The questions presented by this appeal are the relative rights of a life tenant and the owner of the fee of the same land in respect to growing timber.
The court found substantially the following facts: Appellee by the last will of her husband was given a life estate in 180 acres of land all in one body and constituting one farm, which was the home of the husband and appellee at the time of his death and since his death appellee has been in possession. By the will appellant Brugh, a daughter, became the owner in fee of forty acres of the land. This tract of forty acres is inclosed, with a cross-fence dividing it, and a tract of about twelves acres is timber, consisting principally of oak, ash, maple and bass wood. Prior to December 12, 1904, appellant Brugh sold the saw timber on the land, for prices named, and intended to cut and remove enough to pay a debt of $225 owing to appellee, and declared her intention to sell all the declining saw timber and enough timber to pay the above note, but was notified by appellee not to cut any of the timber; but on the above date appellant Brugh, by her agents, cut seven growing trees into logs. At the time suit was brought the fences were in need of repair, appellee having permitted them to become out of repair. The saw timber was worth from $325 to $350, and there was enough other timber to make 250 to 300 fence posts. Of the forty-seven trees of saw timber about half were “on the decline.” The “declining timber” and the greater part of all the timber will be needed in making repairs during the life estate, and if appellants carry out their intention and remove the timber there will not be sufficient timber left to make needed repairs. Eemoving the timber will lessen the value of appellee’s interest and work to her a permanent injury.
As the cutting of the timber was wrongful we fail to see how appellant Brugh can be permitted to take advantage of her own wrong and claim the timber that she had cut before the suit was brought. What disposition, as between the life tenant and the reversioner, should be made of timber that is deteriorating in quality and value, but not needed to make repairs, is not presented by this appeal, as the court Ends that practically all the timber will be needed by the life tenant in making repairs.
Judgment affirmed,