial the appellant, as one of the causes, made this assignment: “The court erred in sustaining the objections of the plaintiff to the following questions to the witnesses Hiram E. Reed and Elder Cooper, and in sustaining the plaintiff’s objection to said question to each of said witnesses, viz.” (Setting out the question as above.)
We have made these quotations from the record in order to present the precise rulings involved.
*489In the original opinion it is stated that the appellee’s evidence of damage was confined strictly to the value of the coal taken, and that no effort was made to recover for any injuries done to the realty.
Appellant’s counsel characterize this statement as a palpable mistake. Let us see who is mistaken.
The gravamen of each paragraph of the complaint is trespass to the real estate and the severance and conversion of the coal. Here are two clear and distinct elements of damage; a permanent injury to the realty, and the conversion of the coal severed. It is immaterial whether the one he designated as trespass and the other trover, or whether the two he combined in an action for trespass. Trespass and trover are sometimes concurrent remedies. When two tortious acts are separate and distinct as to time and place, the general rule is that the pleader must sever or state them in separate counts or paragraphs; hut if several injuries flow from one single act or from one continuous series of acts, they may all he united in one count or paragraph. This is the common law rule. Stephen PL, 39, notes by Heard; Sturgis v. Warren, 11 Vt. 433; and this rule is especially applicable under our code practice, in which distinct forms of action are abolished.
It is true that under the averments of the complaint the plaintiff was entitled to recover damages done to the realty as well as for the coal severed and converted. There were two distinct grounds of recovery stated. But the plaintiff offered no evidence whatever of the amount of damages he sustained on account of any permanent injury to his real estate. He confined his evidence of damages to the amount and value of the coal taken, and no witness testified to, nor was there a scintilla of evidence that the plaintiff suffered other damages, even to the extent of one cent.
*490It is true that the plaintiff might have recovered other damages under the allegations, but if he chose to waive or abandon one ground by failing to offer any evidence thereon, the.appellant should esteem it a matter of congratulation rather than of complaint.
If. expressions be found in the plaintiff’s evidence which might have been used as tending to show that his real estate suffered injury, it is clear that in the absence of any proof of the amount of such damages, such evidence was merely incidental, and that its sole purpose was to show the amount of the coal which had been mined and its value. By no possibility could such evidence be considered as fixing the amount of damages to the realty other than.nominal. The jury could not possibly find damages that were not proved or attempted to be proved, or concerning which there was not a syllable of evidence. At the most, under such evidence, the jury could assess nominal damages only for injuries to the realty; and the authorities are all agreed that it is harmless error to assess or fail to assess nominal damages. Brauns v. Glesige, 130 Ind. 167.
The coal' as it lay in place in the vein was a part of the realty; when it was severed it became a chattel. The severance did not' change its ownership. The owner of the land’was still; the owner of the coal. When it was carried away and converted, the owner was entitled to recover its value as a chattel. Por this injury the defendant must respond independently of any question as to the injury or damages done to the land.
If the plaintiff abandoned his claim for damages as to the injury done his; lands, and gave no evidence whatever as to the amount of such damages, it is- difficult to see upon what hypothesis the defendant was entitled to make proof of the value of the land, either before or after the entry.
*491If the plaintiff had brought suit against the defendant for a personal injury, claiming damages for the pain inflicted, the loss of time, and that he was prevented from fulfilling a contract by which he could have made a large profit; and if upon the trial he offered no evidence whatever as to such contract, would the defendant. be permitted to prove that the plaintiff never had any such contract and that the he suffered no- damages on account thereof? Or suppose the. plaintiff had sued for goods sold and delivered, in one item claiming for coal, and in another for lumber, and if upon the trial he offered evidence as to the coal, but gave none whatever as to the lumber, would it be contended that the defendant should be permitted to prove that it never purchased any lumber of the plaintiff?
Abare statement of such a proposition is its own refutation. But this is precisely the attitude of the appellant in its contention on this point.
We repeat again that the evidence of. the plaintiff as. to the amount of damages was confined, strictly to the coal taken and that not a syllable of evidence as to the amount of the damages to the real estate was given, not even to the extent of one cent. But there are other reasons why there was no error in the rulings of the-court on these points.
Conceding for the sake of the argument that the question was a proper one, was the offer a proper one?. The sustaining of an objection to a proper question, is not of itself reversible error. It must be followed up by an offer to prove. ,
The answer to a question should be responsive to it, neither more nor less. If the offer to prove be impertirnent or exceed the proper response, such additional matter is not available. In Gray v. Elzroth, 10 Ind. App. 587 (592), this court, by Gavin, J., said: “The offer to-*492prove included much more, but the additional matter is not available because not responsive to-the question.” This case furnishes a forcible illustration of the above rule. It is the settled law of this State that in proving the damages to real estate with and without given changes as to its condition, a witness may give his opinion as to its value with, and as to its value without, such changes; but the witness has no right to give his opinion as to the damages, for that is a question for the jury. Yost v. Conroy, 92 Ind. 464; City of Lafayette v. Nagle, 113 Ind. 425.
The only proper response to the question propounded would be the opinion of the witness as to the market value of the land, upon the supposition that the coal remained untouched in the land. If this had been answered, it could have availed the appellant nothing, for without proving the value of the land after its removal the jury would have no basis upon which to estimate the damages. No proper attempt was made to prove the value after the removal.; No question was asked that called for such proof. The offer is also obnoxious because it contains the witness’ estimate of the damages. This is contrary to all the later adjudications of this State. The offer as made was an entirety. The court ruled upon it as an entirety, for there was but one ruling. If some parts, of the offer were responsive to the question and other parts .not responsive, it was the duty of the appellant to separate the proper from the improper.
Nor does the offer show by whom or by what witnesses the proof could be made. The offer included much more than was embraced by the question propounded to the witnesses. No inference arises that certain proof can be made by a witness when no question is propounded that calls for such proof. If the *493evidence Which a party wishes to introduce rests in parol, then the witness from whom the proof is to be made must be placed upon the stand and a proper question propounded, and if objected to, then an offer should he made which in some form should contain a statement to the court that the witness will, if permitted, testify to a certain specified fact. City of Evansville v. Thacker, 2 Ind. App. 370; Smith v. Gorham, 119 Ind. 436. The offer in this case does not show that the witness would, if permitted, testify to a given fact only. It included a fact not responsive to the question. There was an attempt to make proof of a fact concerning which no inquiry was made.
There is still another reason why the rulings on the questions and offer are not available. The motion for a new trial assigns as a cause the sustaining of the objections to the questions only. It is not assigned as a cause that the court erred in excluding the offer. The ruling on the question alone does not present available error. To make it so it should be coupled with the ruling in excluding the offer. This might he done either in a separate cause, or by embracing both rulings in one specification. It takes both rulings to present available error, and no complaint is made in the motion for a new trial as to the ruling in excluding the offer.
Conceding without deciding that the plaintiff was entitled to recover damages other than for taking coal, and that the defendant was entitled to show that there was no injury done the realty, still, if the defendant made no proper effort to that end, there was no error in the ruling of the court excluding such testimony, nor in overruling the motion for a new trial.
It is sufficient for the purposes of this case to say that the defendant propounded no question nor made any proper effort to show the value of the real estate after *494the removal of the coal, at any time, and that it made no complaint in the motion for a new trial, on account of the exclusion of such evidence.
As to instructions one and five given by the court it is only necessary to say th'at appellant did not assail them in its original brief.
It is further contended that the court in its former opinion summarily disposed of appellant’s objections to certain evidence going to the intention of a witness, Jabez Wooley; and that the admission of such evidence was reversible error.
The admission of evidence tending to show the knowledge and intention of appellant’s agents, at the time of making the entry, was proper and important under the issues formed. If the trespass was committed intentionally, then the law fixes one rule; and if unintentionally, then another rule, for the measurement of the damages.
Whatever the rule may be elsewhere, it is settled in this State, that in an inadvertent or unintentional trespass upon lands, the damages should be measured by the permanent injury done, plus the value of the prod-met severed immediately after the severance, less the cost of the labor expended upon them; the burden being on the defendant to show such cost. If the trespass be intentionally committed, the damages should be measured by the permanent injury done, plus the value of the products severed at the time of their conversion, or their highest markeLprice at any time between the severance and the conversion; and the trespasser is not entitled to any reduction on account of the labor expended on such products. It is held in some cases that the plaintiff is entitled to the highest price of his property from the time of the taking to the time of the trial. It was said by the Supreme Court, in Ellis v. *495Wire, supra: “Or it has been held that the law will, upon the principle of natural justice, that a wrongdoer ought not to be allowed to make a profit by his own willful tort, treat the conversion of property of fluctuating value as occurring at such time between the taking and the trial, as the property bears the highest price in the market.” In Woodenware Co. v. U. S., supra, which was an action for timber cut and removed, it is stated in the syllabus, that where the defendant is a willful trespasser the measure of the damages is the full value of the property at the time and place of the demand, or of suit brought with no deduction for labor or expense.
That the appellant did commit the trespass and sever, remove and convert the coal, were undisputed facts.
The witness Jabez Wooley was the superintendent of the appellant’s coal mine at the time the entry upon the plaintiff’s lands was made. It was an admitted fact that there was one main entry running south from the shaft, from which several entries were made to the east; the third east entry being under the plaintiff’s land. Wooley testified, that “I thought the third east entry was under the plaintiff’s land. I aimed to run it under Block 11, which is now his land. * * * The third east entry was driven under Block 11. * * * I supposed we owned the coal under Block 11; I had been informed that the company had purchased the coal under that Block from Mr. Edward Law, who owned the Block at that time. * * * It was my understanding all the time -that the coal under Block 11, which is claimed by the plaintiff, was owned by the Sunnyside Coal and Coke Company.”
John Wooley, another witness, testified that he wás the manager in charge of the business of the defendant,' other than the working of the mine, and that he had *496been very often in the mine, and that “while the former company was working this mine, I bought for that company the coal under Block 11 from Edward Law, who was the owner of plaintiff’s land in Block 11 at that time; I paid him for it with a bill he owed the company for coal of $36.00 ; he made no deed or other writing to the company; the purchase of the coal was made by a verbal contract only.”
It is also true that another witness for the appellant, E. P. Huston, testified that he had been a member of the board of directors of the defendant company since its organization, and its secretary, and kept the minutes, and had been present at all of the meetings of the board; that the board of directors at no time had any notice or information that the company’s superintendent or other servant was taking coal from under the plaintiff’s land, or was taking coal that did not belong to the company, until a few days before bringing this suit.
It is not necessary in order to carry knowledge to a corporation to show that its board of directors had such knowledge. The merest novice in the law knows that the knowledge possessed by an agent, while in the act of performing his principal’s business within the scope of his authority, is imputed to the principal. So far as legal liability is concerned under such circumstances, it is unimportant whether the principal ever had actual knowledge. The knowledge of the agent is the knowledge of the principal in legal contemplation.
An inadvertent act is one done without consideration or intention; one not proceeding from design. Lands are divided into parcels or tracts. If one intend to enter upon a particular tract, and by mistake, accident or without design enter upon another tract, he commits an inadvertent trespass, because he had no intention, de*497sign or purpose to do the thing which he did. He intended to enter upon another and entirely different tract; but the defendant’s agents designed to enter upon Block 11. They did precisely the thing they intended to do. They were never mistaken as to the lands from which they were taking the coal. At the most they were only mistaken as to the legal rights of the defendant. A mistake as to locality or place, and a mistake as to legal rights are entirely dissimilar. The one is an overt physical act, the other a. mental conception. Conveyances of lands or of any interest therein can only be made by deed in writing, subscribed, sealed and acknowledged, except leases for a term not exceeding three years; section 3335, R. S. 1894. At the most the appellant only had a license from a former owner, and a conveyance revoked the license. The undisputed evidence shows that Edward Law, the person from whom the appellant claimed to have obtained the license, did not own or have any interest in Block 11 since June 11, 1883, long before the appellant came into existence. The appellant did not even have color of title. A person who makes improvements upon lands without color of title cannot recover for the same. Bryan v. Uland, 101 Ind. 477. Much less then can' a trespasser, who has no shadow of right, recover for the labor expended upon products removed. Under the undisputed facts of this case, and the law as applicable to them, the appellant could not have obtained even a license from Law (for he never had a shadow of title to Block 11 after June 11, 1883, and the appellant was not incorporated until 1886), we have then two of appellant’s agents admitting that they committed the trespass intentionally. They did not act inadvertently, they knew what they were doing when they took the coal. This, in legal *498effect, made the trespass an intentional one on the part of the corporation.
Conceding that it was improper to permit the plaintiff to show the declarations of £he witness Jabez Wooley, before and after the trespass, concerning his knowledge and intention at the time of the entry, it is difficult to see how the appellant could be harmed thereby, for the intentional character of the trespass, both in law and in fact, stands admitted. The substantial fact is admitted, and now we are asked to reverse because the court afterwards permitted the plaintiff to give certain declarations concerning an admitted fact. It is harmless error to admit improper evidence which only tends to prove a fact otherwise clearly shown by competent evidence. Stumph v. Miller, 142 Ind. 442.
If the plaintiff was permitted to give some evidence that tended to impeach or discredit the witness, Jabez Wooley, surely the defendant ought not to complain, for he was the plaintiff’s witness.
In speaking of the refusal of the court to give an instruction relating to the coal under Delaware street and Eleventh avenue, we stated in our former opinion that there was no evidence that any coal was mined under either, during the time of appellee’s ownership.
Appellant’s counsel characterize this statement as an evident mistake, although it is conceded to be true as to Delaware street. Two maps of surveys were introduced in evidence, one made by the witness Saunders, and one by the witness Minto. The Saunders map shows that the main south entry of the mine extended across the west end of Block 11, but did not reach or extend under Eleventh avenue. The Minto map shows that the entry extended a short distance under Eleventh avenue. The witness Minto testified that he made the *499survey at the request of the defendant : ‘ ‘ The map shown me (the one introduced in evidence) is a copy of the map I made from that survey; the main south entry runs a little east of south; in doing this work I established my base so as to secure a perfectly correct result, and the survey of the mine was made in all respects correctly; the main south entry is east of Eleventh avenue. ” It will he seen from this, that the witness did not testify that the copy was a correct one. On the contrary he expressly contradicted the copy, for he said the main south entry is east of Eleventh avenue. It could not be east of it, if it was under it. The map went in evidence coupled with the explanations of the witness, and when considered with that explanation, it conclusively appears that the entry did not extend under the street. Appellant’s own witness and business manager, John Wooley, testified that “all of the coal under plaintiff’s land, in Block 11, which is west of the main south entry as shown by the Saunders map is still there, none of it has been mined out.”
We have here, then, three witnesses all of whom testify positively when their attention is called to it that no coal was taken from under Eleventh avénue. We have also one map of a survey which shows that no coal was taken from under this avenue. As against this array we have a copy of a map which is not shown to be a correct copy of the original, and which is expressly contradicted by the maker of the original.
Under this evidence, and under the’rules of law governing in such circumstances, was not this court justified in assuming that there was no evidence that any coal was taken from under the street ? It is not true that where there is any evidence whatever concerning a fact, the party is entitled to go to the jury thereon.
*500The old rule that a case must go to the jury, or a fact must he left to the jury if there is a scintilla of evidence, has been long since exploded. The better and improved rule is not to see that there is any evidence, a scintilla, but whether there is any upon which the jury can, in any justifiable view, find for the party producing it. The evidence adduced to prove a fact must have some legal weight. ‘ ‘ There is no practical or logical difference between no evidence and evidence without legal weight. ” Tf the evidence adduced is so slight and inconclusive that no rational, well constructed mind can infer from it the fact which it is offered to establish, it is the duty of the court to instruct the jury that there is no evidence warranting it to find the fact. Connor v. Giles, 76 Me. 132; Thomp. Trials, sections 2246, 2249.
The court and jury may disregard evidence which is too slight and trifling to be considered and acted upon by an intelligent, reasonable person. Connor v. Giles, supra.
So, on the other hand, when the material facts are not controverted in any essential respect, the court may direct the verdict. Faris v. Hoberg, 134 Ind. 269; Hall v. Durham, 109 Ind. 434; Wabash R. W. Co. v. Williamson, 104 Ind. 154; Kavanaugh v. Taylor, 2 Ind. App. 502.
The case of Cincinnati, etc., R. R. Co. v. Wood, 82 Ind. 593, was an action brought against a railroad company for killing a horse, at a point where the road was not fenced. In the Supreme Court the company contended that the evidence proved without contradiction that this portion of its track was used for switching purposes daily, and that it was not required to fence at that point. Several witnesses for the plaintiff testified that no business was transacted by the company at the *501point where the horse entered, except to ran its locomotives and trains over the main track; that cars were neither loaded nor unloaded at that point by persons doing business with the company. The witnesses thus testifying were in no way connected with the business of the company; they were merely casual observers. A number of witnesses connected with the business of the road, and who had ample opportunities to know, testified that the grounds were used by persons doing business with the road; that teams in carrying freight to and from the road used the grounds, and that cars were often coupled and uncoupled there for switching-purposes. The court sustained the company’s contention, and held that while the testimony was not in complete harmony there was no conflict; that the plaintiff’s witnesses should be understood as testifying that, as far as they had observed or noticed, the grounds had not been used by the company.
If there was no conflict, and no evidence which legitimately tended to show that the grounds were not used for railroad purposes other than operating the trains over the main track under the facts of that case, then there is surely no evidence in this case that has legal weight which tends to prove that coal was taken from under the street. With such rales prevailing with reference to directing the verdict, the court surely would have the right to determine that there was no evidence on a given point and refuse an instruction that was not applicable to the evidence. Even if it be conceded that there was some evidence, no matter how slight, which tended to show that the excavation extended under the street, still it does not follow- that coal was taken from the excavation. No witness testified that any coal was taken from under the street.
Under the rule announced by the above authorities *502we repeat that there w as no evidence that any coal was mined either under Delaware street or Eleventh avenue during the appellee’s ownership. It is also a well settled rule that a lot-owner .owns to the center of the adjoining street, and is entitled to the mineral within the street. This being true, the appellee was entitled to recover for the coal under the street, and the instruction asked was erroneous.
To reverse a case for such a trivial reason and under the circumstances disclosed by the record, would be equivalent to disregarding the forms and ends of justice.
Appellant earnestly insists that the verdict is grossly excessive, and that the judgment is an “outrage.” We have given the evidence rélating to the damages a careful consideration and do not concur in this statement. It must he remembered that the undisputed evidence shows that the trespass was an intentional one, and that the appellee was entitled to the highest price for his coal at any time from the conversion to the bringing of the suit, and that, too, without any reduction on account of the labor expended upon it. Appellant’s business manager testified that the company sold coal during the mining operations on appellee’s land, and before this action was instituted, at prices varying from 4f to 9 cents per bushel. The undisputed evidence show^s that the area of Block 11, owned by appellee, was about one and one-third acres. There was some controversy as to the quantity of coal under appellee’s land. One of the witnesses, a mining expert, estimated the quantity at 200,000 bushels per acre. Another witness estimated the quantity under plaintiff’s land at 282,000 bushels. There was also a controversy as to the «amount removed. The great weight of the testir mony tended to prove that at least two-thirds of the quantity had been removed. The appellant’s business *503manager testified that from one-fifth to one-sixth of the whole had been mined out. Another one of appellant’s witnesses estimated that from 37,000 to 40,000 bushels had been removed by the appellant. This was the lowest estimate put upon it by any witness.
This evidence would have warranted a verdict for a much larger amount for the coal taken alone.
The appellant has been in error throughout in supposing that the plaintiff was not entitled in this form of action to recover for the value of the coal after it became a chattel. Lord Hatherly, in the house of lords, in the case of Livingstone v. Ranyards Coal Co., 5 App. Cas. 25, said: “There is no doubt that if a man furtively and in bad faith robs his neighbor of his property, and because it is underground, is probably for some little time not detected, the court of equity in this country will struggle, or I should rather say will assert, its authority to punish the fraud by fixing the person with the value of the whole of the property which he has so furtively taken and making him no allowance in respect of what he has done as would have been justly made to him, if the parties had been working by agreement.”
This case when stripped of all matters about which there is a controversy, and upon its undisputed facts, narrows itself down to this. The appellant knowingly and intentionally entered upon the appellee’s land and mined, removed and converted to its own use at least 37,000 bushels of coal. The highest price of coal after the commission of the trespass until the bringing of the suit, was 9 cents per bushel; this would equal $3,300, while the appellee had judgment for $2,750 only.
If it be conceded that every ruling made in the case (except the one holding that the plaintiff is entitled to maintain the action) is erroneous, that every ruling on the admission and exclusion of evidence, of giving and *504refusing to give instructions, and of damages as to the realty, still upon the conceded and undisputed facts—facts proved by the appellant itself and the law as applied to them, the judgment is one against which the appellant has no cause for complaint.
Filed March 4, 1896. Filed March 4, 1896.If it should be admitted that every contention the appellant makes is well taken, except the first, there can be no reversal, for the judgment rendered is right, notwithstanding such intervening errors. When substantial justice has been done by the judgment rendered, intervening errors are unavailing. Not only the statutes (sections 401, 670, Burns R. S. 1894), and the precedents,' but a proper regard for the administration of justice prevent a reversal, under such circumstances.
Petition overruled.
Gavin, C. J.I concur that there was no available error in refusing the evidence of value offered under the rule laid down in Gray v. Elzroth, but I am of opinion that for some of the other causesi urged the petition should be granted.