117 Minn. 355 | Minn. | 1912
Action for tbe conversion of certain logs, known as tbe “Cameron logs,” and otherwise designated as tbe “white paint timber,” alleged to have been tbe property of tbe plaintiffs, but wrongfully converted by the defendant in disregard of tbe plaintiffs’ rights. The alleged conversion was denied, and tbe cause tried to the court without a jury, and findings made in favor of tbe plaintiffs. From a judgment rendered thereon tbe defendant appealed."
The court, after finding tbe corporate character of tbe parties, further found as facts: That during the logging season of 1909-1910, one Cameron cut and banked upon tbe ice of Battle lake, in Itasca county, seventy-five thousand twenty feet of pine timber, all of which was marked on the end of the log with three spots of white paint; that prior to the cutting and banking of the said timber the said Cameron had cut and banked upon the said ice a large amount
The only assignments of error in the record which attempt to challenge the' above findings are as follows, the first of same being the only one effective for that purpose:
“The court erred in finding as a fact that the defendant relinquished and turned over to the Shevlin-Mathieu Lumber Company a portion of the logs found to have been cut by one Cameron, marked on the end with three spots of white paint, and intermingled with the other timber being driven by the defendant.”
“The court erred in finding as a fact that the defendant converted all of the said timber alleged to have been cut by Cameron, and marked with the spots of white paint.”
We have carefully examined the record, and hold that the evidence fairly tends to support the said findings.
2. The next question is: Do these findings support the trial court’s conclusion of law that the defendant converted the said white paint timber? The facts thus found show (1) an agreement by the defendant to take possession of the said white paint timber, to drive it to its hoist for scaling, and to pay the plaintiffs therefor, and a taking of possession of the said timber by the defendant under such agreement; and (2) the defendant’s subsequent violation of its agreement in appropriating the logs which arrived at its hoist, without scaling them as agreed, and its disposition of the remainder, which did not so arrive at the hoist, without the plaintiffs’ consent, to the Shevlin-Mathieu Company. Such, then, being the facts, the appropriation which took place at the hoist presents merely the ordinary case of where one in lawful possession of the property of another
3. If no other questions were involved, what we have said above would dispose of this appeal. It was established on the trial, however, that the marks on the white paint timber had not been recorded as provided by R. L. 1905, § 2580, the here material portion of which reads as follows: “All logs and timber found in the waters of any lumber district, not in the possession or under the control of any person, which have no distinctive mark, or marks, which are not recorded in the proper district, shall be deemed abandoned, and shall not be recognized as property by the courts.” The defendant’s contention is based on the language of the statute above quoted, and the point is made that the evidence established that the plaintiffs had no title to the said white paint timber at any of the times when the alleged conversion occurred, and that for this reason the plaintiffs cannot recover. In other words, the contention is that under the statute the said timber became “abandoned” when it passed out of the boom where the defendant first took possession thereof. But taking, as we must, the findings above set out as true, this contention cannot be sustained.
The section of the statute above quoted was recently considered by this court in Cotton Lumber & M. Co. v. St. Louis River D. & Imp. Co. 115 Minn. 484, 132 N. W. 1126. It was there held that the statute has no application to logs not in the water, or which are in the possession or under the control of any person, and nothing here need be added to what was there said. It appears that the logs which the defendant appropriated at its hoist were under its own control from the time it received them in the boom on Deer lake until its appropriation thereof at the hoist, and hence under the rule in Cot
' The defendant contends, however, that as the court found the value of all of the said white paint timber, without any attempt to separate the value of that which was taken from the river at the hoist from the value of that which was left along the river, and ordered judgment for the lump sum so found, and that as there is no evidence in the record upon which to base a finding of the separate values, respectively^ of the timber which reached the hoist and that which was left behind and subsequently disposed of to the Shevlin-Mathieu Company, the judgment appealed from cannot be sustained, either in whole or in part; and this contention must be sustained, unless it appears that such transaction with the Shevlin-Mathieu Company likewise constituted a conversion of the plaintiffs’ property.
The question, then, is: Should the last-mentioned transaction be considered to have been a conversion of the plaintiffs’ property? And hefe again we must consider the findings of the trial court to the effect that the defendant received this timber from the plaintiffs pursuant to an agreement that it would drive the same to its hoist, and that it failed so to do, and thereafter permitted the Shevlin-Mathieu Company to take possession thereof, drive it to its mill, and there dispose of it. Evidently the purpose of the agreement under which the defendant received this timber in the first instance was to insure its safe transportation to the said hoist, and hence it is apparent that,'if any of the said timber should be considered “abandoned” within the meaning of the statute, such result would be due directly to the defendant’s failure to perform its agreement. How, then, does it lie in' the defendant’s mouth to urge such an abandonment, or to say that its disposition of the timber thus left along tlie river 'was not a conversion of the plaintiffs’ property ? Manifestly, from our holding with respect to the timber which reached the defendant’s hoist, the defendant would be held to have converted the limber now under consideration, if the same had been in its actual possession at the time of its disposition thereof, and, since it cannot be allowed to avail itself of its loss of possession through its own
Judgment affirmed.