v.
A. C. Tuxbury Land and Timber Co.
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Defendant appeals from judgment on verdict for plaintiffs for $10,000 damages done to plaintiffs’ lands and the reserved timber thereon by defendant in cutting and removing therefrom certain timber which defendant had acquired the right to cut and remove under conveyances from plaintiffs.
In 1902, plaintiffs conveyed to another all the pine timber of ten inches (stump diameter) and upwards, at the time of cutting, on several tracts of their lands aggregating more than 7,000 acres. The deed contains the privileges and easements usually found in such grants, and, among them, the right “to do any and all other things, that may be necessary or convenient for the cutting, handling, hauling and removing of the timber.” In 1910, plaintiffs extended the time for cutting until April 20, 1930. Having acquired these rights, defendant cut the timber in 1913.
There was on the lands a valuable growth of small pines, under the size sold, and timber of various other kinds, which was reserved. Plaintiffs alleged that, over their protests, defendants used steam skidders in removing its timber, and thereby damaged and destroyed the young pines and other reserved timber and undergrowth so that their lands were practically denuded and greatly damaged, and that, in so conducting its operations, defendant acted wilfully and in reckless disregard of their rights.
Defendant denied the cutting Or destroying of any timber that it did not have the right to cut or destroy under its license, and denied all allegations of wrongdoing, but admitted and justified thp use of skidders, under the terms of the grant, on the ground that it was a convenient method of handling and removing the timber. At the trial, defendant [*75] proved that the use of skidders was a convenient method of handling and removing the timber, which was not controverted.
Appellant complains because the Court instructed the jury that it was bound to exercise its rights in a reasonably careful way, with due regard to plaintiffs’ rights, the error assigned being that the Court thereby brought into the case the issue of defendant’s negligence, and allowed the jury to give damages therefor, when there was no allegation of negligence.
It must be conceded that defendant is sustained in this contention by the decision of this Court in Proctor v. Railway, 61 S. C. 170, 39 S. E. 351, and in other cases that have followed that decision. In that case, the plaintiff was a p|ssenger, and was wrongfully ejected from the train. He sued’theYaiTway company for damages, and alleged that his ejection was wilful. This Court held that the trial Court erred in instructing the jury that they might include in their verdict damages arising from negligence. The decision was rested upon the ground that the wrongful ejection gave rise to two separate and distinct causes of action, one for compensatory damages, arising from negligence, and the other for punitive damages, for the wilful invasion of plaintiff’s right, and that, as negligence was not alleged, there could be no recovery on that cause of action.
With the utmost respect for the opinion of the very able and learned Justice who wrote for the Court in that case, we venture to think that we can show that the decision was wrong and ought to be overruled. In fact, when followed [*76] to its logical conclusion, it led to such inconvenient, if not unjust, consequences in the practical administration of justice that it has already been overruled in effect, though not in so many words.
The case was remanded for a new trial, and plaintiff moved to be allowed to amend his complaint, so as to allege negligence. The motion was refused, on the ground that he would thereby be allowed to change substantially his cause of action, or to add a new, separate, and distinct cause of action, which could not be done by way of amendment. And that decision was affirmed by this Court. Proctor v. Railway, 64 S. C. 491, 42 S. E. 427. But that decision has been overruled, in effect in Taylor v. Railroad Co., 81 S. C. 574, 82 S. E. 1113, and in several other cases that have followed the decision in Taylor’s case.
Again, if in such cases there are two causes of action, the plaintiff is not required to sue upon both at the same time, or in the same complaint. Under the provisions of the Code, he may do so; but there is no law compelling him to do so. It follows that he could bring one action, charging-negligence only, and recover his actual damage. He could then bring another action, alleging that he was wilfully injured, and recover punitive damages; and, if he should fail in the first, the judgment would not bar the second. Upon the reasoning of Proctor’s case, that is precisely what has been attempted in at least two cases that have found their way to this Court, to wit, Greer v. Telegraph Co., 105 S. C. 147, 89 S. E. 782, and Horton v. Pullman Co., 96 S. E. 289. In both these cases we hold that the second action could not be maintained, on the ground that a single cause of action cannot be split into several actions. In effect, these, decisions overruled Proctor’s case.
The error in that decision was in confusing the cause of action with the nature of the damages which the law imposed upon the defendant as a consequence of its invasion of the plaintiff’s right. In Emory v. Hazard Powder Co., 22 S. [*77] C. 476, 53 Am. Rep. 730, this Court adopted Pomeroy’s definition of the term “cause of action,” tO' wit, that it is a primary right, invaded without legal justification or excuse. Pom. Rem. 452, et seq. Let us apply that definition to the facts of Proctor’s case. His right was to be carried. The defendant invaded that right by ejecting him from the train, without legal justification or excuse. The two things combined the right, and its invasion completed his cause of action. The damages which the law imposed upon the defendant as a consequence of its invasion of his right was the relief which it gave him for the wrong done him. The nature or kind of damages which the law allowed him to recover depended upon the manner in which his right was invaded, which is the same as to say, the nature of the relief allowed him depended upon the manner in which his right was invaded. By the manner in which his right was invaded, we mean the mental attitude of defendant in doing the wrong; if negligently, the relief was compensatory damages; if wilfully, the relief should have been compensatory and exemplary damages; but in either event damages was the relief. It follows that the relief alone, and not the cause of action, was determined or affected by the mental attitude of the defendant in doing the wrong. The authorities agree that the relief is no part of the cause of action.
Theoretically negligence and wilfulness imply different states of mind on the part of the tort-feasor. Pickens v. Railway, 54 S. C. 498, 32 S. E. 567. But those words and words of like import are not always used to express the precise mental state of the wrongdoer. They are used as often to express different degrees of culpability in wrongdoing. Hence we constantly find in textbooks, decisions, and statutes such expressions as “gross negligence,” “reckless negligence,” and “wilful negligence.” Our crossing statute (Civil Code, sec. 3230) uses the expression “gross or wilful negligence.” Such expressions may not be technically accurate, for, theoretic.ally, the same act cannot be both negligent and wilful. But they are not misleading. Negligence may be so gross that it would be difficult, if not impossible, to distinguish it from wilfulness; and so we say that it may be so gross as to warrant the inference of wilfulness, which shows that the one shades into the other almost imperceptibly.
It follows that the same state of facts may give rise to a cause of action for either negligence or wilfulness, or, indeed, for both, as where different acts, some of which are negligent and' some wilful, proximately contribute to the injury. In either event, the injured party ought not to be required to determine at his peril the state of mind of the wrongdoer. If he charge the greater wrong and prove only [*79] the lesser, the wrongdoer has suffered no prejudice, for if he come prepared to defend against the greater, he would be equally prepared to defend against the lesser. Upon analogous reasoning, in a forum where much greater strictness in pleading is required, the defendant may be charged with murder, which requires proof of malice, and convicted of manslaughter, which requires proof of killing in sudden heat and passion, or by negligence. This is allowable on the theory that the greater offense, includes the lesser, even though they grow out of different states of mind on the part of the offender. In the determination of cases, Courts ought to proceed upon practical rather than theoretical considerations.
The conclusions which we have reached are in harmony with the true intent and requirement of the following provisions of section 216 of the Code:
“In all actions ex delicto in which vindictive, punitive or exemplary damages are claimed in the complaint, it shall be proper for the party to recover also his actual damages sustained, and no party shall be required to make any separate statement in the complaint in such'action, nor shall any party be required to elect whether he will go to trial for actual or other damages, but shall be entitled to submit his whole case to the jury under the instruction of the Court.”
[*80]
Appellant complains of this as a charge upon the facts, as in effect telling the jury that a trespass had been committed. If so, it was only by inference, and when the charge is considered as a whole, the inference is not warranted, and we are satisfied that the jury were not misled.
Judgment affirmed.