The complaint contains three counts. The first is trover for the conversion of a. lot of timber alleged to have been cut from certain lands described in the count. The second count is in trespass, and counts for recovery on the cutting of timber by the defendant on the lands described in the first count of the complaint. The third count is for trespass on the same lands, without any averment particularizing the acts of trespass. The controversy in the case grew out of the purchase and sale of growing pine timber on land of which Bettie Daffin was the owner at the time of the purchase and sale. On the 11th day of Nqvemher, 1901, Bettie Daffin and her husband sold to the defendant (appellant) “all the pine timber, twelve inches in diameter and up,” then standing and being on certain lands described in a conveyance Avhich they on the same day executed to the defendant, and which is in the' following laguage:
“State of Alabama, Olarke County.
“KnoAv all men by these presents, that, for and in consideration of nine hundred and sixty dollars, we do, grant, bargain, sell and convey unto the C. W. Zimmerman Mfg. Co. all the pine timber, tAvelve inches in diameter and .up, now standing and being on the folloAving described lands, situated in Clarke county, Alabama, to-wit: Northeast quarter of northeast quarter, south half of northeast quarter, north half of southeast quarter, section 20, west half of northwest quarter, section 21, township 8 north, range 3 east. To have and to hold to C. W. Zimmerman Mfg. Co., their successors and assigns, forever. And we coArenant Avith' the C. W. Zimmerman Mfg. Co., that Ave are seized in fee of the said premises, and that we Avill warrant and defend the same to the said C. W. Zimmerman Mfg. Co. against the lawful claims of all persons whomsoever. For the same consideration we do grant to C. W. Zimmerman Mfg. Co. free rights of way over and across any lands OAvned by us for all railroads, dirt roads, and log ditches, which it may desire to construct.
*384 “The said C. W. Zimmerman & Co.' is allowed two years from this date within which to cut and remove the timber herein above conveyed.
“Witness our hands and seals this the 11th day of November, 1901.
“W. W. Daffin. (L. S.)
“Bettie Daffin. (L. S.)”
Mrs. Daffin died, leaving surviving her several children and her husband. The husband is the sole plaintiff in this case. The timber was cut on the land after the expiration of the time limit specified in the contract,, and after the death of Mrs. Daffin.
The first contention of the appellant requires us to construe the contract of sale and determine the interest of the parties in the timber. The plaintiff’s contention is that the defendant (grantee in the conveyance), not having cut and removed the timber within the time limit fixed in the second paragraph of the sale contract, forfeited its title to the timber; and this contention prevailed in the trial court.' The defendant’s contention is that the conveyance is absolute, carrying and vesting the title to the timber in the grantee, and that the time limit for cutting and removing simply limits its right of the use of the soil for keeping and maintaining the trees or timber on it.
The precise question has never been before this court for consideration. But such contracts have been frequently considered and construed by the courts of other states, and the decisions are not by any means harmonious. In 28 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d Ed.) p. 541, we find this statement in respect to such contracts: “Contracts for the sale of standing trees to be removed within a specified time has generally be construed by the courts as sales of only SO' many trees as the vendee might cut and remove within the time designated; the balance remaining the property of the vendor.’ ’ Many cases are cited in note 9 to support the statement. The note includes cases from the courts of Georgia, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New York, Ohio, Vermont, and Winconsin. There is this further statement of the law in the Encyclopedia above quoted from:
*385 “Such a sale may, however, he regarded as absolute, and the agreement to remove as a covenant, in which case the timber remains the property of the purchaser, although not'removed within the time provided for, and for the failure to remove the vendor may bring an action on the covenant. A wrongful taking of the timber by the vendor would in such a case constitute a conversion, for which the purchaser would have a right of action.” In support of this statement the decisions of the courts of Alabama, Indiana, Michigan, and Massachusetts are cited in note 1. In addition to the cases cited in the Encyclopedia, we have found and examined many others.
To review all the cases Avould extend this opinion to very great length, but in reading the different cases it has been found that each of them turned upon the terms of the particular contract then under consideration. In the case of Mengal Box Co. v. Moore & McFerrin, a Tennessee case, reported in
In this jurisdiction the case nearest in point is that of Magnetic Ore Co. v. Marbury Lumber Co.,
It is insisted by appellee that the case is not applicable, for the reason that no time limit is expressed in the deed involved there. But this court has held that when there is a conveyance of land, and a reservation of-growing trees, and no time is fixed for their removal, a reasonable time only is alloAved in Avhich the entry can be made for the purpose of taking the trees off the land. — Heflin v Bingham,
To adopt the insistence of the appellee — plaintiff below — would give the paragraph the effect of a condition or proviso to the granting clause of the deed, and, although the grantee paid full value for the trees, yet, by. its failure to cut and- remove the trees within the two years a forfeiture of the title would be worked. “A deed will not be construed to create an estate on condition, unless language is used which, according to the rules of law, ex proprio vigore, imports a condition, or the intent of the grantor to make a conditional estate is otherwise clearly and unequivocally indicated. Conditions are not to be raised readily by inference or argument.” — 2 Devlin on Deeds, § 970; Elyton Land Co. v. Railroad,
If the limitation as to time of cutting and removal should be construed as a covenant on the part .of the purchaser that it would cut and remove the timber in the time specified, the title to the timber would remain in the purchaser after the time limited had expired, and he could still enter upon the premises and remove the same at his .pleasure, being liable to the’ vendor for such damages as he should cause in so doing. The vendor would also have a right of action against the vendee for a breach of the covenant in not performing the covenant as agreed; or it may be that the vendor would be entitled to remove the timber after the time limit himself, but not to appropriate it -to his own use. In the case of Walker v. Johnson,
If, in the present case, the intention of the grantors that the title to the timber should revert to them on failure of the grantee to cut and remove it within the time specified, it would have been an easy matter to have expressed it in the deed; but on the face of the instrument it is at least a question of doubt as to whether the limitation is a condition subsequent of the contract of sale or a covenant, and, following the trend of the authorities above referred to in respect to- the construction to be adopted when such question is doubtful, and in the light of the ruling in the case of Magnetic Ore Co. v. Marbury Lumber Co., supra, we hold that the clause or paragraph in the deed in respect to the timé for cutting and removing the timber is a covenant, and does not operate a forfeiture of the title on the failure of the vendee to cut and remove the timber within the time specified. — Magnetic Ore Co., v. Marbury Lumber Co., supra; Howard v. Lincoln, 13 Me, 22; Goodwin v. Hubbard, 47 Id. 595; Knotts v. Hydrick, 12 Rich. Lew, 314; Halstead v. Jessup,
It also follows that charge 1, requested by the defendant, should have been given. The foregoing- makes it unnecessary to consider charges 2, 3, and 4, refused to the defendant. Charge 5, refused to the defendant, is bad in form and was properly refused. Charge 6, requested by the defendant, should have been given.
Réfusecí charges 7 and 8 involved the question of plaintiff’s' right to maintain the suit on any count of the complaint; he being only a life tenant. A life tenant cannot maintain trover for the conversion of trees, nor trespass' dé bonis' for the taking of them. This results from the nature of his interest in the premises, but he may maintain trespass quare clausum fregit. — 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, 450, 453; 15 Ency. PI. & Pr.
It is unnecessary to consider the oral charge of the court in respect to the measure of damages, further than to say that it is erroneous.
Beversed and remanded.
