Bloedel Timberlands Development, Inc. v. Timber Industries, Inc.

626 P.2d 30, 28 Wash. App. 669, 1981 Wash. App. LEXIS 2066
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMarch 23, 1981
Docket3909-II
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 626 P.2d 30 (Bloedel Timberlands Development, Inc. v. Timber Industries, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bloedel Timberlands Development, Inc. v. Timber Industries, Inc., 626 P.2d 30, 28 Wash. App. 669, 1981 Wash. App. LEXIS 2066 (Wash. Ct. App. 1981).

Opinion

Petrich, J.

Treble damages for a timber trespass and damages for conversion for the timber severed from the trespass area are sought in this lawsuit. 1

Appeals and cross appeals followed a bench trial resulting in the award of treble damages in favor of the plaintiff Bloedel Timberlands Development, Inc., against defendant Timber Industries, Inc., less a setoff and dismissal of the *671 claim for treble damages against individual defendant Jack Ortolf, president of Timber Industries, as well as the dismissal of the claim against defendant Mitsui & Co. (U.S.A.), Inc., for conversion. We affirm the trial court's judgment in all respects.

Bloedel, as part of its ongoing forest management practices, decided in 1972 to sell some of its standing timber and took steps to prepare an offering of such timber in the tract known as the Wright Timber Sale. This area, carved out of a larger tract owned by Bloedel, consisted of about 60 acres of land irregular in shape. It was bounded on the north by the clearly identified Goodyear Camp railroad grade; on the east and west "by orange-glow flagging"; and the south by the southern section line of two adjoining sections. Defendant Jack Ortolf, acting in his capacity as president of Timber Industries, inspected the Wright Timber Sale in the company of John Allen, forest manager for Bloedel, who pointed out the orange-glow flagging. Allen had previously erected the orange-glow flagging for the east and west boundaries. During this inspection trip, a line of blazed trees extending between the southern termini of the east and west flag lines was observed and discussed by Ortolf and Allen. The testimony at trial was in conflict as to the representation of the blazed tree line as the section line, with Ortolf claiming Allen verbally represented the blazed tree line as the section line and Allen denying the same.

An agreement between Bloedel and Timber Industries dated November 8, 1972, entitled Timber to harvest standing timber in the Wright Timber Sale area in exchange for a cash payment of $80,000. Weather conditions as well as the timber market delayed completion of the project as originally scheduled. For additional sums of money and a deposit of $1,000 to be held as a "performance bond," time for completion was extended by written agreement to September 30, 1976. The actual operation extended into October or early November of 1976 without the benefit of a written extension. The source of the $80,000 cash consideration was from an advance in a like amount to Timber *672 Industries from defendant Mitsui. The advance was evidenced by a note and security agreement in favor of Mitsui on the timber to be harvested. Mitsui also agreed with Timber Industries to purchase about a million board feet of hemlock and douglas fir logs of certain sizes for export. Payment in part for such logs was by a credit on the advance at a predetermined rate. The remaining timber was to be sold by Timber Industries to other customers. This was one of other similar, although not necessarily identical, arrangements between Timber Industries and Mitsui which provided financing assistance to Timber Industries and a ready source of logs suitable for export to Mitsui.

Timber Industries contracted with logging operators for the actual logging operations. Three such operators in succession were so engaged, the last being M & M Logging owned by Ray Allen, with Stan Hull as one of its principal employees. Subsequent to the original Bloedel-Timber Industries agreement but before completion of the cutting, Crown Zellerbach, the owner of the property immediately south of the Wright Timber Sale area, located a claimed boundary line somewhat north of the blazed tree line. Once this line was established, Timber Industries respected it and refrained from any cutting south of the Crown Zeller-bach line.

Jack Ortolf was seldom on the tract after the initial inspection. In the spring of 1975, he personally inspected the property. Up to that time the logging operations were primarily in the western part, progressing toward the east. At this time he and his son erected red and blue flagging slightly inside the east orange-glow flag line. His stated reason was that the orange-glow flag line was poorly marked, and the new line was a clear warning of the east boundary, the general direction in which the operation was progressing. During the summer months of 1976, David Cassida, an employee of Timber Industries, was assigned the task of supervising the operation. Cassida, on behalf of Timber, entered into the agreement with Ray Allen of M & *673 M Logging, the third and last logging contractor to do the cutting, loading and delivery of the timber.

However, David Cassida's knowledge of the boundaries was apparently gained from a map of the area, and the flagged boundary to the east had never been pointed out to him. Ray Allen of M & M had been advised of the boundaries, not by Cassida but by members of a prior logging crew. Because of other commitments Ray Allen left the Wright tract the end of September, and Stan Hull, an employee of M & M Logging, continued the operation. The logging operation in late September and October of 1976 progressed east beyond the eastern boundary of the Wright tract and onto Bloedel's adjoining property. The operation to the east stopped when the outer limits of the most recent yarding site had been reached. It was not until the loggers returned towards the yarding site that the orange-glow flagging and the red and blue flagging were noticed. Upon realizing a probable trespass, Timber Industries ceased logging operations in the trespassed area. The fact of the trespass onto 9.3 acres of the Bloedel property is not disputed, nor is the stumpage value of $20,000 for severed timber.

At the close of the plaintiff's case the trial court dismissed the trespass claims against defendants Ortolf and Mitsui, as well as the alternate claim of conversion against defendant Mitsui. It did award judgment against defendant Timber Industries in the amount of $60,000, thrice the value of the standing timber for the timber trespass, but allowed a setoff in the amount of $5,746 for the standing timber in the disputed area of the south boundary plus an additional $1,000, the amount of bond deposit.

Timber Industries appeals, claiming that the admitted trespass was committed with M & M Logging acting as an independent contractor rather than its agent, and further, that the trespass was unintentional and therefore not subject to treble damáges. Bloedel cross-appeals the award of the setoff in favor of Timber Industries, as well as the dismissal of the trespass claim against the individual defendant Ortolf and the conversion claim against Mitsui.

*674 We first address Timber Industries' challenge to the trial court's determination that Ray Allen and Stan Hull, the owner and employee of M & M Logging, were its agents.

The contract between Timber and M & M Logging specified that M & M was an independent contractor. The record shows that M & M was an entity distinct from Timber, that its employees were paid by it and that it supplied its workers with tools and equipment. Timber argues that M & M is an independent contractor as a matter of law.

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Bluebook (online)
626 P.2d 30, 28 Wash. App. 669, 1981 Wash. App. LEXIS 2066, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bloedel-timberlands-development-inc-v-timber-industries-inc-washctapp-1981.