Lead Opinion
Appeal from orders denying a new trial in an action brought to determine adverse claims to timber in Koochiching county, Minnesota.
The controversy in this action is over the construction of a deed executed by Sheldon and his wife to the Felthous Land Company, May 5, 1904. The material portions of the deed are as follows:
The grant is made “subject * * * to the incumbrances, limitations and reservations hereinafter specified.”
"Following the description is a clause reading as .follows: “It is understood that the timber upon a large portion of said lands has been sold by parties * * * who have given warranty timber deeds therefor, with various periods, usually twenty years, for the removal of such timber,
The timber on 800 acres of the land had theretofore been conveyed. The price paid was between $9 and $10 per acre. The timber deeds were executed in 1900 and provided that the timber should be removed within 15 years, and that the owner of the timber should have the exclusive right to occupy the land. He was required to pay all taxes which became payable prior to the cutting of the timber. The defendants Staude, Heitmann and Smith are grantees of the Felthous Company. They paid approximately $3.33 per acre for the land and purchased subject to existing timber deeds and reservations. Plaintiff acquired title to the timber in 1906. In 1914 Sheldon extended the time within which plaintiff might remove the timber to May 31, 19&5. Staude, Heitmann and Smith were the original defendants. Sheldon and his wife were subsequently joined as defendants. The facts were agreed upon and embodied in a stipulation.' The findings were adverse to plaintiff’s claim. The court below held that Sheldon had conveyed to the Felthous Company his reversionary interest in the timber. Whether he conveyed it or reserved it is the vital question in the case.
The circumstances existing when the deed was executed compel the conclusion that the parties did not have in mind the possibility that plaintiff might not remove the timber prior to the summer of 1915. On part of the land conveyed there was timber owned by plaintiff and others, and on the remainder there was timber owned by Sheldon. It was contemplated that the several owners of the timber would remove it. Sheldon
We conclude that the learned trial court placed the proper construction upon the Sheldon deed, and that the order denying a new trial should be affirmed.
Order affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
(dissenting).
I dissent:
My opinion is that when Sheldon in his deed to the Felthous Company reserved “the right to remove * * * any and all * * * timber from all the lands” conveyed, he intended just what he said. The fact that he had previously made a conditional sale of the timber growing on part of the land did not defeat the reservation. If the conditions in such timber deeds should fail and the timber revert, it would become Sheldon’s timber to dispose of within the time limited in his deed as he