75 Fla. 729 | Fla. | 1918
This is a suit in equity brought by the appellees, who will hereafter for convenience be referred to as complainants, against the appellants, who will be referred to as defendants, in the Circuit Court of Pasco County.
The bill in substance alleges the ownership in fee simple in the complainants of certain described lands in Pasco county, and that the complainants by deed dated January 20th, 1902, conveyed to Zelpha Copley “all of the cypress timber on the above described land, with the right of .entering on said land for the purpose of working said cypress timber, and in consideration of your orator’s permitting the said grantee to have a reasonable time within which to remove said timber, it was agreed that the grantee should pay the State and county taxs on said land pending the removal of said cypress timber, and it was understood and agreed that as your orator did not desire the immediate possession of said land, said grantee should have a reasonable time within which to remove the same;” that thereafter, on September 15th, 1902, said Copley sold and conveyed the said cypress timber to Jacob Cummer and others who thereupon on January 22nd, 1904, by deed conveyed said timber to the Cummer Company, a corporation; that all of said deeds
The prayer is that the defendant, the Cummer Company, shall be required by order of the court “within a short date to be fixed by this court to remove its said timber from said land,” pay all taxes thereon according to its agreement, vacate and quit-claim all right, title and interest in and to said cypress timber, and that in default thereof the said several deeds conveying said timber from said complainant to said company be can-celled and annulled; that the defendants and all persons claiming under them may be barred and foreclosed of all rights to or interest in said cypress timber, and for general relief.
The deed omitting formal parts is as follows:
“THIS INDENTURE, made and entered into this the 20th day of June, A. D. 1902, BETWEEN Estill L. Yager and Arthur Yager her husband, of the County of Scott and State of Kentucky, parties of the first part, and Zelpha Copley of Grand Rapids State of Michigan, party of the second part;
“All of the cypress timber now growing and standing and all the cypress timber dead and' lying on the ground on the northeast quarter of Section sixteen (16) Town ship twenty five (25) south of Range twenty two (22) east. With the right of entry on the aforesaid land for the purpose of working up and removing said cypress timber and the party of the second part shall pay the State and County taxes on the aforesaid land as long as the cypress timber remains thereon.
“TO HAVE AND TO HOLD said cypress timber, with the appurtenances, to 'the said party of the'second paid, her heirs and assigns forever. And the said parties of the first part do hereby bind themselves and their heirs, executors and administrators' to warrant and forever defend the' title to said cypress' timber unto thé said party of the second part, her heirs and assigns, against the said parties of the first part and their heirs, executors and administrators, and against all persons whomsoever lawfully or equitably claiming or to claim the same.”
The bill was demurred to by the several defendants and the demurrers were upon hearings thereon overruled by the Circuit Judge. Thereafter an' answer was filed
The errors assigned are the orders that are appealed from.
The grounds of the demurrers are in substance as follows: (1) that the conveyance by the complainant contains no prescribed time within which said timber shall be removed, and the conveyance of said timber was not for a limited or circumscribed purpose; (2) that the bill contains no allegations of any prior or contemporaneous parol agreement or understanding between the parties to the deed, no.r of such facts or circumstances surrounding the execution of the deed as to warrant a construction thereof other than that called for by the language employed in the deed itself; (3) because it is competent for parties to convey growing timber on land with a perpetual right to the grantee to enter upon the land and cut and remove such timber, that this conveyance was a grant in presentí for a good and sufficient consideration to said grantee, her heirs and assigns forever, and the bill contains no allegations which warrant the complainant in applying to a court of equity to relieve them from the legal effect of said conveyance; (á) there is no allegation in said bill that complainants have resided upon, cultivated or occupied said land or any part thereof, nor that said land is adapted to or may be used for farming or other purposes nor that said land has any actual or market value apart from the cypress timber, thereon; (5) there is no
The contention is made by counsel for defendants upon the assignments based upon the orders overruling
We are unable to accept this view. On the contrary we think the principles applicable have been settled in this jurisdiction in cases in which the facts were sufficiently similar to the facts in this case to be' controlling.
It is settled here that it is perfectly competent for parties owning land to convey timber growing upon it and grant a perpetual right to the purchaser to enter upon the land for the purpose of removing the timber therefrom. McNair & Wade Land Co. v. Adams, 54 Fla. 550, 45 South Rep. 492; Cawthon v. Stearns Culver Lumber Co., 60 Fla. 313, 53 South. Rep. 738; Fletcher v. Moriarty, 62 Fla. 482, 56 South. Rep. 437.
But it is equally well established that because such an agreement is so unreasonable in its nature, no conveyance will be construed as granting a perpetual right to enter upon and cut and remove timber from the land of another unless it is plainly manifest from the terms of the conveyance that such was the intention of the parties. McNair & Wade Land Co. v. Adams, supra..
In the case of McNair & Wade Land Co. v. Parker, 64 Fla. 371, 59 South. Rep. 959, this court undertook to define the nature of the estate or interest which is conveyed by a deed such as the one involved in this suit. The court speaking through Mr. Justice Hocker, said: “As to the interest conveyed by the deed it is plain that it carries no permanent fee simple interest in the land itself. It conveys only the timber growing on the land, which is a kind of servitude which may be lost;
In that case the conveyance was an ordinary warranty deed conveying all the green pine and cypress timber on the land described for a stated consideration to the grantee named, its heirs and assigns forever, and the habendum clause was to the grantee, its heirs and assigns forever. There was no limitation of the time within which the grantee should enter upon the land and remove the timber therefrom. The deed was made on December 12th, 1900, and the suit brought on the theory that a reasonable time had elapsed for using and removing the timber was filed on June 20th, 1910. The Circuit Judge held that a reasonable time for using and removing the timber had elapsed at the time the suit was filed, and although the timber as in the instant case had been conveyed by the grantee to a third party, decreed that the rights of the defendants acquired under the deed from the complainants were forfeited, and directed in the decree that the original deed and the deed to the third party be cancelled.
There is no difference in principle between that case and the case now under consideration.
It is alleged in the bill of complaint that “it was understood and agreed that as your orator did not desire the immediate possession of said land, said grantee should have a reasonable time within which to remove the same.”
It does not appear by the deed as alleged that it was agreed that as the grantor “did not desire the immediate possession of said land, said grantee should have a rea
In view of the rules of interpretation announced in the cases cited, it appears that as the deed conveyed “all of the cypress timber now growing and standing and all the cypress timber dead and lying on the ground on the” described land “with the right of entry on the aforesaid land for the purpose of working up and removing said cypress timber,” the intention is manifest that the timber should be removed from the land in a reasonable time.
The conveyance to the grantee, “her heirs and assigns forever,” is of a fee simple estate in “the cypress timber now growing and standing” on the land, and is coupled “with the right of entry on the aforesaid land for the purpose of working up and removing said cypress timber.” From these terms the law implies an obligation to remove the timber within a reasonable time.
Although it is generally held that the parties to an agreeemnt may, if they choose, make a contract whereby one will be entitled to a perpetual right to enter upon the land of the other and remove timber therefrom, it has been held in the majority of the decisions, and, as we have seen, this court is in accord with this holding, that such an agreement is so unreasonable in its nature that no contract will be held to have this effect unless it is plainly manifest from its terms that such was the intention of the parties; and therefore a deed conveying timber without stipulating the time within which it must be removed is usually construed as implying that such
The terms of the conveyance here considered differ in material respects from those in the cases cited and relied on by counsel for the appellant. In Butterfield Lumber
In Lodwick Lumber Co. v. Taylor, 100 Tex. 270, 98 S. W. Rep. 238, there was a conveyance of “all the timber on” the lands with no reference to a right to enter or an intention to remove the granted timber. This case was followed by a divided court in Chapman v. Bearman, Tex. Civ. App. , 181 S. W. Rep. 808, where there was a grant of a right to enter to remove the timber. In North Georgia Co. v. Bebee, 128 Ga. 563, 57 S. E. Rep. 873, the right was to remove “at any time.” In Cobban Realty Co. v. Donlan, 51 Mont. 58, 149 Pac. Rep. 484, it was held if the grantor’s original conveyance of the timber was subject to removal within a reasonable time, the subsequent grantee of the land could not claim the timber which had been expressly excepted from the grant to him. In Hicks v. Phillips, 146 Ky. 305, 142 S. W. Rep. 394, there was a reservation or exception from a conveyance of land of the timber on a part of the land with no reference to a right to enter or an intention to remove the timber, excepted from the conveyance. In Hardman v. Brown, West Va. , 88 S. E. Rep. 1016, there was a time fixed for the removal of reserved timber.
What may be regarded as a reasonable time should be determined not by the arbitrary will of either the grantor or the grantee, but by a consideration of the location, nature, accessibility and uses of the land and the timber as well as all the other circumstances that attended the making of the conveyance. While the grantor should not be deprived of the use of the land longer than is necessary to protect the right of the grantee, yet in fixing a time limit the grantee should not be arbitrarily deprived of an opportunity to use the timber that has been paid for. If the facts averred in the answer are sustained the time allowed should be quite liberal.
What we have said disposes of the principles involved. It follows that the bill states a cause of action good as against the demurrer interposed and there was no error in overruling the demurrer to the bill.
With respect to the order sustaining the exceptions to the answer the case is different. Without setting out the portions of the answer, which are of considerable length, that were stricken we hold that the averments of paragraphs two (2), three (3), four (4), six (6) and ten (10) of the answer cannot be said to be wholly irrelevant and such as to have no bearing or influence upon the decisions of the question between the parties to this suit (Trustees Internal Improvement Fund v. Root, 63 Fla. 666, 58 South. Rep. 371; Jones v. Hiller, 65 Fla. 532, 62 South. Rep. 583; Wofford v. Dykes, 67 Fla. 118, 64 South. Rep. 451), and there was therefore error in this ruling.
The order overruling the demurrer is affirmed, but the order granting the motion to strike portions of the