Bisbee v. Torinus

2 N.W. 168, 26 Minn. 165, 1879 Minn. LEXIS 205
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 12, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2 N.W. 168 (Bisbee v. Torinus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bisbee v. Torinus, 2 N.W. 168, 26 Minn. 165, 1879 Minn. LEXIS 205 (Mich. 1879).

Opinion

Berry, J.

This is an action upon a promissory note for :'$>3,452.08, executed to plaintiff by defendants. So far as important for the purposes of this opinion, the facts out of which the note arose are as follows:

On October 2, 1871, Butler Comstock represented to defendants that he and plaintiff were owners of certain large tracts of pine lands in Wisconsin. Defendants relying upon this representation, a written contract was, on that day, entered into by and between them of the second part, and plaintiff of the first part, whereby the latter, for a considera[166]*166tion mentioned, granted, to the former the “right, privilege and permission” to enter upon the lands aforesaid, and cut, during the logging season commencing in 1.871 and 1872, “all the pine timber fit for saw-logs, standing, growing or being” thereon. Under this contract defendants entered upon the lands during the logging season of 1871-2, and' cut and removed therefrom 1,805,834 feet, and paid the parties of the first part and their assigns for 3,000,000 feet, as by the terms of the contract required, at the price specified therein. During the logging season of 1872-3, defendants cut and removed from said lands 2,198,162 feet. On July 11,1873, the plaintiff, together with the administrator and assigns of Comstock, as parties of the first part, and the defendants as parties of the second part, entered into a contract supplemental to that of October 2d. In this supplemental contract it was estimated and agreed that, at the time of entering into the same, there remained standing upon the land 2,575,000 feet of pine timber. Thereupon defendants gave the parties of the first part in the supplemental contract their notes for the amount due for the logs cut on the lands in the logging season of 1872-3, and it was then and there agreed that, after deducting from the amount of timber estimated to be standing upon the lands, to wit, 2,275,000 feet, the amount that had been paid for, th at was not in fact cut during the season of 1871-2, to-wit, 1,194.166 feet, the defendants should give.their note for the balance, being 1,380,834 feet, at the contract price of $2.50 per thousand, which note should be made payable to plaintiff on August 1, 1874. In accordance with this agreement the note in suit was executed. So far as defendants were concerned, this note was given for the interest of all parties of the first part to the supplemental contract in the timber remaining standing, and was made payable to-plaintiff by their arrangement. The supplemental contract, after acknowledging payment in full by the defendants for all the pine timber theretofore cut on and removed'from said lands, or then remaining thereon, stipulates ¡má agrees that [167]*167the defendants may, at any time within five years from the date of such contract, (July 11, 1873,) enter upon said lands, or any part of them, and cut and remove therefrom all the-pine timber remaining thereon. The note in suit was a part-of the payment referred to.

It appears that at the date of the execution of the first contract, (October 2, 1871,) the plaintiff and Butler Comstock were the owners in fee of all the lands described therein, except certain school lands, and a forty-acre tract in section 20. At the time of the execution of the supplemental contract and of the note in suit, the forty-acre tract was owned in fee by defendants, and the parties of the first part to said contract had no interest therein or in the timber thereon, and such transfer did not enter into the estimate of standing timber made by the parties at the time of making the supplemental contract. The school-section lands were held by plaintiff and Butler Comstock, under certificates of sale issued to them by the state of Wisconsin, under the laws of that state regulating the sale of school and university lands, and only a part of the purchase-money of the same had been paid, and no patent has been issued for any part thereof. By the laws of Wisconsin, it is provided that “the title or fee” of all school and university lands shall remain in the state until patents- shall issue therefor, and that no certificate of sale shall be deemed to confer upon the purchaser of such lands, or any person claiming under him, the right to cut down, destroy or carry off from the same any wood or timber stand-^ ing or growing thereon, without the consent of the commissioners. With the exception of an eighty-acre tract, all the other lands mentioned in the original and supplemental contracts — the same being situate in Douglas county, Wisconsin — had been sold to said county for delinquent taxes, as follows: A part was sold on September 5, 1871, and certificates of sale bearing that date were issued to Douglas county. These certificates were, on January 13, 1874, assigned to one ■Chalmers. On December 8, 1874, no- redemption of said [168]*168part having taken place, a tax deed thereof was duly executed and delivered to Chalmers, who then became the owner thereof and of the timber thereon. The remainder of said other lands were sold on September 3, 1872, and certificates of sale bearing that date were issued to Douglas county. These certificates were, on January 13, 1874, assigned to said Chalmers. On May 10,1876, no redemption of said remainder of lands having been made, a tax deed thereof was duly executed and delivered to said Chalmers, who then became owner thereof and of the timber thereon. Under the laws of Wisconsin, the owner or occupant of any lands sold for taxes may redeem the same at any time within three years from the date of the certificate of sale. The laws of Wisconsin also provide “that whenever any land shall have been sold for the non-payment of taxes thereon, and shall have been bid in by the county as provided by law, and the taxes for which the same were sold remain due and unpaid, and the county remains the owner and holder of the certificate or certificates of sale, it shall bo unlawful for anj*- person or persons whomsoever to cut or remove any logs or timber from such land as aforesaid; and if any person or persons shall cut or remove any logs or timber from such land as aforesaid, it is made the duty of the county treasurer of the county in which such land is situated to issue a warrant under his hand and seal to the sheriff of -his county, stating the description or descriptions of such land, and the amount of taxes thereon for one or more years, commanding such sheriff forthwith to seize such timber and logs, (if to be found in his county,) and sell the same, or a sufficient amount thereof to satisfy said taxes.”

It appears that the amount of pine timber on the eighty-acre tract before mentioned (the title of which remained in the plaintiff and Butler Comstock, or his heirs or assigns,) was, according to the estimate made by the parties to the supplemental contract, at the time of the execution thereof, 400,000 feet, of the value of $1,000, at the price at which the sale was made. It further appears that at the time of the [169]*169■execution of the supplemental contract, the parties thereto knew that there were taxes which had not been paid, and which were claimed to be due, upon all the lands described in said contract, except the school lands.

The referee by whom this case was tried below finds three ■conclusions of law, which are in substance as follows: First, that the plaintiff and “his associates,” at the time of making the supplemental contract, had a good title to the eighty-acre tract, and a right to sell the timber thereon; second, that there was a valid consideration for the note in suit, to the extent of $1,000; third*

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12 N.W. 348 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1882)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2 N.W. 168, 26 Minn. 165, 1879 Minn. LEXIS 205, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bisbee-v-torinus-minn-1879.