223 F. 1000 | 5th Cir. | 1915
We are of the opinion that the evidence adduced before the special master fully supported the conclusion reached by him, and sustained by the District Court, that the appellant was not, as a bona fide purchaser without notice of the claim asserted in the suit, or as a vendee deraigning title through'such a purchaser, entitled to be protected against that claim. The deeds disclosing the claim asserted by the suit were of record at the time the appellant made its purchase, and, under the circumstances of its purchase, it could not be entitled to protection against that claim unless it maintained its: contention that its vendor, the Kelly Land & Lumber Company, was a bona fide purchaser without notice. If the testimony is consistent with the master’s finding against this contention, his report “must be treated as unassailable.” Houston Oil Co. of Texas v. Wilhelm, 182 Fed. 474, 104 C. C. A. 618. Many circumstances disclosed by the evidence are adverted to by the master in his report, and their cumulative probative effect was relied upon by him as furnishing support for the conclusions he reached. We do not deem it necessary to make mention of more than one of the groups of circumstances so relied upon.
Some time during the summer of 1905 W. J. Townsend, for himself and associates, took from C. M. Votaw an option for the purchase of the lands in question — more than 17,000 acres — and he and his associates organized the Kelly Land & Lumber Company with the view of exercising that option and having the lands conveyed to that company. While Townsend and others who were associated with him in the contemplated venture were making investigatidns to determine whether the option would be exercised, and up to within a few days of September 2, 1905, the date of the formal execution of an instrument by which Votaw sold and conveyed the land to Townsend and his associates, and also the date of a number of deeds conveying the several parcels into which the land was subdivided, executed by Votaw and others at his instance to the Kelly Land & Lumber Company, or to grantees who took and held in trust for it, there was pending in a court of record of a county in which a considerable part of the land lay a suit instituted by Votaw against John H. Kirby, the Kirby Lumber Company, and the Houston Oil Company of Texas, the papers in which distinctly disclosed the existence of the claim which is asserted in the suit at bar. To- Townsend, who was a lawyer of extensive experience in dealing with land titles and versed in the law applicable to the examination of them, was exclusively committed the task of examining and passing upon the titles to the land. For a long period, and until about the time the properties of John H. Kirby, of the Kirby Lumber Company, and
The special master’s recommendation was that the appellant be charged with the manufactured value of the timber cut by it after the institution of the suit. As the timber was cut after there was unequivocal notice of the adverse claim, and by a party which failed to sustain its contention that it was an innocent purchaser, it may be that the court would not have been chargeable with error if it had followed the master’s recommendation. Wooden-Ware Co. v. United States, 106 U. S. 432, 1 Sup. Ct. 398, 27 L. Ed. 230; Pine River Logging Co. v. United States, 186 U. S. 279, 22 Sup. Ct. 920, 46 L. Ed. 1164. This question, however, is not presented for decision, as the court did not, in its award of damages, follow the recommendation of the master, but awarded an amount considerably less than that recommended by him, and the party adversely affected by this action of the court is not complaining of it. The court awarded $5 per thousand feet as damages for timber cut after the bringing of the suit. We do not discover from the record how this particular figure was arrived at.
Counsel for the appellant contend that the amount awarded was more than that of the profit which the evidence showed was realized by the appellant from the timber so cut. This contention is sought to be supported by an estimate of the profits, arrived at by deducting from the sum of the prices realized from the lumber made from the timber the sum of the cost of its manufacture and adding interest on the. amount so ascertained. In the calculation submitted in the argument of the counsel the fact is overlooked or ignored that in the cost of manufacture shown by the evidence which is relied on the stumpage was included as an item of outlay. The appellant has not made that outlay, and, as the timber cut belonged to the appellee, the latter is entitled to have its reasonable value included in the award of damages. The result of adding the amount of that item, as it is shown by the evidence, to the amount shown by the estimate submitted by the counsel for the appellant, is an amount greater than that which the court, awarded. The appellant could not have sustained a complaint as to the amount awarded as damages if that amount had been determined by charging the appellant with the prices received by it for the lumber made from the timber so cut, less the cost of the conversion of the timber cut into lumber, as the appellant is not entitled to make a profit
The conclusion is that the record does not show the commission of any error which requires the reversal of the decree appealed from. It follows that that decree should be affirmed; and it is so ordered.