A. C. Tuxbury Lumber Co. v. Byrd

127 S.E. 267, 131 S.C. 32, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 126
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 19, 1925
Docket11724
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 127 S.E. 267 (A. C. Tuxbury Lumber Co. v. Byrd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A. C. Tuxbury Lumber Co. v. Byrd, 127 S.E. 267, 131 S.C. 32, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 126 (S.C. 1925).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Marion.

The plaintiff, lumber company, brought action against the defendants, who by their deed had conveyed to said company the timber on a certain tract of land, to enjoin the defendants from cutting and removing the timber and for damages. Under the pleadings the general issue joined was that of title to the timber. The plaintiff secured a temporary injunction. On the trial of the cause the presiding Judge refused defendants’ motions for nonsuit and for a directed verdict, and granted a motion for a directed verdict in favor of the plaintiff. The defendants’ appeal challenges the correctness of the foregoing rulings.

The essential facts upon which the controversy turns are not in dispute. By their deed dated February 22, 1906, Minnie L. Byrd and Julien E. Byrd, conveyed to A. C. Tux-bury Lumber Company all the timber, both standing and fallen, on a certain tract of land. The deed contains the following time-limit provisions:

“The time of this contract is fifteen (15) years from this date for the removal of said timber, and to grant to the said A. C. Tuxbury Lumber Company such additional time as they may desire’for cutting and removing said timber upon the payment of interest on the original purchase price, at the rate of six (6%) per cent, per annum, payable for each additional year, provided such additional time does not exceed ten (10) years, and the said A. C. Tuxbury Lumber Company agrees to surrender possession of said land, and cancel all of their rights hereunder, with the exception of maintaining and operating tram roads, railroads, and wagon *35 roads across the same, when they have removed all of the timber covered by this contract.”

No timber was°cut or removed during the period of fifteen (15) years from the date of the deed, expiring February 22, 1921. No notice or expression, verbal or written, of a desire on the part of the lumber company to extend the contract was communicated to the Byrds on or before the expiration of the 15-year period. No offer or tender of payment of the interest on the original purchase price at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum for one or more years was made on or before the date of expiration of the 15-year period. There is no contention or suggestion that the non-action of the lumber company prior to the expiration of the 15-year period was due to any misleading representation or conduct of the Byrds. Subsequent to the expiration of the 15-year period, on April 1, 1921, about 37 days after the date of expiration, a representative of the lumber company, “saw” Mr. Julien E. Byrd “with reference to the additional time provided in the deed, and told him he wanted to give him a check or draft for the money.” Mr. Byrd declined to receive the draft or check, saying that the time for payment had expired. Thereafter, in May and in June, 1921, the lumber company made, or attempted to make, formal tender to Julien E. Byrd of the sum of $360, the interest on the original purchase price at 6 per cent, per annum for the whole of the 10-year extension period. Prior to the commencement of this action, the Byrds had cut and removed some of the timber.

It is the contention of the respondent, sustained by the Circuit Court, that under the terms of this deed the provisions for the removal of the timber within a period of 15 years and for granting an extension of 10 years for such removal upon payment of an amount stipulated are to be construed as conditions subsequent, and that under the general rule that such conditions will be strictly construed in favor of the grantee, and will not be enforced to divest an *36 estate “further than may be absolutely required.” Hammond v. Ry. Co., 15 S. C., 10; 34. The lumber company’s offer to comply with the conditions and the tender of payment within a short time after the expiration of the first 15-year removal period were a substantial and sufficient compliance, and that there had been no defeasance or forfeiture of the lumber company’s title. The contentions of the appellants are, in substance, that the deed passed an interest in the timber or land which was divested by the failure of the lumber company to remove the timber within the time limit of 15 years from the date of the contract; that the provision for extension is a unilateral contract, in the nature of an option in which time is of the essence, which should be strictly construed in favor of the vendors or grantors; and that upon the failure of the lumber company to pay or tender payment of the stipulated consideration, or additional consideration, for the grant of an extension, prior to the expiration of the 15-year time limit, its right to the extension of time ceased and the obligation of the vendors terminated.

As has been well said by Buchanan, J., in Smith v. Ramsey, 116 Va., 530; 82 S. E., 189; 15 A. L. R., 32:

“There is scarcely any other subject upon which there is so great a diversity of judicial decision as in the construction of what are known as timber contracts. Not only have the Courts of different jurisdictions construed them differently, but the decisions of the same Court have not always been uniform.”

While such diversity of decision is doubtless attributable largely to differences in opinion as to the nature of the contract — whether it is to be regarded as a license, lease or sale —even where the contract is considered to effect a sale, absolute or conditional, of the timber as an interest in the land, the decisions furnish no^ generally accepted test or theory by which to determine the force of a provision for the removal of the timber within a definite time limit, and *37 the effect upon the rights of the parties of a failure to remove within the time limited.

It may be regarded as settled in this jurisdiction that an ordinary, deed, without conditions or limitations, conveying the standing timber upon a certain tract of land, conveys to the grantee a fee-simple estate in the trees and timber, and in so much of the land as is necessary to sustain the timber; and that the grantee under such a deed is not required to remove the timber within a reasonable time, but may at any time enter upon the land and remove the timber. Knotts v. Hydrick, 12 Rich., 314. Wilson Lumber Co. v. Alderman & Sons Co., 80 S. C., 106; 61 S. E., 217; 128 Am. St. Rep., 865. It has further been expressly decided that a deed conveying the timber upon land, with the right and privilege of cutting and removing the timber within the period of 10 years from the date of the deed, grants ‘a fee in the timber, defeasible upon failure to remove the same within ten years.” Hill v. Lumber Co., 90 S. C., 176; 72 S. E., 1085. In the case last cited the Court quoted with approval the following from the opinion of the West Virginia Court in the case of Adkins v. Huff, 58 W. Va., 645; 52 S. E., 773; 3 L. R. A. (N. S.), 649; 6 Ann. Cas., 246:

“The authorities are practically uniform in holding that an instrument granting standing timber, and containing a clause requiring or permitting it to be removed within a specified time from the date of the grant, gives no absolute and unconditional title to the property.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
127 S.E. 267, 131 S.C. 32, 1925 S.C. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-c-tuxbury-lumber-co-v-byrd-sc-1925.