State v. Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Co.

122 Minn. 400 | Minn. | 1913

Brown, C. J.

At a public sale held in December, 1903, tbe state sold to defendant, Brooks-Scanlon Lumber Company, all tbe pine timber, not less than 8 inches in diameter 24 feet from the ground, standing .and growing upon section 16, town 53, range 12, St. Louis county, at tbe agreed price of $7 per thousand feet. On tbe day of sale, tbe usual permit was issued by tbe state auditor to tbe lumber company, which by its terms expired or terminated June 1, 1905. Tbe ■sale was made and tbe permit issued under and pursuant to tbe provisions of chapter 163, p. 349, Laws 1895, and subsequent amendatory acts, and tbe transaction was in all things in compliance therewith. At tbe time of tbe issuance of tbe permit, tbe lumber company duly executed to tbe state tbe bond required by *402the statute, with defendants- O’Brien and Bonness as sureties, conditioned for the faithful performance of and compliance with the terms of the contract. During the life of the permit, the lumber company entered upon the premises and cut and removed therefrom all the pine timber standing thereon. The timber so cut and removed was scaled under the directions of the surveyor general of the Duluth district, in which the land is located. That official reported to the state auditor that there had been cut and removed from the land 5,026,990 feet of pine timber, and the auditor drew his draft upon the lumber company for the sum of $28,397.37, the same being the amount due the state under the terms of the permit. The lumber company paid the draft on June 2, 1905, and the auditor in' turn executed to it a bill of sale of the timber. This closed the transactions, and prima facie terminated all rights and obligations under the permit. The timber was cut and removed from the land by J. E. Hurd & Co., acting under contract with and for the lumber company. Hurd & Co. had in its employ during the logging season one William E. Stack, who, after release from his employment, reported to the state auditor some time in the fall of 1908, that an incorrect scale of the timber removed from the land had been made, and that much more timber had been taken than had been reported or paid for by the lumber company. Upon receipt of this information, the auditor immediately inquired into the matter and, acting under the authority of the statute in such cases provided, caused a rescale to be made, termed in the record a “top- and stump” scale, from which it appeared that 7,927,820 feet of timber had been removed from the land, or nearly 3,000,000 feet more than had been reported by the surveyor general. The result of the rescale was submitted to the lumber company, and payment demanded for the quantity of timber actually taken and which was not included in the original scale and report by the surveyor general. Payment was refused, and the state thereafter brought this action to recover the amount so claimed to be due.

The cause was tried below without a jury, and the court made findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to the state, and ordered judgment for the sum of $14,756.33, with interest, the sum *403of $306.38 the cost and expense of the rescale, together with the costs and disbursements of the action. The court found the facts, substantially as here stated, and that the rescale of the timber taken exceeded the quantity reported by the surveyor general by 2,900,830 feet, but further found that of the timber so taken 792,782 feet represented timber under the dimensions authorized by the permit to be cut and removed, and the amount thereof was excluded from the recovery, and defendants are not charged therewith by the judgment. Defendants thereafter moved the court for amended findings of fact, for judgment in their favor, or for a new trial of the action. The motion was in all respects denied and defendants appealed.

1. The statute under which this sale of timber was made is quite full and complete, defining the rights, duties and obligations of the parties definitely and with certainty. Among other things, it provides that the scale by the surveyor general of the timber shall be final and conclusive of the quantity removed, “provided, however, that state land commissioner (state auditor) may question the correctness of any scale made by the surveyor general, and cause a rescale to be made in the manner and form as provided for in section 27.” Section 27 provides the form and method of such rescale, and we discover from the record no defect in such proceedings in the case at bar. The steps made necessary and requisite to a rescale were all taken in substantial conformity with the statute, with the result already stated. The court found that the auditor did question the original scale immediately upon being informed that more timber had been taken from the land than was reported, and that his proceedings in that respect were in all things regular. We hold that the findings in this respect, as well as upon all other issues in the case, are amply supported by the evidence, and cannot be disturbed.

2. It is contended by defendants that the rescale was unauthorized and ineffectual for any purpose for the reasons, (a) that the right of the state to a rescale was lost by laches and delay; (b) that the demand for the same was not made upon the proper officer; (c) that an improper and disqualified person was employed to make the *404rescale, and (d) that the work of rescaling was insufficiently, inadequately and improperly performed. We are unable to sustain any of these contentions.

(a) The auditor exercised the right to demand a rescale immediately or soon after being informed that the original scale was incorrect. This was something over three years after the settlement under the first scale. The contention that the right of rescale was lost by delay is clearly unsound. In actions at law, governed by .express statute of limitations, the doctrine of laches is seldom applied, has often been said to have no application at all, and that ■nothing short of the statutory limitation will bar the right of action. Broadway Bank v. Baker, 176 Mass. 294, 57 N. E. 603; Norris v. Haggin, 136 U. S. 386, 10 Sup. Ct. 942, 34 L. ed. 424; Morris v. McClary, 43 Minn. 346, 46 N. W. 238; Neibuhr v. Gage, 99 Minn. 149, 108 N. W. 884, 109 N. W. 1. The right of the state to recover for the timber taken from this land, and the right of its officer to demand a rescale, was each a legal and not an equitable right, and founded in fact upon contract. The permit to cut and remove the timber constituted a contract, and the right to a rescale was a necessary element thereof, because a part of the statute under which the piermit was issued. The statute fixes no time within which the rescale may be demanded, and the action to recover upon the contract would not expire for the period of six years. And, moreover, the pith and substance of the doctrine of laches is unreasonable •delay in enforcing a known right. 18 Am. & Eng. Enc. (2d ed.) 102; Bausman v. Kelley, 38 Minn. 197, 36 N. W. 333, 8 Am. St. 661. In the case at bar there was no unreasonable delay in demanding the rescale after knowledge of the facts, and if the doctrine can be said to apply to the state in any case (36 Cyc. 910; Board of Co. Commrs. of Hennepin County v. Dickey, 86 Minn. 331, 90 N. W. 775) the absence of delay after knowledge precludes its appli•eation here.

(b) At the time of the original scale Simon Clark was the surveyor general of this logging district, and the scale of the timber was made by him or under his directions. His term of office had «expired, and, at the time of the rescale, another person occupied the *405position.. The demand for the rescale was made upon the new officer, and defendants contend that this was ineffectual, and that it should have been made upon Clark. If counsel’s position in this respect. Avere held to be sound, the result necessarily would be not only the embarrassment of public business, but in many instances the suspension of many official transactions before final completion, and in effect withhold the right of a new incumbent to complete the unfinished work of his predecessor in office. This is not the law. The statute authorizing’ the rescale required the auditor to demand the same of the surveyor general, and the demand in the case at bar was made upon the person holding the office at the time. This was a compliance with the statute. The duties imposed by law upon public officers are functions and attributes of the office, to be performed by the incumbent, though they may have been left undone by a predecessor. State v. Johnson, 111 Minn. 10, 126 N. W. 479, 480. The statutes do not require the service of a copy of the demand on the holder of the permit, and we hold that the demand was properly made and Avas in all things valid.

(c) Upon being informed of the incorrect scale, the auditor directed O. S. Keay, an official land examiner in his office, to proceed to the land and inquire into the merits of the information. This officer complied with directions and subsequently reported that the information was correct. Thereupon the auditor demanded the rescale and designated Keay to act with an official from the surveyor general’s office in making the same. The surveyor general designated J. K Murphy to act for his office. It is contended that the appointment of Keay for this service Avas invalid, for the reason that he was disqualified to serve. This is founded in the claim that, as Keay had made the preliminary investigation, he had formed an opinion, and Avas interested in maintaining the integrity of his report. The contention is without substantial merit. Keay was a public official, and, by his appointment to make the rescale, was charged with the performance of an official duty. He had no pecuniary interest in the subject matter. The statute' expressly provides for the .appointment of one holding the position he held in the service of the state, and the mere fact that he had made a pre*406liminary investigation of the quantity of timber taken from the land did not, as a matter of law, disqualify him for appointment to discharge the duty of rescaling the same. The evidence will, in no view, justify the conclusion that he acted from improper motives, or that the rescale was fraudulent or incorrect.

(d) Murphy and Keay together rescaled the timber; a “top and stump scale,” the former representing the surveyor general and the latter the state auditor. It is contended by defendants that Murphy scaled one-half and Keay the other half of the land, working independently, and that the result was not the joint work of both. If this were true, a serious question might be presented. Both were appointed to make the rescale, and their labors in that behalf should completely cover the entire work. The law contemplates a full and impartial rescaling, and the one made under the mandate of the statute is final upon both the state and the permit holder, and should therefore be jointly made. But the evidence made the question, whether these parties acted independently of each other, one of fact for the trial court. The evidence tends to show that they acted and worked together, were guided by the same rule of admeasurement, and the court was justified in finding that the result was their joint effort to determine the truth. Both men were competent and qualified, and as stated there is no suggestion of fraud or collusion.

3. Murphy and Keay rescaled all the timber taken from the land, including that not covered by defendants’ permit, and reported a total of 7,927,820 feet cut and removed therefrom. During the trial, the state offered and the court received evidence showing the quantity of timber thus scaled which was not included in the permit, and, in ordering judgment against defendants, the court deducted the quantity for which the lumber company was not liable under its contract. The fact that all the timber removed from the land was included in the rescale did not invalidate the same. The quantity not included in the permit was readily determinable from the evidence, and the court properly deducted the same from the judgment. Though the lumber company may have cut and removed the timber not included in the contract, it was not liable therefor in this action, and we are at a loss to discover how de*407fendants were in any way prejudiced by tbe action of tbe court. Defendants offered no evidence upon tbe particular question, and tbe findings of the court upon tbe issue will not bar tbeir right to be heard thereon in any future litigation involving tbe question whether tbe lumber company wrongfully cut and removed timber it was not entitled to under tbe contract.

4. It is further contended that tbe construction given tbe statute in question, and tbe effect of tbe rescale, without affording defendants an opportunity to be beard before tbe rescalers, deprives them of tbeir property without due process of law, in violation of tbe fourteenth amendment of tbe Federal Constitution, and, for that reason, tbe court below erred in ordering judgment against them. We do not sustain this contention.

This covers all that need be said. We have fully considered all tbe assignments of error, and discover no reason for differing with tbe learned trial court, and tbe order appealed from must therefore be affirmed.

Order affirmed.

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