The important question on this appeal is whether the evidence reasonably tends to sustain the verdict. That the defendant wrongfully appropriated some of the plaintiff’s logs is evident; but, as to how many were so appropriated, it must be admitted that the testimony is by no means explicit. But, upon a careful examination, we think the evidence reasonably tends to show that' the plaintiff ■ lost a much larger number of logs than the verdict charges to the defendant; that the lost logs could only be accounted for upon the supposition that they or a largé portion of them — as many, at least, as the verdict charges to defendant — were taken into defendant’s boom, and were the same which were sawed by him, and appropriated to his own use. We think the jury might well have come to the significant conclusion that the defendant failed to show satisfactorily how he came into possession of the great majority of the logs in his boom upon any other basis.
There were two marks of logs claimed by plaintiff, XIX and 0 % 0, some of each of which were found in defend*444ant’s boom, and we're appropriated by him. The plaintiff testified that he owned both of the marks. To the former he showed title by the records of the office of the surveyor general of the second district; to the latter he showed title by parol evidence of transfers not in writing, and which had not been entered in the proper surveyor general’s office. .
The statute provides (Gen. St. 1878, c. 32, § 19,) that “no sale or transfer of any log-mark, or sale, mortgage or other transfer or encumbrance of any logs cut in this state, or which come into any district of this state, shall be legal or binding, except between thé parties thereto, unless such sale, transfer, mortgage or encumbrance is in writing, and recorded in the office of the surveyor general in the district where such logs were cut, or into which they have come if cut in another state.”
The court below in effect held that, under this statutory provision, a transfer of a log-mark and logs, not in writing and not recorded in the proper surveyor general’s office, is an absolute nullity, except between the immediate parties to such transfer; that it is such nullity even in favor of a mere stranger or trespasser, who has appropriated to his own use logs marked with such log-mark, without any authority whatever. The jury were accordingly instructed that the plaintiff could recover nothing on account of defendant’s appropriation of logs marked 0 % O. This was wrong. The meaning of the statute is that no unwritten and unrecorded transfer, etc., of a log-mark or logs shall be valid or binding, except between the parties thereto, as respects a party wrho has acquired some right thereto (as, for instance, by a transfer) from the person who, upon the records of the surveyor general’s office, appears to be owner of the same. It is not intended to protect a mere stranger, or trespasser, who has no show of right beyond what arises from his unlawful appropriation and possession.
The practical importance of this error of the court below is this: The jury are to be presumed to have followed the *445instruction of the court; but if, upon the evidence, they could not have arrived at the amount of their verdict -without taking into account the logs marked O 0, thus disregarding the instruction given, the fact that they did take those logs into account is not an error prejudicial to the. defendant, and furnishes no ground for a new trial.' Colter v. Mann, 18 Minn. 96.
Order affirmed.