42 Mich. 1 | Mich. | 1879
This controversy concerns the title to certain logs cut by the defendant Sovereign and one Dease on lands belonging to the plaintiffs and sold to the defendant Campbell from whom the plaintiffs replevied them. The principal facts in the case are not in dispute but the parties differ on minor points.
The plaintiff Kothsehild in 1877 resided in Detroit and the plaintiff Ortmann in Bast Saginaw. One of the other plaintiffs resided in Cincinnati and the other in New York. The four jointly owned pine lands in Michigan. In the fall of that year Ortmann, assuming to act for all, entered into negotiations with Sovereign to sel to him and Dease all the white pine timber then standing, lying or being on certain parcels of land in Bay county, and their negotiations ended in an agreement to sell at the gross price of $16,800. In payment they were to receive a note made by John Campbell & Co. for $8000, indorsed by the purchasers, and the notes of the purchasers for the remainder, the last of which was to fall due May 1, 1880.. An agreement in writing, bearing date November 22, 1877, was drawn up — .amended somewhat afterwards — among the provisions in which were the following: The logs cut and the lumber therefrom were to be and remain the property of the vendors until payment of the purchase price as stipulated therein; and the vendees were to pay for all the timber cut and removed five dollars per thousand feet, board measure,
While the parties were thus together at Beckwith’s and while the agreement of purchase remained unsigned it was talked over among them that the vendees desired to begin their operations in lumbering at once. Ortmann says he gave no consent to this, but the testimony seems to put beyond question the fact that it was understood all around, that the terms of purchase were fully agreed
The contract between the vendors and vendees was never fully signed and duplicates were never delivered. To whose fault the failure was attributable was a mooted question on the trial. The three thousand dollar note of John Campbell & Co. was never delivered to the vendors, nor was any money paid to them. Sovereign and Dease cut a large quantity of logs, — near, two million feet in all, — of which about 300,000 feet were delivered to John Campbell & Co., and the rest were in the woods when this suit was instituted. Campbell & Co. made to Sovereign and Dease considerable payments on the logs delivered to them, and converted some of the logs into lumber. The plaintiffs gave evidence tending to show that the failure.to complete and exchange contracts was wholly the fault of Sovereign and Dease; that on their part they continued their efforts to close the transaction, so far as the completion of the papers was concerned, until March 7, 1878, and that, failing in these, they demanded of John Campbell & Co. the logs in their possession, and the lumber, so far as any had been cut from their logs, and on the refusal to comply with the demand they took out their writ of replevin. On their part, Campbell & Co. showed that they offered to pay to the plaintiffs the five dollars per thousand feet which they agreed to pay to Sovereign and Dease, if plaintiffs would give them a bill of sale of the logs received by them, but plaintiffs refused.
It is to be observed that this suit is not brought for the trespass — if -there was one — but only to recover logs cut. It may therefore possibly be maintained even though the court should be satisfied that such a license was given as would protect against liability in trespass. The only question is whether the title to the logs passed from the owners of the lands to the parties cutting them. And upon this question we cannot agree with the circuit judge that the license — if one was given — is at all conclusive.
It is plain from the evidence that if Ortmann gave consent to the cutting, it was in anticipation of the execution of the contract, and by way of accommodation to the vendees who would be delayed in their lumbering operations if they waited for the contract to be fully executed and delivered. It was not in Ortmann’s mind that his consent was to give the vendees rights the contract would not give, or to waive any rights the contract would secure to himself and his associates. Neither is there any reason for believing that the vendees understood they were to be at liberty to do that which would
Now if under such circumstances the contract which was agreed upon reserved to the vendors the title to the logs until paid for, the license to cut the logs in anticipation of the due execution of the contract would necessarily be.subject to the same condition. The most the vendees could claim would be that the parties were proceeding under the contract, and were to be protected as long as they lived up to its provisions. A license, like an estoppel, is to be restricted to the fair understanding upon which the parties were at liberty to act. Rust v. Bennett, 89 Mich., 521. It cannot be understood as a general authority to the licensee to do what he pleases.
In view of the facts it is plain that the case was submitted to the jury under erroneous views respecting the rights which the license could confer upon the defendants. Many questions were discussed in the circuit court which seem to us of no moment; but conceding all that defendants claimed, the license, under the facts as now exhibited to us, could not pass the title to the logs so long as they remained unpaid for.
The judgment must therefore be reversed, with costs, and a new trial ordered.