69 N.Y. 264 | NY | 1877
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *266 The plaintiff's claim to recover the value of the hemlock bark in question arises as assignee of a contract made between one Corbin of the first part, and Wood and Van Benschoten of the second part, by which Corbin agreed to sell and convey, and did thereby sell and transfer to Wood and Van Benschoten all the hemlock bark on the trees standing and growing upon a tract of land therein described. The contract contained a clause by which the parties of the second part agreed to peel said bark, and "to have said bark all peeled by the first of September, 1864, piled, measured, and settled for in full." The contract also contained a provision conferring a right of free ingress and egress to enter at any time or all times upon the premises for the purposes mentioned. The bark was not peeled and taken away within the time named, and Corbin, who held an absolute title to the premises in 1867, from Tuttle, with whom he had previously made a contract of purchase, had the bark in question peeled by and sold it to one Conway, who sold the same to the defendants, who were purchasers in good faith, and had no notice of the plaintiff's claim of ownership, except as to a very small portion of the bark. *268
The question to be determined is one of title, and the solution of the same depends upon the construction to be placed upon the contract referred to. The fair intendment and reasonable interpretation of the contract is, that it was to be completed and fulfilled by the first of September, 1864, and unless so completed the right to peel and carry away the bark would be terminated. Such would be its ordinary reading, and the right of entering for the purpose of carrying out the terms of the contract must be considered as connected with the preceding portion of the agreement. It could not upon any legal ground be regarded as extending beyond that, when a time is fixed for the final termination of the contract. As no question arises as to the right to carry away such bark as was peeled, measured and piled, it is not necessary to consider that subject. The plaintiff's counsel insists that all the provisions in the contract relating to the time and manner of peeling, and the payment for the bark, are independent of the conveyance, and are not conditions, and hence the remedy of the owner of the land was for a breach of the condition in failing to fulfill the contract within the time named, and that the plaintiff's right to the bark is not affected by such failure. We are referred to a number of authorities to uphold the position contended for. They mostly relate to sales and contracts in regard to real estate, and while they establish the principle that conditions in a grant are not favored in law, and should be clearly expressed, we think that they have no application to a contract of the character of the one now considered. It related to the sale of a portion of the products of the soil, and its removal from the same, and it would seem but reasonable to limit the time within which such removals should take place. If no time was fixed, the purchasers of the bark might take a number of years for its removal, and thus seriously interfere with and destroy perhaps the right to the enjoyment of the soil.
This never could have been intended, as the time for which an action would lie for the recovery of damages would be *269 postponed far beyond any ordinary limits, so as to render the relief of but little, if of any, avail.
The cases cited by the appellant's counsel (Craig v. Wells,
1. Kern., 315; Jackson v. McClallen, 8 Cow., 296; Aikin v.Vt. C.R.R. Co., 26 Barb., 296; Tompkins v. Elliot, 5 Wend., 497; Betts v. Perine, 14 Wend., 219; Pearsoll v.Frazer, 14 Barb., 564; Paine v. Brown,
There was no error in the disposition of the case, and the judgment should be affirmed.
All concur, ALLEN and FOLGER, J.J., absent.
Judgment affirmed.