89 W. Va. 286 | W. Va. | 1921
By these suits the plaintiffs seek to enjoin the defendants from cutting and removing any of the timber from a tract of '27000 acres of land situate in Braxton, Gilmer and Calhoun ■counties. They are controlled by the same legal principles, for which reason they will be considered together.
On the 11th of July, 1906, Louis Bennett, W. G. Bennett, •Gertrude B. Howell and Mary B. Bowie conveyed to the de
And second party is also each year after January 1st, 1909, to remove the timber from at least fifteen hundred additional acres of said land, to be removed from reasonably compact parcels thereof, though they need not adjoin each other, and the timber then remaining on said parcels is yearly from said January 1st, 1909, to be surrendered back to first parties, their heirs or assigns, by metes and bounds as aforesaid, as-though it had never been sold by them. And it is also expressly understood and agreed that all timber that may remain on said boundaries from which it is hereby conveyed after January 1st, 1925, shall without further notice or motion and by force and effect hereof revert back and belong to said first parties, their heirs or assigns, as though it had never been sold; and all rights, interests and privileges of second party, its successors or assigns, in any timber thereon not then removed shall totally cease thereafter.”
The primary purpose of the defendant Cooperage Company
The Cooperage Company’s operations upon the land commenced in Braxton-county, and, as the timber was removed from the land in that county, extended into Gilmer county, and thence into Calhoun county. In 1913 Louis Bennett, who, it appears, conducted all of the transactions for the grantors in the deed, took up with the Cooperage Company the
In the spring of 1918 the Cooperage Company had removed from the land all of the timber suitable for making staves and headings that was accessible to its tramroads and railroads. It had theretofore cut large quantities of the other timber and sold it to other parties, and had also sold considerable of the other timber upon the stump to other parties who cut and manufactured the same, but at this time there was still remaining on the land a considerable amount of valuable timber which the Cooperage Company determined to sell as a whole. At that time it was under a contract with Vansant Kitchen & Company to cut and deliver all of certain kinds of timber upon the lands at certain prices. Because of the increased cost of cutting the timber and putting it in the streams, this contract had become very burdensome, resulting in considerable loss to the Cooperage Company. Before, however, it could dispose of the remaining timber it was necessary to secure a cancellation of this contract. In March or April, 1918, the Cooperage Company agreed with the defendant Snodgrass to sell the remaining timber upon the land to him for the sum of $6500.00, conditioned, however, upon it being able to secure a cancellation of the Vansant Kitchen & Company contract. Negotiations were entered into with that company which resulted in September, 1918, in a cancellation of that contract upon the payment to that company by the Cooperage Company of the sum of $10,000.00, and on the same day the Cooperage Company executed the contract selling the remaining timber to Snodgrass.
In the spring of 1918 the Cooperage Company removed all of its mills from the land, took up its steel railroads, and had determined to discontinue its operations thereon. In the fall of 1918, after the transfer of the remaining timber
Upon a hearing of the case the court below found that the Cooperage Company had not abandoned its timber rights, but that it still had title to some part of the^timber upon said 27000-acre tract of land at the time it made the conveyance
It appears that when the plaintiffs in the seven last above named suits began to question the right of Snodgrass and Turner to cut the timber remaining on the lands sold to the company by the Bennetts, Snodgrass took up with the Ben-netts the matter of making surrenders of such parts of the land as should have been surrendered up to that time. It appears that there was ample acreage from which the timber had been entirely removed to make up all of the lands which, by the terms of the deed, should have been surrendered, but that in order to make surrender deeds with any degree of accuracy considerable surveying would necessarily have to be done. These tracts of land which were laid off into farms were divided upon the theory of making them convenient for farming purposes, and it was not practicable to conduct the timber operations» so as to entirely remove the timber from any such tract as the work progressed. Snodgrass asked the
The appellants contend that the conclusion of the circuit court that there had been no abandonment of its rights by the interstate Cooperage Company at the time of the transfer of the remaining timber by it to Snodgrass is well supported by the evidence, while the plaintiffs contend that this conclusion of the circuit-court is wrong; that it should have held that the Interstate Cooperage Company had lost, by abandonment, its rights prior to the time it made the deed to Snod-grass, and should not only have perpetuated the injunctions in the seven last above named cases, but in the first above styled ease as well. This contention that the Cooperage Company had abandoned its rights under the timber deed is
Another ground relied upon by the plaintiffs to show abandonment by the Cooperage Company is that it cut over all of this land, sometimes more thán once. This is quite true. The Cooperage Company had cut over practically all of the land so far as the stave and heading timber was concerned. The evidence shows that its method of removing the timber was to go over a tract of land first and cut out the stave and heading timber; then it frequently went over it again and cut out the poplar timber; and still again and cut out the hickory suitable for spokes and handles; and frequently again, and cut out telegraph and telephone poles and other classes of timber. This process was carried on during all of the time it was engaged in its operations, and no objection to conducting the operations in this manner were ever made by any of the interested parties, nor could any objection be made upon that account. There was nothing in the deed which
The plaintiffs, however, insist that the decree of the lower court is right for the reason that according to their construction of the timber deed it must be considered that the lands required to be surrendered each year were automatically surrendered, and this being so there would only remain a little over 8000 acres of the land to be cut over by Snodgrass at the time of the transfer to him. It might be pertinent to inquire what 1500 acres was surrendered each year. There is no pai’tieular 1500 acres of land described in the deed to be surrendered each and every year, nor is there any way pointed out by which the court could ascertain which 1500 acres the purchaser of the timber was required to surrender. It may be doubted whether, if Bennett had attempted to compel the specific execution of the contract in this regard, he could have been successful, for the reason that the subject matter of the surrender each year is not determined by the contract itself, nor is there any method pointed out for the determination of this acreage except the action of the parties, it may be that this provision in the deed is no more than a condition for the violation of which an action at law might be maintained. Our view of the case, however, renders it unnecessary for us to pass upon this question. The defendants insist that Bennett waived this provision of the contract:
Our conclusion is to reverse all of the decrees complained of, dissolve the injunctions, and dismiss the bills in the seven last above named causes, with costs to the appellants in this court, and in thé court below; and as to the first above named cause, it is remanded for the purpose of having the special receiver therein appointed make settlement of his accounts, with directions to thereupon discharge such special receiver and dismiss the suit.
Reversed; Injunctions dissolved; Remanded.