60 Mich. 622 | Mich. | 1886
The plaintiff, on the thirteenth of March, 1883, brought replevin to recover possession of 1,276 felled cedar trees, 30 pieces of cedar, and 6 pine logs, cut from the N. i of the N. W. ¿ of section 36, in township 12 N., range 10 E., Michigan.
He introduced in evidence on the trial a deed bearing-date “ the second day of July, in the year of our Lord,” but not naming any year; the evidence, however, tended to-show that it was delivered in the year 1870. This deed conveyed the land above described to Loretta M. Rumble, and immediately after the word “ Michigan ” contained the following words: “excepting timber therein.” The evidence shows that there was at that time standing and growing on the land conveyed, timber of the following varieties : Pine, cedar, hemlock, black ash, and chestnut. Some four or five years after the date of the conveyance plaintiff sold all the pine timber on tlie land to Stevens, Fowler & Holland, who eut and removed the most thereof.
The defendant Baldwin acquired title to the land above described by a warranty deed from Mrs. Rumble to Mr. and Mrs. Poole, executed in May, 1871, and a warranty deed from them to him before he cut the timber in question
His testimony concerning these transactions was admitted against the objection of plaintiff’s counsel, and was submitted by the court to the jury, with instructions that from it they could find an agreement by which the plaintiff agreed that the timber should be removed in five years; and also that they could find that Mr. Mumble, for Mrs. Mumble, had a final settlement with plaintiff of his claim to the timber.
I think the court erred in receiving the testimony of Mr. Mumble upon these two points, and in submitting it to the jury. There was no agency proved, or attempted to be proved. There was no privity of contract established between Mrs. Mumble and plaintiff, and he was .not bound by any such agreement or settlement as Mumble asserted was made, and which plaintiff denies was made,
This is not a case of a sale of land, excepting therefrom
Hei’e, in the deed granting the land, the timber thei’eon is excepted from the gi’ant. The title to the timber remains in the plaintiff, who, by the transaction, has an implied power to enter, fell, and take away the timber: Boults v. Mitchell, 15 Penn. St. 371, 379 ; Wood v. Leadbitter, 13 Mees. & W. 844; Thomas v. Sorrel, Vaughn, 330, 351; Hewitt v. Isham, 7 Exch. 75 ; Pierrepont v. Barnard, 6 N. Y. 279.
Plaintiff’s title to the timber arising from the exception in the deed is of the same binding force and effect as if the whole estate had been granted by the deed, and then Mrs. Rumble had executed a deed to plaintiff of all the timber upon the land; in which case the plaintiff’s right to enter upon the land, and cut and remove the timber at pleasure, would have passed as an incident of the grant, and could not have been revoked by Mrs. Rumble so as to defeat her grant, to which the right was incident. It is essential to the enjoyment of the property, and as such enters into the property rights of the plaintiff in the timber by the assent of both parties. Such a right, where there are no words in the contract showing a limitation of the time of enjoyment, or within which it shall be exercised, is not revocable, nor can it be terminated at the will of the owner or grantee of the land, nor by notice to remove the timber in a reasonable time. The right to enter and remove the timber under the exception contained in this deed does not rest upon the notion of a license from the grantee, but as being connected with the exception as an incident to its enjoyment, and is an interest in the land itself to that, extent.
This being so, the subsequent purchasers from Mrs. Rumble took the title with full notice of what appeared in the
The judgment must be reversed, and a new trial granted.