131 Ky. 796 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1909
Opinion of the Court by
Reversing.
These two appeals, involving the same questions of
At this point it is convenient to say that in July, 1903, Asher and the company entered into a contract by which he sold to it about 9,000 trees standing on land in the counties of Perry and Letcher. The contract stipulated that Asher was to convey the trees by deed of general warranty and to furnish rights of way for getting 'out the logs, but did not specify any time in which the trees or logs were to be removed from the land. In pursuance of the condition in the contract that the trees were to be conveyed by deed, Asher on August 15, 1903, executed and delivered to the company a deed whereby, in consideration of $46,670, he conveyed to it the 9,000 trees mentioned
Briefly stated, it appears from these pleadings (1) that Asher did not at any time own any of the land, upon which the trees he sold the company were standing*: (2) that the trees Asher sold the company had been previously purchased by him from other parties who had granted to him- the right without time limit to remove the trees from the land; (3) that Asher in the conveyance of the trees to the company assigned and transferred to it all the benefits and privileges with reference to the removal of the timber conferred upon him in the conveyances under which he held it; (4) that Asher at the time he sold the timber to the company was the unqualified owner of all of it, and had the right to enter upon the land upon which it was standing at any time for the purpose of removing it; (5) that the owners of the land did not object to the company entering upon it after March 1, 1905, or at any time for the purpose of removing the timber.
Upon these admitted facts, the company insists that Asher has not shown himself entitled to judgment for any amount against it, insisting that by his deed he conveyed to it the unqualified right and title to the timber; .and, not being the owner of the land or liable in any way for the company’s failure to remove the trees within a specified time, he is not in a position to maintain an action against it for not removing
Asher was not the owner of the land upon which the trees stood, and we know of no principle of law that would vest the title and ownership of the trees in Asher upon the failure of the purchaser to remove them from the land within the given time. Whether or not a stipulation in the contract forfeiting the rights of the purchaser to the trees upon his failure to remove them within a specified time would have the effect of restoring the .ownership to the vendor if the contract was not complied with by the purchaser is not necessary to decide, as that question is not presented by the record. It is not contended by Asher that the ownership of the trees vested in him on March 1,' 1905, under any particular condition to this effect in the contract. His theory is that he occupies the same relation as would the owner of land upon which trees were standing that had been sold under a contract giving the purchaser the right to remove them by a certain time. But the fatal defect in this theory is that Asher is not the owner of the soil, and it would be a most unwarranted extension of the rule that prevails between the owner of land, and the purchaser of timber thereon to include Asher within its scope. Asher by his sale of the trees passed to the company not only all his title and interest in the trees, but the privilege to remove them granted to him by the owners of the land. As Asher did not own the land, or any interest in it except the timber and the right to remove it, all of which he sold and conveyed, it is no concern of his when the timber is removed1. The failure to remove it by March 1, 1905, did not, as shown by this record, operate to the injury of Asher in any manner whatever. He was paid
"Wherefore the judgment in each case is reversed,with directions- to. dismiss the petition.