267 F. 605 | S.D. Miss. | 1919
This matter is before the court on the motion of the plaintiff to strike from the answer of the defendant certain parts thereof set up therein as an affirmative defense to the bill of complaint. There are two motions, one in each of the above causes, which are consolidated, and under an agreement of counsel the court is requested to pass upon two questions of law, which it is agreed are presented by the records in both of the above cases, and which questions, it is agreed, also arise in causes Nos. 156, 157, 159, 160, and 161 of the equity docket.
The questions of law presented under this agreement are as follows: First. Did the defendant have a right, as a matter of law, to cut any timber from the sixteenth sections of land involved in these suits? Second. If the defendant had such right, was his right confined to the merchantable timber on the land at the time the deed was executed, or did it extend to the timber that had become merchantable between the date of the deed and the time that the timber was cut ? It is also agreed that any documents proper to be used as exhibits to the pleadings of either side may be adduced on this hearing. The defendant was lessee of the sixteenth sections of land for a period of time, to wit, 15 years,
“A lease of land, giving the lessee the right to cut all the timber on the land suitable for sawmill purposes during the term of 20 years, entitles him to cut, not only the timber suitable at the date of the lease, but all that becomes suitable during the term.”
In the principal case here under consideration there was a lease of the land for IS years, and shortly after the execution of the lease by separate instrument there was a conveyance of all the merchantable timber on said land, with the right to cut and remove said timber at any time during the life of said lease. I will therefore overrule the motion to strike out certain parts of the answer, and will hold, on the records before me, that:
First. The defendant had a right, as a matter of law, to cut and remove timber from the said sixteenth sections of land.
Second. Such right to cut was not confined to the merchantable timber on the land at the date of the execution of the deed, but the lessee and vendee had the right to cut and remove any timber that became merchantable between the date of the' deed and the expiration of the lease.