74 Miss. 484 | Miss. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
This cause was instituted in justice of the peace court in Covington county, and judgment rendered for plaintiffs, and defendant appealed the cause to the circuit court of said county,
In July, 1891, defendant Lowrey made a parol agreement with G. W. Walton for the sale by Walton, and purchase by Lowrey, of the standing timber on 120 acres of land, a part of northwest quarter, section three, township six, range fifteen west, situated in Covington county, Mississippi, and which northwest quarter is the homestead of Walton and his wife, who occupied it as such, and Lowrey paid Walton the agreed price, $110, and was to take the timber off within two years. Before the expiration of the two years, having failed to take the timber off, Lowrey made another parol agreement with Walton for an extension of time for two years longer, as he claims, which Walton and wife claim was for one year, and paid $10 for same. Before the expiration of that two years, Lowrey procured another extension of time from Walton alone indefinitely, at the rate of $10 per year, and paid on that $5.85. To that first agreement, the wife of Walton (Mary Walton) assented and acquiesced in the first extension, but refused to consent to any further agreement about the timber. All of these agreements were verbal; no writing of any character entered into any of them. Some timber was cut during the first extension. On August 1, 1895, Lowrey, hearing that Walton and wife were dissatisfied, went to see them about cutting the timber, and Walton and wife both told him he had had time enough, and forbade his cutting any more timber upon their land. Lowrey went to cutting the timber, and Walton went to where he was cutting and forbade him again, but Lowrey cut eighty pine trees after he was forbidden to cut any more by both Walton and wife. They brought suit.
The parol agreement and the first extension, to which the wife assented, operated as a license to Lowrey to enter upon the land without committing a trespass, but did not authorize him to cut trees; but when she refused to assent to further extension,
It is laid down in Harrell v. Miller, 35 Miss., 700, that, “when the statute of frauds speaks of ‘ lands, tenements, and hereditaments,’ it must be understood to refer to them in such sense as the terms imported at common law, and, according to the principles above stated in that case, growing trees must be considered as pertaining to the soil and embraced by the terms of the statute. ” To permit a parol sale of growing timber, and authorize the vendee to enter and cut and remove it, would be to invite the same evils that the statute of. frauds was intended to remedy and prevent. To convey the growing timber is to convey an interest in the land, and a parol sale of the timber is therefore void, and could not be enforced even if all the purchase money had been paid. After the two recent matured decisions of this court — McKenzie v. Shows, 70 Miss., 388, delivered by the present chief justice, and Nelson v. Lawson, 71 Miss., 819, by Chief Justice Campbell, both referring to and recognizing and reannouncing the doctrine laid down in Harrell v. Miller, decided in 1858, and practically acquiesced in by the bar of the state — it must be regarded as the definitely settled law in this state that parol agreements for the sale of growing timber-, to be secured and removed from the land in future, are void, and confer no rights- on the purchaser. “ It is conceded to be law that, if the contract was executory, it conferred no right, because not in writing,” says Chief Justice Campbell, in Nelson v. Lawson, referring to Harrell v. Miller.
It will not be necessary to discuss the instructions that were refused, inasmuch as the instructions given at the instance of defendant were clearly erroneous, and, for that reason, the cause must be remanded; particularly the second instruction
The judgment of the court helow is reversed, a new trial granted and the cause remanded.