111 Ga. 65 | Ga. | 1900
Stillwell, Millen & Company brought suit against McRae and others, alleging in their petition that the defendants had damaged them by cutting large quantities of pine timber, the property of the plaintiffs, which was growing on a described lot of land’ and that the defendants were still cutting such timber. The prayer of the petition was, that the defendants be enjoined from cutting the timber and from removing or otherwise interfering with that which had already been cut. The defendant McRae appeared and answered the petition, and assumed responsibility for the acts of the other defendants ; and the case proceeded against him alone. At the trial the court directed the jury to find a verdict that the defendant be perpetually enjoined from cutting the timber on the land, and that the plaintiffs recover of the defendant a given sum; it being agreed by counsel that if the plaintiffs were entitled to recover at all, the amount for which the court directed a verdict was the proper sum. The defendant filed a bill of exceptions, assigning error upon the decision of the court directing a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs, and also upon other rulings made during the progress of the trial.
Counsel for defendant, the plaintiff in error here, contends
It is contended, however, by counsel for the defendants in error, that the rule laid down in Washburn on Real Property, which is quoted in the opinion of Mr. Justice Lewis in Baxter v. Mattox, is decisive of the case in their favor. The rule referred to is as follows: “But.if the owner of land grants the trees growing thereon to another and his heirs, with liberty to cut and carry away at his pleasure, forever, the grantee acquires an estate in fee in the trees, with an interest in the soil sufficient for their growth, while the fee in the soil itself remains in the grantor.” ' The authorities .cited by the author to support that proposition are Clap v. Draper, 4 Mass. 266, and Knotts v. Hydrick, 12 Rich. 314. In Clap v. Draper it was held that “a grant to one, his heirs and assigns, of all the trees and timber standing and growing on certain lands forever, with liberty to cut and carry them away, conveys an estate of inheritance in the trees and timber, and the grantee can maintain trespass quare clausum freyit against the owner of the soil for cutting down the trees.” There was no question in that case as to whether under such a conveyance the right -to remove the trees was a perpetual right or one determinable after the expiration of a reasonable time. In Knotts v. Hydrick it was held that when growing timber trees are reserved for the
While it is possible, as was held in Baxter v. Mattox and Knotts v. Hydrick, supra, for parties to make a contract whereby one would be entitled to a perpetual right to enter upon the land of another and remove timber therefrom, as such an agreement is so unreasonable in its nature, no contract will be presumed to have this effect unless it is plainly manifest from the terms of the same that such was the intention of the parties. The language of the deed in the present case not only does not require but does not authorize such an interpretation. It is true 'that the effect of the paper is to p"ass title to the timber, but the estate in the timber is determinable, and comes to an end after a lapse of time which would be a reasonable time to be allowed to the grantees to enter and remove the timber from the land. Under this construction, after the lapse of a reasonable time the timber again becomes the property of the grantor. Such a construction prevents the anomaly which is.apparent in Boults v. Mitchell and Hoit v. Stratton Mills, supra, where the instrument under construction in each case'was held to authorize an entry for the purpose of removing the timber ohly for a reasonable time, and that an- entry after the lapse of such a time was unlawful; but that, the timber still belonging to the person making the unlawful entry, the value thereof should not be taken into account in estimating damages for the trespass.
The court should have allowed the defendant in the court below to introduce evidence from which a jury could find what was a reasonable time to be allowed to the plaintiffs to remove the timber from the land; and this question should have been submitted to a jury, under instructions that they were to take into consideration all the facts and circumstances of the case and the conditions surrounding the parties at the time of the óxecution of the contract, and from this determine what would be a reasonable time to allow the plaintiffs to remove the trees; and if such a time had elapsed before the defendant commenced cutting the timber, his act would not be wrongful as against
Growing timber is realty. Balkcom v. Empire Lumber Company, 91 Ca. 651. And the deed conveying such timber, although the estate therein granted is determinable, conveys land within the meaning of the registry laws; and therefore such a deed, if duly recorded, was admissible in evidence without proof of execution.
Payment of the balance due on the purchase-money to the grantor in the deed involved in the present case was not acon.dition precedent to the entry upon the land by the plaintiffs to cut the timber thereon. The title to the trees passed absolutely upon the execution and delivery of the conveyance. The time when the purchase-money wa^to be paid is fixed in the conveyance, but it does not make payment of the same a condition to be complied with before the title passed. The deed merely fixes the time when the purchase-money shall be paid, reciting that a certain part of the same had been paid and that the amount unpaid was one hundred dollars for each lot, and that this amount was to be paid as each lot was entered for the purpose of cutting the timber.
2. Peacock & Peterson sold the timber, title to which was acquired under the deed from McRae, to Peacock, Peterson & Company, but the deed was not signed by the members of the firm as individuals, but simply in the firm name. It appears that the individuals who composed the firm of Peacock & Peterson subsequently became members of a firm known as Peacock, Peterson & Company, who were the grantees in the deed from Peacock & Peterson. A deed was made by Peacock, Peterson
Judgment reversed.