Camas Logging Co. v. HASKINS

349 P.2d 852, 221 Or. 182, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 408
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 2, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 349 P.2d 852 (Camas Logging Co. v. HASKINS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Camas Logging Co. v. HASKINS, 349 P.2d 852, 221 Or. 182, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 408 (Or. 1960).

Opinion

HARRIS, J.

(Pro Tempore)

Under date of January 23,1951, defendant, Haskins Lumber Company (hereinafter referred to as Has-kins), entered into a contract with Timber Development Company, the owner of timberlands near Swiss-home, whereby Haskins agreed to construct and operate certain sawmills to manufacture into lumber the timber which Haskins agreed to log from the lands *184 belonging to Timber Development Company. Haskins agreed to do everything needed to produce the lumber.

On March 15,1951, Cope Logging Company entered into a contract with Haskins whereby Cope agreed to perform the logging operations and road construction as required of Haskins by the terms of the contract dated January 23, 1951.

On March 23, 1953, the contract was amended to provide that Haskins assume the obligation to deliver the logs to the mill from the woods, to maintain roads, and to cold-deck surplus logs.

This agreement was assigned by Cope to the plaintiff, Camas Logging Company, on September 5, 1953.

In November, 1953, Hasldns purchased from Timber Development Company all the latter’s interest in the timber covered by the January 23, 1951, contract.

Some time in 1954, the exact date being impossible to determine, the prior written contracts were modified by Camas and Haskins to this effect: Haskins agreed to buy and did buy a crane. Haskins agreed to furnish one man. Camas agreed in return to do all the decking of surplus logs and pay all expenses connected with doing so. The place of log scale was changed from lumber scale as sawed in the mill to log scale.

As logs were received, they would be dumped into a pond belonging to Haskins, from which some might go directly to the mill where they were scaled prior to manufacture, or they might be placed in a cold deck before which they were scaled. The cold deck logs were again scaled when they were taken from the deck to the mill for manufacture.

Logs produced by Camas during the year 1955 were placed in cold deck, from which they were removed and manufactured into lumber prior to March, 1956. *185 The so-called 1956 cold deck was commenced about April 23,1956.

Camas instituted this litigation to restrain Haskins from manufacturing into lumber logs obtained by Haskins from sources other than Camas and for an accounting with reference to other operations.

The accounting with reference to the decks necessarily entailed the question as to whether or not Has-kins had paid Camas for the logs which it had used in the manufacture of lumber. That problem gave rise to the question of what deductions from the price paid for the logs Haskins had made and was permitted to make. The particular deductions which were put in issue included deductions for personal property taxes for the year 1954 and the year 1955 from the price paid for logs taken for manufacture from the 1955 deck; and deductions for the repair of a piece of equipment owned by Haskins but used by Camas in making the 1955 cold deck. Camas also asked for payment for logs which were used to construct a matting or corduroy deck over which the equipment used in cold-decking moved, and for the footage of logs which were used as boomsticks at the mill pond. The court allowed the claim of Camas for reimbursement for amounts withheld by Haskins for personal property taxes and the claim for payment for the logs used in the corduroy road and the boomstick.

The findings of fact and conclusions of law of the trial court so far as material to the issues raised upon this appeal are as follows:

“1. With reference to the 1955 cold deck hereinafter referred to as the ‘cold deck’ it was the agreement of the parties that the plaintiff was to store logs intended for winter use in the cold deck, draw an ‘advance’ and be paid for logs as and when *186 said logs entered the sawmill for manufacture into lumber.
“2. The defendants, under the agreement between the parties, had the right to regulate and did regulate the flow of logs into the mill and the selection of logs to be manufactured in the mill.
“3. The defendants exercised dominion and control over the logs at all times after the logs were placed in the cold deck.
“4. The defendants caused all logs to be scaled, and preserved the record of such scale as and when the logs went into the cold deck. Such records were also kept for logs moving from the cold deck into the sawmill.
“5. It was the express agreement of the parties that the plaintiff would pay all of the ordinary costs incurred in the making of the cold deck.
“6. The parties did not specifically agree with reference to personal property taxes, and there was no meeting of the minds concerning the payment of taxes. Personal property tax is not an ordinary cost in the making of a cold deck. *****
“9. The defendants were not authorized to withhold sums for shovel repairs made and deducted after the termination of the contract.
“10. The plaintiff is entitled to payment of $1,705.72 for logs used in the corduroy road for the benefit of the defendants.
“11. The plaintiff is entitled to payment for 12 thousand board feet of logs used in boom sticks at the rate of $27.50 per thousand.
“CONCLUSIONS OP LAW
“1. The plaintiff is entitled to a decree for the sums held out by the defendants as personal property tax for a total of $5,764.58.
“2. The Plaintiff is entitled to a decree for the , further sums of $196.61 for shovel repairs; $330.00 *187 for boom sticks, and $1,705.72 for logs used in the corduroy road.”

Based on the foregoing findings of fact and conclusions of law, the court entered a decree in favor of Camas in the sum of $7,996.91, with interest thereon at 6% per annum from August 1, 1956, until the date of the decree. From this decree, Haskins has appealed.

Haskins’ assignments of error are stated as follows:

“I
“The Court erred in finding that:
“(a) The Defendants exercised dominion and control over the logs at all times after the logs were placed in the 1955 cold-deck;
“ (b) It was the express agreement of the parties that the Plaintiff would pay all of the ordinary costs incurred in the making of the cold-deck;
“(c) The parties did not specifically agree with reference to personal property taxes, and there was no meeting of the minds concerning the payment of taxes and that personal property tax is not an ordinary cost in the making of a cold-deck;
“(d) The Defendants were not authorized to withhold sums for shovel repairs made and deducted after the termination of the contract;

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Bluebook (online)
349 P.2d 852, 221 Or. 182, 1960 Ore. LEXIS 408, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/camas-logging-co-v-haskins-or-1960.