Fitzgerald v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Co.

3 S.W.2d 30, 176 Ark. 64, 57 A.L.R. 444, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 704
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJanuary 30, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 30 (Fitzgerald v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fitzgerald v. Chicago Mill & Lumber Co., 3 S.W.2d 30, 176 Ark. 64, 57 A.L.R. 444, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 704 (Ark. 1928).

Opinion

Wood, J.

Mrs. N. R. Fitzgerald instituted an action against R. L. Cobh and wife in the chancery court of Phillips County to foreclose a deed of trust executed by Cobb on a large plantation to secure an indebtedness to plaintiff of approximately $104,000. The deed of trust was subject to a prior deed of trust in favor of the Deming Investment Company in the sum of $110,000. The investment company was made a party defendant, but filed no answer. It was alleged that Cobb, tlie mortgagor, bad wrongfully . and unlawfully cut timber from the mortgaged premises and sold the same to the Chicago Mill & Lumber Company, and 'also cut timber from the mortgaged premises -and sold same to the Howe-Neely Lumber Company. The value of the timber alleged to have been sold to the Chicago Mill & Lumber Company was not set forth, and the plaintiff asked that that company be required to produce its books to enable the plaintiff to (ascertain the correct value of the timber sold to it. The value of the timber alleged to have been sold to the Howe-Neely Lumber Company was set down at $2,202.47. Judgment of foreclosure was prayed against the mortgagors, R. L. Cobb and wife, and for damages in the sum of three times the value of the timber removed and sold, and against the lumber companies for the value of the timber purchased by them from Cobb.

The only appeal here is by the plaintiff from the decree dismissing’ her complaint for want of equity as against the lumber companies. Therefore it is unnecessary to set out the answer of Cobb and wife, further than to say it denied that they had wrongfully and unlawfully cut and sold timber to the lumber companies. The Chicago Mill & Lumber Company answered, denying that it had, without lawful authority, purchased timber from Cobb, knowing that it had been cut and removed from the lands described, contrary to law, land denied that any timber sold to it by Cobb was grown on, or removed from, the property described, and denied that the quantity of timber sold to it by Cobb was unknown to the plaintiff, and denied that appellants should recover any amount for the timber. It alleged that it had purchased certain timber in the form of logs from Cobb which bad been delivered to it on the west 'bank of the Mississippi River, in dumps or piles, where it could be conveniently loaded on barges; that it was not responsible for the cutting and hauling of the logs to the river; that, when the logs were thus delivered to it, they- were no longer real estate, but personal property, and tbe plaintiff had no lien thereon; that the proceeds of the sale of the logs by Cobb were used by him in the making of necessary improvements on the property described in the deed of trust. It was alleged that the plaintiff and Cobb, on the 25th day of November, 1923, entered into a verbal agreement by which 'Cobb conveyed to the plaintiff the lands involved, the consideration being the release of the deed of trust; that Cobb,-pursuant to the agreement, surrendered possession to the plaintiff and tendered a quitclaim deed to plaintiff to the mortgaged premises; that, iat the time the verbal agreement was entered into for the surrender of the possession of the premises, the plaintiff knew that the timber had been removed and therefore she was estopped from claiming any damages therefor. It was further alleged that the Doming Investment Company had a prior lien on the mortgaged property in the sum of $121,000, which the plaintiff had not paid, and the failure to satisfy this prior mortgage was pleaded in bar of plaintiff’s right to recover against the lumber company. The Chicag’o Mill & Lumber Company also entered a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it did not state a cause of action, and also on the ground that the plaintiff had not paid the prior indebtedness to the Deming Investment Company, and therefore had no cause of action for the removal of the timber by the mortgagor, Cobb.

The Howe-Neely Lumber Company answered and admitted that it purchased some logs from Cobb, but denied that the plaintiff had any interest therein,' and denied that it was indebted to the plaintiff in the amount prayed. It also denied that the logs purchased by it from Cobb were táken from premises on which the plaintiff had a mortgage. It denied that it had cut logs from any lands owned by plaintiff or Cobb, and alleged that the logs purchased by it from Cobb were delivered by Cobb to the defendant’s millyard at Helena.

The plaintiff replied to the answers, and pleaded the statute of frauds to defeat the alleged verbal contract of sale from Cobb to the plaintiff.

The undisputed, testimony shows that E. C. Nelson, the local manager of the Chicago Mill & Lumber Company, during the year 1923 purchased for the company from R. L. Cobb logs for which it paid the sum of $16,661.72. These logs were purchased under a written contract between the Chicago Mill & Lumber Company and Cobb, executed May 12, 1923. The logs consisted of cottonwood, gum, maple, and elm, and were to 'be delivered on the bank of the Mississippi River at or near Westover Landing, within easy reach of derrick boats at all stages of water, and were so delivered from June to October, 1923. The Chicago Mill & Lumber Company bad the rig*ht to claim the logs as soon as same were placed on the bank of the river at the place specified. The price to be paid for the logs thus delivered was $16 per thousand feet. Westover Place, on which Westover Landing above mentioned is situated, consisted of about 4,500 acres in the whole plantation, divided into several different small plantations included in this foreclosure. Westover Landing Was the landing for all the plantations comprising Westover Place.

The undisputed testimony by those living on the plantations comprising* Westover Place was to the effect that timber was cut from Westover Place for R. L. Cobb in the year 1923 between the river and the levee, and that this timber was delivered on the river bank near West-over Landing*. 'They began cutting the timber as soon as the water went down, and continued until the fall. Timber was cut on the places constituting Westover Place on the land side of the levee, or what is known as the “inside of the levee,” and the timber thus cut was hauled to Helena.

The undisputed testimony showed that the HoweNeely Lumber Company purchased timber from R. L. Cobb during the years 1922 and 1923 amounting to $2,209.47.

Without setting out the testimony in detail, we are convinced that the undisputed testimony shows that the timber purchased by both lumber companies from R. L. Cobb was timber cut by him, from the Westover Place. The testimony shows that the proceeds from the sale of the timber by Cobb were used in the farming operations of the place and in making some minor improvements, such as covering some of the houses. The price paid for the timber by the purchasers included the cutting and the hauling — everything that went into the cost of the timber and the cutting and delivering of the siame. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Cobb, at the time of the foreclosure, owed the appellant the sum of $118,000. The land was sold under foreclosure and purchased by the plaintiff for-$10,000, and the undisputed testimony is that the foreclosure was subject to a prior mortgage in favor of the Deming Investment Company for $110,000. There is testimony in the record tending to prove that the West-over Place, after the removal of the timber, was worth from $160,000 to $175,000. -One. witness, A. C. Cobb, son of R. L.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 30, 176 Ark. 64, 57 A.L.R. 444, 1928 Ark. LEXIS 704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fitzgerald-v-chicago-mill-lumber-co-ark-1928.