21 N.C. 631 | N.C. | 1837
The defendant married the widow of the testator, and the plaintiff filed this bill against him for and on account of the value of waste alleged to have been committed by him. The waste was denied by the answer.
The testimony established that there was cleared ground upon the tract sufficient for the employment and, in the opinion of several of the witnesses, for the profitable employment of the slaves which belonged to Mr. Wilcox at the time of the intermarriage; that the land was thin and much worn by previous cultivation; that the defendant occasionally let out parcels of this land; that since February, 1828, the defendant had cleared between fifty and seventy acres of the woodland; that this was done gradually by cutting down for fuel and the uses of the plantation the wood growing thereon, which had been much injured before he came into possession, and never had been plentiful; and that he had turned out a part of the exhausted land and suffered it to grow up (632) with the ordinary second growth of the country. There was no evidence, unless the fact was to be inferred from this testimony, that any permanent injury has been done to the inheritance, and the only witnesses examined to that point declared that in their judgment it had not been deteriorated in value. *491 It is insisted on the part of the plaintiff that the clearing of woodland is in itself waste, and that the only exception to this general law is when such clearing in necessary for the useful enjoyment of the land by the tenant for life. We are of opinion that this position is laid down too broadly. According to the adjudications in this State, and in most of the States of the Union, the cutting down of timber is not waste unless it does a lasting damage to the inheritance and deteriorates its value, and not then if no more was cut down than was necessary for the ordinary enjoyment of the land by the tenant for life. Shepard v. Shepard. 2 Hay., 382; Ballentine v. Payner, ibid., 111; Jackson v. Brownson, 7 Johnson's Rep., 227; Owen v. Hyde, 6 Yerger's Tenn. Rep., 334. While our ancestors brought over to this country the principles of the common law, these were nevertheless necessarily accommodated to their new condition. It would have been absurd to hold that the clearing of the forest so as to fit it for the habitation and use of man was waste. And, at this day, when a large proportion of our lands is yet wild, the reduction of part of a tract to an arable state may be highly beneficial to the owner. Whether it has been beneficial or injurious to him is a question of fact, which must depend on the relative proportion of the cleared to the wood land, on the comparative value or worthlessness of the trees destroyed, and on the ordinary use made of the trees in the part of the country where the land is situated.
It is not shown in this case that the trees cut down by the defendant were valuable, for sale or for any other purposes than for the support of the plantation, nor that a deficiency was there by caused of timber sufficient for its permanent support after it should come (633) into the possession of the plaintiff. The exception to the general law of waste, as above laid down, owes its origin also to the usages of the country and to the necessities of widows — the most frequent tenants for life that we have amongst us. The provision for life was regarded as designed for their support, and such as use of the land was necessary for that support, and as prudent proprietors were accustomed to make of their own, was deemed to have been intended in the provision, although the value of the estate might be somewhat impaired thereby.
We hold also that the turning out of exhausted lands is not waste. An improved system of agriculture has commenced with us which, we hope, will in time supersede the present slovenly and, as it respects the country at large, injurious course of husbandry. But as yet the usage is almost universal of cultivating the cleared land until it is worn out, *492 permitting it to rest and grow up with pines and scrubby oaks in order to shield it from the sun, and return by their straw and leaves a portion of the fertility it once possessed, and clearing new ground to supply the place of that given back to nature. While the tenant for life observes the usual course of husbandry of the country, and does no permanent injury to the estate of him in remainder, such tenant ought not to be deemed guilty of legal waste.
The bill is dismissed, but the Court does not consider this a case in which to decree costs to the defendant.
PER CURIAM. Decree accordingly.
Cited: Crawley v. Timberlake,
(634)