Brown Lumber Co. v. Consolidated Lumber Co.

238 N.W. 257, 255 Mich. 314, 1931 Mich. LEXIS 624
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1931
DocketDocket No. 50, Calendar No. 35,609.
StatusPublished

This text of 238 N.W. 257 (Brown Lumber Co. v. Consolidated Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown Lumber Co. v. Consolidated Lumber Co., 238 N.W. 257, 255 Mich. 314, 1931 Mich. LEXIS 624 (Mich. 1931).

Opinion

Sharpe, J.

The Brown Lumber Company, a Michigan corporation, had been engaged in the lumber and woodworking business in Traverse City since about the year 1908. W. W. Parr was for many years its president and manager. The plaintiff Thad B. Preston is a resident of Ionia and a large stockholder in the company. The defendant Consolidated Lumber Company, a Michigan corporation, was organized in 1912. It acquired certain timber lands in the county of Schoolcraft, erected a sawmill thereon, and engaged in the manufacture of lumber. The defendant Culver, a resident of Ludington, was president of this company from 1915 until July 23, 1925.

In 1916, as a result of negotiations between Mr. Culver and Mr. Parr, the plaintiff company leased certain land from the Consolidated company, and erected thereon a woodworking plant, the lumber for which was to be supplied by the Consolidated company. In 1919, this company, decided to discontinue the operation of its sawmill, and a written agreement was entered into on February 26, 1920, between the two companies, whereby the Consolidated company sold to the plaintiff company the *316 merchantable timber on certain of its lands, with some reservations, at the price of $6.50 per thousand feet of stumpage. The amount of the timber was to be determined by two cruisers, one selected by each of the companies, and, if they could not agree, a third cruiser should be named by the parties and the amount fixed by any two of them should be final. They were to include in their estimate all hardwood with tops not less than eight inches in diameter, and all,softwood with tops not less than six inches in diameter. ■

It was further provided therein that upon its execution the plaintiff company should deliver to the Consolidated company its notes for $25,000, payable $5,000 on or before the 10th day of January, 1921, and $5,000 payable on the 10th day of each month thereafter until the purchase price', as determined by the estimate of stumpage, should be fully paid. It was further agreed that, after the amount of thé timber had been determined, the plaintiff company, on June 1, 1920, should execute and deliver to the Consolidated company its promissory notes as above provided for. The lands included therein were in townships 44, 45, and 46 north, range 18 west.

Pursuant thereto, the plaintiff employed Joseph Chenord, and the defendant T. C. Sheridan, as cruisers. They completed their work in town 44 in the spring of 1920, estimating the merchantable timber thereon to be 15,868,000 feet. The plaintiff company thereupon sent William Richmond, a man selected by it, “to take charge of the woods work,” with instruction “to check up on some of the descriptions” in town 44 and “see what he thought of that estimate,” and “to block out the work that should be carried on during that season in taking it off.” He reported that the amount of the timber as *317 estimated was not on the- land. Mr. Parr thereupon advised the defendant Consolidated company that it would not accept this estimate. Plaintiff company thereupon substituted Richmond for Chenord to act with Sheridan in cruising the lands in towns 45 and 46. They completed their estimate on the timber in these towns, agreeing upon 19,041,000 feet. A new written agreement was entered into on June 1, 1920, as to this timber, in which the above estimate was accepted as final and provision made for the payment of $25,000 in cash and notes payable monthly. The cash payment was made, and these notes were executed by the plaintiff company and delivered to the Consolidated company.

After some negotiations, another cruise was made of the lands in town 44 by George Tuttle, representing the plaintiff company, and James Scott the Consolidated company, who agreed upon the amount of timber on this tract to be 5,877,000 feet. This the Consolidated company accepted; its acceptance being due, at least somewhat, as claimed by it, to the marked slump in the price of stumpage at that time. A settlement was had, based thereon, and this timber was fully paid for.

In 1922, the plaintiff company desired to issue bonds upon its holdings to refund some of its obligations. To do so it became necessary for it to acquire legal title to the timber theretofore held by it under the written agreements or contracts for its sale. A conveyance thereof was made to it by the Consolidated company, and, as a condition thereof, plaintiff company paid to it $60,000 in cash to apply on the purchase and executed notes for the balance. Prior to this bond issue, some investigation of the amount of the timber and the value of the plaintiff company’s plants was made by an appraiser of the *318 bonding company. The circulars issued relating thereto stated that the issue of $150,000 was “secured by a closed first mortgage on approximately 24,000,000 feet of timber.”

In the month of February, 1925, the plaintiff company sent its then woods superintendent, George Tuttle, to block out a lumbering operation of the timber in towns 45 and 46. He soon thereafter reported that there was an error in the estimate; that the amount as determined by the cruisers was not on the lands.. A few weeks thereafter there was discussion of the matter and some correspondence between Mr. Parr and Mr. Culver, but no agreement was reached relative thereto. The plaintiff company cut a part of the timber on these tracts (3,162,077 feet), and afterwards had a cruise thereof made by Banzhaf & Watson, Inc., which revealed, with that cut, a total thereon of 6,817,177 feet.

In the meantime, the financial affairs of the Consolidated company had not been prosperous. The defendant Stearns Coal & Lumber Company became interested therein, and both Mr. Stearns and Mr. Culver became personally liable for considerable sums in an effort to keep it afloat. Its liabilities became such that a public sale of the great bulk of its assets was had on January 26, 1926, at which the Stearns company became the purchaser for $250,000. Later, notes of the plaintiff company to the amount of $40,000, being the balance due on the sale made on June 1st, which had been used as collateral with a banking firm in Milwaukee, were sold and were purchased by the defendant Stearns company. These notes were indorsed by the plaintiff Preston.

On September 2, 1926, the plaintiffs filed the bill of complaint herein. It was twice amended, the last *319 time on November 5,1927. It set up with more particularity the facts above stated. It prayed for a reformation of the contract of sale to make the finality of the cruisers’ determination of the amount of the timber on the lands in towns 45 and 46—

“to be dependent upon an accurate and correctly made cruise and estimate of the said timber honestly made; and that the same may be decreed to be subject to such modification as shall apply to mutual mistake and fraud, and that the said clause be so modified and to apply to and mean the actual amount of timber, of the specifications described in said contracts found to be on said lands; ’ ’—

for a decree that the notes held by the Stearns company were null and void, and for an accounting of the money due by it on account of its purchase, and a personal decree against the Consolidated company and Culver for the amount overpaid by it on account thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 N.W. 257, 255 Mich. 314, 1931 Mich. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-lumber-co-v-consolidated-lumber-co-mich-1931.