83 W. Va. 54 | W. Va. | 1918
Having successfully resisted the plaintiff’s bill for enforcement of an award of arbitrators and obtained the setting aside of the ward, the defendant complains of the overruling of his repeated motions to dissolve an injunction, awarded in the cause, inhibiting him from cutting certain, timber, and the failure of the court to dismiss the bill. Cross-assigning error, the plaintiff complains of the setting aside of the award, the requirement of a new award by the same arbitrators and denial of the relief sought by the bill.
The subject matter of the controversy is the value of timber of the plaintiff wrongfully cut by the defendant, for which the latter agreed to make compensation, by a conveyance of other timber of equal, value, to be defined by estimators or arbitrators. The parties owned different classes of
Within ten days from the date of said agreement, Har-wood and Morrison, accompanied by J. W. Turner, an agent
The ground upon which the answer assails the award is alleged improper conduct' of the estimators or arbitrators, resulting in an unjust, unreasonable and oppressive award. It charges failure to make a fair estimate of the timber wrongfully cut, to make a fair estimate of the timber awarded by way of compensation, to cruise it, to count the trees and to go over the boundary of timber allotted, and avers that it ivas determined by a mere guess. Unfairness and injustice in the award are established by overwhelming proof, if the basis of settlement is the character of the timber at the dates of the cutting and the aAvard. There is no pretense or claim that Mankin cut more than 362,806 feet, nor any doubt that the award included as much as 1,250,000 feet. Competent witnesses who haAre carefully examined it and one of Avhom actually cruised it, place the amount at not less than 1,750,000. Morrison did not testify in support of the award and Harwood’s testimony proves they arrived at their conclusion by a mere rough acreage estimate. Under that, he estimated the timber awarded Avould amount to about 660,000 feet. Circumstances tending to prove this disparity in quantity is not altogether innocent or merely accidental, are disclosed. They Avent upon the ground and did their work without notice to Mankin and in company -with the plaintiff’s timber agent and spent four days in arriving at a conclusion based upon a general observation of the land and timber and a plat AAdth reference to which they estimated
In an effort to overcome the objection of disparity in quantity between the timber cut and the amount allotted by way of compensation, the plaintiff claims the benefit of growth in the timber between the date of its lease and the dates of the cutting and award, a period of about seventeen years; but this claim is utterly untenable, for its lease did not purport to vest title to any timber in it as of that date. It conferred a mere right to cut and use such timber not over twenty, inches in diameter, as it should need in the progress of its mining operations. Nothing but necessity for such use justified its taking of any of the timber, wherefore the size of the timber to be so taken was determinable as of the dates of necessity for its use. Any other construction of that clause of the lease would be an absurdity on its face. Plaintiff made no absolute purchase of timber. What it took was a mere right to cut and use timber, as needed, nothing more than a license to be exercised in the pursuit and progress of its mining right. The terms of the grant are prospective, saying the lessee may at all times take for its use, so much timber, subject to certain limitations, as may be required for specific purposes. At the same time, the lessor reserved right “at all times during the operation” of the lease, to cut and remove timber not thereby specifically granted to the lessee. None was specifically granted. The grant was one of mere license to cut and use certain classes of timber, for specified purposes.
After having set the award aside, the court could not recommit the controversy to the arbitrators, nor order a new
The only right the plaintiff: had respecting the timber the cutting of which was enjoined stood on the award. Mere right of recovery of damages for wrongful cutting conferred no right to enjoin Mankin from cutting his own timber. The apparent right -in equity to have a conveyance of some of his timber, shown by the award, was the sole basis of the injunction, and, when the award was set aside, the plaintiff’s equity in Mankins’ timber ended, wherefore the injunction should have been dissolved.
These conclusions dispose of the subjects of the cross-assignments of error, and there is no occasion for further discussion thereof.
In as much as the question of the validity of the award has been determined upon the pleadings and proof, the bill should not he dismissed, and the award left in force, by reason of such dismissal, to become the basis of further litigation. The right respecting it has been fairly heard and properly determined. In so far as the decrees complained of overruled the motions to dissolve the injunction and recommitted the controversy between the parties to the arbitrators named in the agreement of submission, they will be reversed, and in the other respects affirmed; but without prejudice to the right of the plaintiff to assert in a proper manner its claim against the defendant for damages for wrongful cutting of its timber ; and it will be further "decreed here that the plaintiff pay to the defendant his costs in the court below as well as his costs in this court.
Reversed in part. Injunction dissolved. Affirmed in part.