Minshew v. Atlantic Coast Lumber Corp.

81 S.E. 1027 | S.C. | 1914

Lead Opinion

April 27, 1914. The opinion of the Court was delivered by This is an action for equitable relief brought by the plaintiff against defendant. From the allegations of the complaint it appears that on December 24, 1898, W.A. Wall, of Marion county, in consideration of the sum of $275, sold and conveyed to R.L. Montague and his assigns all the timber above 12 inches stump diameter, 12 inches from the ground at the time of cutting, on a tract of 208 acres. Subsequent to this conveyance the defendant acquired by purchase all the rights, title, privileges, and interest that Montague had in the same. In the contract made by Wall to Montague among other things was the following: "It is agreed that the time limit of this conveyance above set forth shall be five (5) years from the time the second party begins cutting and removing the said timber from the lands above *17 described, but the first party agrees that the said time limit may be extended from year to year thereafter upon the payment by the said second party, his heirs, executors, administrators, or assigns, to the first party, his heirs, executors, administrators or assigns, of interest on the original purchase price at the rate of 6 per cent. per annum." In December, 1911, the plaintiff in this case took from Wall a conveyance in fee of the land upon which the timber conveyed by Wall to Montague was located. This suit was commenced January 10, 1912, for the purpose of having the Court adjudge that a reasonable time had elapsed and expired under a proper construction of the contract as to any rights Montague and his assigns (the defendant) had acquired and for a decree to have the contract canceled and ended because the defendant had failed to commence to cut, or cut and remove, the timber conveyed by the contract within a reasonable time, and had thereby forfeited all rights acquired thereunder. The defendant answered, after issue duly joined, the cause was heard by Judge DeVore, in open Court, in August, 1912, who, on December 23, 1912, filed his decree in favor of the plaintiff. This decree should be set out in the report of the case. Within due time the defendant appealed and asks reversal of the same, and the plaintiff also gave notice that he would ask the Court to sustain the decree on four additional grounds.

The first exception is: (1) His Honor erred, it is respectfully submitted, in sustaining plaintiff's objections to the testimony offered by defendant, tending to prove that defendant and those under whom it claimed secured legal advice before entering into the contract in question, and before acquiring the property conveyed therein, as to the legal effect of said contract, the established law of South Carolina in regard thereto, and the extent of the rights acquired thereunder. He should have held that the accepted opinion prevailing among reputable attorneys at that time as to the effect of the terms of the contract in question *18 constituted one of the material circumstances surrounding the parties at the time of the making of the contract, which would naturally have influenced the views of the parties, and which did influence them in their conduct, one with the other, and which should have influenced the Court in determining what was a reasonable time in which to commence to cut the timber in question, and whether or not the defendant should have been held to have forfeited its rights by not proceeding at an earlier date."

We think that this exception is not well taken. This testimony was incompetent and irrelevant and could not throw any light on the question at issue. It does not make any difference in this case what advice appellant obtained from some one learned in the law. Lawyers make mistakes as to what the law is, and Courts differ in deciding what the law is. The defendant took the risk in following advise of its counsel as to whether the advice given was correct law or not. The plaintiff is not seeking exemplary or punitive damages wherein it could be shown that party acted under advice of counsel and thereby show he did not act maliciously or wilfully, and such evidence would be competent to lessen or mitigate damages. There is no contention that counsel advised both parties as to the transaction, and that both acted under that advice; but the attempt was only to show that the advice was given to the grantee as to the construction and effect of the contract. A party can be relieved when he acts under a mistake of fact, but not when he acts under a mistake of law. Cunningham v. Cunningham,20 S.C. 317. In Porter v. Jeffries, 40 S.C. 92, 18 S.E. 229, the Court, quoting from 2 Pom. Eq., sec. 843, adopts it as a correct rule: "The rule is well settled that a simple mistake by a party as to the legal effect of an agreement which he executes, or as to the legal result of an act which he performs, is no ground for either defensive or affirmative relief." The only safe course, where the construction of an instrument is in doubt, is to have the Courts construe it, and, *19 when a person relies on his own construction or the construction of a lawyer, he does so at his own peril that the construction placed upon the instrument is correct. In Wright v. Willoughby, 79 S.C. 442, 60 S.E. 971, the Court said: "But it was the duty of the Circuit Judge to construe the deed as written, and no construction put upon it by defendants, or their grantors alone, not assented to nor acquiesced in by the other parties concerned, could avail against the defendant. This exception is overruled.

Exceptions 2 and 3 complain of error on the part of his Honor in his conclusions and findings of fact that, at the time Montague purchased timber from Wall, Montague was a timber expert, and that he erred in finding at that time Montague had purchased timber in other counties. In connection with this latter finding, his Honor used this language: "I find that Wall, at the time of this timber contract, knew of no timber holdings or timber contracts by Montague except in Marion county, and even this only by hearsay." It is incumbent upon the appellant to show by the preponderance of the testimony that his Honor was in error in his findings of fact, and this the appellant has failed to do. Hickson Lumber Co. v. Stallings,91 S.C. 473, 74 S.E. 1072; Leland v. Morrison, 92 S.C. 511, 75 S.E. 889.

The fourth exception assigns error on the part of his Honor in considering testimony tending to show that the grantor of the deed at the time of its execution was led to believe by the purchaser that a mill would be located in the near future near the timber sold; the appellant's contention being that it was inadmissible as far as defendant was concerned in the absence of any evidence showing that any such notice had been brought home to the defendant, who was the subsequent purchaser, and that the contract was in reference to real estate not in writing, and not to be performed in one year, and tended to vary or add to the terms of the written contract. The contract was *20 silent as to when the purchaser was to commence to cut the timber, and under the law the cutting and removal must be within a reasonable time, and anything that took place at the time the original contract was entered into that would go to show what the parties intended as to the time in which the cutting was to commence, or would in any manner elucidate or throw light on this question, would be competent as evidence to be considered for what it was worth, and would not be varying in any manner the written instrument. There is no contention between the parties about the contract entered into between Wall and Montague. The paper is admitted by both parties here in this suit to be the actual contract, but they differ as to the force and effect of it; one claiming that it is canceled, and the other that it is live and active. The contract speaks for itself and cannot be varied as far as its contents are concerned by parol evidence. But the circumstances surrounding the parties at the time it was made can be detailed, and any separate and independent agreement made at the time, or any understanding separate and apart and not embodied in the contract, and in no sense a part of the contract, entered into in writing, is competent evidence. It was incumbent on the purchaser to ascertain the facts and circumstances of the situation of the parties when he purchased. It was held, in Flagler v. Lumber Corporation,89 S.C. 328, 71 S.E. 849, that the rights of a purchaser under a contract of this kind would depend upon the facts and circumstances surrounding the parties at the time of the execution of the contract, so that the term of years acquired under the contract depended upon these facts and circumstances, and whatever term these facts and circumstances should fix would be the term acquired. The appellant here was charged with knowledge of a proper legal construction of the contract and as to the time that the cutting should commence under the contract depended upon the facts and circumstances surrounding the parties at the time the contract was made, and the defendant was chargeable with that notice. *21 The evidence was pertinent and competent to throw light on the question of what was a reasonable time as contemplated by the parties to the original contract and was properly admitted by his Honor. Sullivan v. Williams, 43 S.C. 489,21 S.E. 642; Paint Co. v. Bennett-Hedgepeth Co., 85 S.C. 493,67 S.E. 738. This exception is overruled.

The sixth exception is overruled for the same reasons that exceptions 2 and 3 were overruled.

The fifth, seventh, eighth, ninth, tenth, eleventh, twelfth, thirteen and fifteenth exceptions will be discussed together as they substantially challenge all of the Judge's finding of facts and conclusions of law, and impute error to him in decreeing as he did upon evidence before him, some of which is excepted to as incompetent. It is reasonable to suppose that the Judge in arriving at his findings of fact was wholly influenced by competent, pertinent testimony relevant to the issues in the case and wholly uninfluenced by incompetent evidence. After a careful inspection of all of the competent evidence in the case we are not prepared to say that he was in error in finding, as he did, "that 12 years from the date of the deed would have been a sufficient reasonable time within which for Montague, or those claiming under or through him, to wit, the defendant, to have commenced cutting and removing the timber from the land involved here." What is a reasonable time under this contract or contracts similar to it? This is a question to be determined upon the facts of each particular case. What may be a reasonable time in one case under the particular facts and circumstances of that case may be unreasonable in another case, and inapplicable by reason of a different state of facts, or a different situation and surrounding circumstances. There is no question that, if a party desires to exercise his right to extend an option which he has, beyond the fixed time he has acquired, before his time expires, if he desires to exercise his option, he must tender and pay the amount agreed upon in advance. *22 and serve notice that he will exercise his option for the period agreed upon, and will each year in advance pay the amount agreed upon. This payment must be unqualified and in strict compliance with the agreement of the parties. The payment must be unconditional and in advance. In this case there has been no tender, offer, or payment on the part of the defendant to pay the 6 per cent. on $275, in order to extend the time limit year by year. Neither has the defendant indicated the number of additional years they would claim. If the defendant had commenced to cut and remove timber and needed additional time, it was reasonable and incumbent to tender in advance the 6 per cent. on the purchase price agreed upon, and give notice of the number of years required, and offer to pay in advance each year the 6 per cent. on purchase price, in order that the extended time might be fixed, definite, and determined, and each party know what to rely on as to whether extension of time claimed in the absence of an agreement fixing the time could have been determined.

Under contracts of this character, the purchaser has only the right to have a reasonable time to get the fruits of his purchase. He has no right to enjoy by indefinite extension what would practically amount to a perpetuity and deprive the owner of the enjoyment of his property. What is a "reasonable time" depends upon the circumstances of each case, and is a question of fact, and no particular rule has yet been laid down to govern cases. Ould v. SpartanburgRealty Co., 94 S.C. 187, 77 S.E. 866. It has been decided by this Court, in Flagler v. Lumber Corporation, 89 S.C. 328,71 S.E. 849; McLary v. Lumber Corporation, 90 S.C. 153,72 S.E. 145, and Atlantic Coast Lumber Co. v. Litchfield,90 S.C. 363, 73 S.E. 182, that the grantee must begin the removal of timber within a reasonable time, and it follows as a natural logical and irresistible sequence that, upon the failure to commence the removal within a reasonable *23 time, the estate or interest granted is terminated and the interest granted reverts to the grantor or his privies. His Honor with all of the facts before him has found that a reasonable time had elapsed and the defendant had not commenced to remove the timber and by reason of this failure his contract was terminated and he has no further right to remove. We find nothing in the case that would warrant us in reversing this finding, and appellant has failed to convince us that his Honor was in error in finding as he did. While it is true in reference to forfeiture, as was said in Davenport v. Latimer, 53 S.C. 572, 31 S.E. 630: "But, since equity leans to compensation in preference to forfeiture, the vendee, if he cannot show exact compliance with the contract on his part, may still have specific performance or compensation, provided he is not guilty of laches in the ascertion of his claim, stands ready and willing to comply, and shows reasons satisfactory to the Court in excuse of his failure to comply" — it may be that in some of the cases that may arise under similar contracts that parties may bring themselves within this principle, but under the evidence here defendant has failed by its laches to excuse its default in not commencing to remove the timber under the contract within a reasonable time under the circumstances of the case. This delay works injury to the plaintiff. He is deprived of the use of his property. He gets no benefit out of it by reason of being allowed to till or pasture it. He is deprived of the new growth of timber on the land; he gets nothing for the increased size of the timber growing all this time. He pays taxes on the land, and for all of this defendant makes no offer of compensation to him at all. Ordinarily a forfeiture will not be declared where a full compensation can be made for the damage in money. We do not think it was necessary for the vendor to give any notice to the defendant to commence to remove the timber, the defendant knew what the contract was, and it is to be presumed knew what its rights *24 under it were and enforced or abandoned its rights as it saw fit.

Exception 14 is overruled, as the complaint, properly construed, put them on notice in plain and explicit terms as to the relief asked for from the Court, especially section 8 thereof. This precise question was determined in Jones v.Atlantic Coast Lumber Corporation, 92 S.C. 418,75 S.E. 698. We do not think the exceptions taken by defendant complaining that his Honor erred in declaring the contract forfeited. The contract in question was not an absolute conveyance in fee, but determinable or qualified contract, and when there was a breach of the same by reason of defendant failing to avail itself of the terms of the contract, then its rights therein were terminated. The contract was in the nature of a lease. During the life of it, as it were, the defendant had the right to remove the timber. Having neglected to do this within the time found and fixed by the Court, the defendant has no further interest or rights in the timber, and it reverts to the grantor or his assigns. The contract being terminated by failure of defendant to remove the timber within a reasonable time, we do not see that the Circuit Judge was in error in deciding that the plaintiff was entitled to the timber, and that the defendant had no further rights under the contract. All exceptions are overruled.

Judgment affirmed.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE GARY and MR. JUSTICE HYDRICK, concur.






Dissenting Opinion

To me the reasonableness of 12 years and the want of reasonableness of 13 years is not apparent. Forfeitures are rarely ever enforced in equity and not favored in law.

It seems to me that the difference of conditions between a time that is reasonable and a time that is not reasonable *25 ought to be material. If the unfavored forfeiture is to be declared, a distinction ought to represent a difference. Here I see none.

MR. JUSTICE GAGE did not sit in this case.

NOTE: This case has been carried to the United States Supreme Court on writ of error.