Cullman Property Co. v. H. H. Hitt Lumber Co.

77 So. 574, 201 Ala. 150, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 91
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedDecember 20, 1917
Docket6 Div. 413.
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 77 So. 574 (Cullman Property Co. v. H. H. Hitt Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cullman Property Co. v. H. H. Hitt Lumber Co., 77 So. 574, 201 Ala. 150, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 91 (Ala. 1917).

Opinions

Statement of the Case.

MAYFIELD, J.

This is the second appeal, to determine the sufficiency of the allegations of the bill in this case to warrant the relief prayed, viz. the enjoining of repeated trespasses upon land, the awarding of damages in consequence of trespasses upon the same land, and the decreeing of discovery against the respondents as to what particular lands were trespassed upon, the nature, character, and extent of the trespass, the times and occasions of the trespasses, the identity of the particular persons who committed them and for whom such persons were acting, and as to what contracts or agreements, if any, were ever made by and between the respondents, as to liability, compensation, or idemnity for such trespasses.

The report of the case on the former appeal will show many allegations which are yet in the bill. See 189 Ala. 13, 66 South. 720.

The original bill and the bill as amended before the first appeal were held bad, on demurrer, on account of the generality and uncertainty of the averments, and for multiplicity, and because the allegations as to many material matters were mere conclusions of the pleader. When the case went back the bill was again amended, or,- more accurately speaking, a new or substitute bill was filed in lieu of the original and amended bills up *152 to that date, and demurrers thereto were interposed, and were sustained. Prom the decree on such demurrers the complainant prosecutes this appeal, assigning and arguing error in such rulings, and insisting that the substituted bill is sufficient in its averments. Some of the defects of the averments of the original bill, pointed out on the former appeal, were cured; but whether or not all were cured, and the averments rendered sufficient to authorize the relief prayed, are questions presented to us on this appeal. The chancellor wrote no opinion, but merely rendered a decree sustaining the demurrers, without even pointing out the particular grounds of demurrer which he deemed to he well taken. The last amendment relieved the bill of some of its faults as to multiplicity, by striking out certain of the defendants, and some of the averments as to such defendants, and, of course, as to the relief asked against them. In other respects the present bill is in effect, though not in terms, what the bill was on the former appeal.

As to the rights and interests of those named as complainants, the amended and substituted bill, after giving a history of the legal title to the lands, from the United States government to complainant, proceeds as follows:

“That on, to wit, the 27th day of September, 1911, the complainant, the Cullman Property Company, acquired all the interests of the, said S. Roman, ns trustee, and said cestui que trust in and to the lands then remaining unsold, a list of which is attached hereto as Exhibit A. and prayed to he made a part of this bill, and has acquired from the said S. Roman, as trustee, all of his interest and the interest of said cestui que trust arising as an incident to the ownership of said property prior to said conveyance, including' all choses in action and cause of action in favor of S. Roman, as trustee, accruing to him by reason and because of the depredations on said lands committed by the respondents, and hereafter specifically set forth; and the said complainant, the Cullman Property Company, is now the beneficial owner of all said lands and the holder of the legal title thereto, and of all causes of action accruing to the said S. Roman, as trustee, prior to said conveyance; and the said S. Roman, as trustee, joins in this bill as a complainant, suing for the use and benefit of the Cullman Property Company as to said causes of action.”

As to the repeated and continuous trespasses on the land, giving equity jurisdiction to enjoin future trespasses and to award damages as for past depredations, the present bill contains, among others, the following allegations :

“That although the title to said lands long since, to wit, about the year 1870, passed out of the government and vested in the South & North Alabama Railroad Company, and thereby became private property, and although the title to said property has since changed hands, and become the property, respectively, of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company, H. Hullman, the North Alabama .Land Company, the North Alabama Land & Immigration Company, S. Roman, trustee, and the complainant in this case, it has been looked upon, considered, and treated by a great portion of the inhabitants of the rural districts where said lands are located as common property, and they have habitually trespassed thereon and have taken the timber therefrom ; and, by reason of the sentiment that has grown up with reference to said lands, and the custom of the 'inhabitants of the districts where said lands are situated, to use it and its products as common property, it is practically impossible for complainant to obtain justice and recover in a suit at law before a jury in the counties where the land is located for a conversion of the timber therefrom; the complainant avers that divers and sundry persons and cox*porations have habitually preyed upon said property, taking therefrom great quantities of valuable timber, converting the same to their own uses, to the great detriment to said lands, and great and lasting damage to the owners thereof.”

The property described embraces more than 50,000 acres of land scattered over four counties, within 15 miles of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad right of way; that is, necessarily scattered, because it is only in the odd-numbered sections. It is described as being in more than 2,000 separate and distinct tracts, mostly in 40-acre and 20-acre blocks.

There is no attempt to allege upon which particular blocks or tracts the trespasses have heretofore been committed or threatened, nor what particular kind or quality of timber is on any particular tract or tracts, nor what quantity and kind has been removed therefrom or destroyed, or is now threatened to be removed or destroyed, except in the most general terms, as, for example:

“That said respondents, by their said divers and sundry depredations and trespasses, committed through their numerous and sundry agents and employes at different times, places, and un_der different and sundry circumstances, and in 'the several different counties named above, have taken from the property described in Exhibit A vast quantities of valuable timber, the exact amount, quantity, quality, and value of which is unknown to the complainant, but of great value, to wit, $100,000 and perhaps more,” etc.

It is also alleged that respondents have established telephone lines and logging roads over and across the lands of complainant; hut the bill attempts no other description or location of the lines, or of any particular tract on or over which they are located. There are allegations that the trespasses are repeated and frequent, and that the injury is irreparable, but only as conclusions. The piayer of the bill is that the coui-t ascertain— “the quantity, character, and quality of the timber converted by each of said respondents, and the value thereof; aixd; if it be ascertained that said trespasses were intentional, that the value of said timber after it was manufactured into lumber be ascertained; that it.

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Bluebook (online)
77 So. 574, 201 Ala. 150, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 91, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cullman-property-co-v-h-h-hitt-lumber-co-ala-1917.