Enders v. Skannal

35 La. Ann. 1000
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedOctober 15, 1883
DocketNo. 104
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 La. Ann. 1000 (Enders v. Skannal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Enders v. Skannal, 35 La. Ann. 1000 (La. 1883).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Todd, J.

This is an action to recover damages for an alleged violation of a contract and eviction from certain lands by means of violence and threats. ■

The defense is substantially the general issue and the contention that it was the plaintiff who had first violated the contract and had misconstrued it throughout.

The case was tried by a jury, which gave a verdict against the de-' fendant for four thousand dollars, and he has appealed.

The plaintiff is engaged in the manufacture of furniture, sash, doors, blinds, etc., in the City of Shreveport; lie had gone to considerable expense in establishing the factory and had quite a number of opera-' tives employed, some of them, as the evidence shows, brought from distant States.

Finding it difficult, if not impossible, to procure lumber from the sawmills in the vicinity of the kind needed in his business, which was principally cotton-wood, gum, ash, etc., it became necessary to establish a mill of his own, in order to have a constant supply of the lumber required.

The defendant was the owner of a plantation on Red River, consist[1002]*1002ing of about 1,000 acres, 250 in cultivation and the balance heavily timbered. He wanted more of his land cleared and needed lumber to improve his plantation. Plaintiff required timber for his mill of the kinds designated, with which the land abounded, and moved by these considerations, the defendant drew up and plaintiff signed the following writing:

“ I obligate myself, for the privilege of cutting timber off that portion of J. A. Skannal’s Chalk Level place which he intends clearing, and for putting a sawmill on the place, to furnish him, free of cost, twenty-five hundred feet of lumber during the month of August, and seventy-five thousand feet additional as he may order during the remaining twelve months.

I further obligate myself to burn and move off the ground, all logs and brush left from timber cut in a reasonable length of time, and to burn all sawdust made by the mill, and to interfere with no hands on the place, by hiring or other means, without consent of J. A. Skannal. The lumber I furnish him is to be good cotton-wood lumber.

Wm. Enders.”

The twenty-five hundred feet in first part of this contract should be twenty-five thousand.

The defendant did not sign, but when this was suggested to him by plaintiff, he replied, u that he was a gentleman and was good for what he said.” It is not questioned that, though the contract was in this form, it was essentially commutative in its character.

The subsequent difficulties of the parties grew out of the constructions placed by them respectively on this agreement.

The evidence shows that, shortly after its execution, the plaintiff erected the sawmill on the land in a locality which he deemed most convenient to the timber, with the approval, as to the.choice of location, of the defendant—the original cost of the mill and of its transportation and construction entailing an expense of several thousand dollars. He employed a considerable number of hands in felling and cutting the timber, and commenced sawing large quantities of lumber. He supplied the defendant with lumber from time to time in such quantities as he needed or called for, in compliance with the stipulations of the contract. There is, at least, no complaint that he failed in this respect. He did not deliver the entire quantity mentioned in the contract, being prevented from doing so by events which we will proceed to relate.

The undertaking of the plaintiff had proceeded apparently to the satisfaction of both parties until January, 1882.

[1003]*1003In that month, the overseer of the defendant ordered the laborers, who were colored, and then under the charge of the plaintiff’s son, to leave the premises, and threatened to have them arrested for trespass if they did not. When this was reported to the plaintiff, lie dispatched to the place a number of white laborers, who were put to work felling the trees. What then occurred is best told by one of the witnesses. Young Enders, son of the plaintiff, states :

“ Mr. Skannal rode up and told them that the next man that put an axe in a tree he would kill him on the spot; and he then came to the mill and told me that if I allowed any more trees to be cut, he would kill me; he was not armed, but said he would go up and get his gun.” At this the laborers ceased work and returned to Shreveport.

The plaintiff thereupon sent down another set of bands in charge of a Mr. Chaffin. We leave the same witness again to say what followed. He states:

“The men had not made more than four or five strikes with their axes, before Mr. Skannal rode up with his gun. He rode to the hands aud told them, that the first man who struck another axe in a tree, he would kill him on the spot. He had a Winchester rifle. He met Chaffin and me in the road, when he was coming toward the house, and he said: ‘ Chaffin! by God! are you at the head of this business'? ’ Chaffin replied that he had come down there for Mr. Enders to cut timber. Skannal then said : ‘Chaffin, I will give you fifteen minutes to leave my place; if you don’t, I will kill you on the spot.’

“Chaffin then said: ‘ Skannal, that is noway to do business; there is law in this country, and there are other ways for you to stop us from cutting without bringing your gun down on us.’ Skannal then said : ‘ Damn the law 1 I own this land and I am going to have things here my way, and if I can’t do it any other way, I will do it with my gun.’ “In the meantime the hands returned to the house, when Skannal rode up and said; ‘ Gentlemen, I will give you five minutes to leave my place, and if you don’t, I will be forced to use my gun on you.’

“ All of the hands left but two. One of these asked for a little more time to get ready. Skannal then got down from his horse and said: ‘ I’ll be God damned if you don’t leave now.’

“Skannal then commenced abusing plaintiff, saying that if the old man had come there himself, things would have been settled long ago.

“ Skannal then told us that he did not propose to have any one cut on his land, that he intended to clear every damn foot that was under fence and he did not propose to have another tree cut there.”

The statement of this witness is fully corroborated and, in fact, its correctness on this point is not questioned.

[1004]*1004- In consequence of this violence the engagement between the parties was abruptly terminated, and the plaintiff left the premises and removed his mill therefrom.

The defendant’s counsel, while they do not approve of his conduct, undertake to justify the defendant’s asserted construction of the contract which led to his violent proceedings.

According to' defendant’s construction and that of his counsel, the main, if not the sole object of the contract was to procure the clearing of the defendant’s land, and that all the operations and movements of the plaintiff should be conducted mainly to that end. The plaintiff, his laborers and his mill were not to be in the defendant’s way; they must get out of his way when his (defendant’s) part of the work of clearing was going on. Everything must subserve this purpose.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 La. Ann. 1000, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/enders-v-skannal-la-1883.