Flowers v. R. A. Vinton Lumber Co.

35 So. 2d 300, 203 Miss. 420, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 288
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1948
DocketNo. 36763.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 35 So. 2d 300 (Flowers v. R. A. Vinton Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flowers v. R. A. Vinton Lumber Co., 35 So. 2d 300, 203 Miss. 420, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 288 (Mich. 1948).

Opinions

*425 McGehee, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On October 11, 1946, the appellant, Roosevelt Flowers, obtained an injunction against the appellee, R. A. Vinton Lumber Company, to prevent it from further cutting and removing merchantable timber which be bad sold to said Lumber Company on September 25, 1944, by warranty deed, for a cash consideration of $1100. The alleged right to enjoin was predicated upon the fact that the- timber deed contained a provision to the effect that the grantee was to have until September 25, 1946, to cut and remove the said merchantable timber, and at the end of said day, the title to said timber then standing on the 200 acres of land described in the deed was to “revert to and become the property of the grantor herein, bis heirs and assigns, and all rights of the grantee shall cease at that time,” it being alleged that the grantee was engaged in cutting and removing timber from said land on October 11, 1946-, when the original bill of complaint was filed and the temporary writ of injunction obtained.

There was an amended bill of complaint thereafter filed which also prayed for a discovery and accounting as to the number of trees cut and removed after September 25, 1946, and as to the species, total amount, and value thereof.

The defendant lumber company filed its answer and cross-bill, and in the cross-bill it prayed that the court restore unto the cross-complainant a period of 15 months from and after the expiration date fixed in the timber deed because of the fact that the grantee lumber company had been deprived of that much of the period orig *426 inally granted for cutting and removing the timber by the wrongful acts of the grantor, Roosevelt Flowers.

The trial court on final hearing of the case entered a decree granting an additional period of twelve months from the rendition of such degree within which the grantee could cut and remove the same. The decree having also dissolved the injunction and dismissed the bill of complaint, the grantor in the timber deed appeals.

It appears that the vendor, Roosevelt Flowers, had purchased the 200 acres of land and the timber thereon on October 21,1943, from C. A. Pitchford, for a consideration of $4,000, of which the sum of $500 had been' paid in cash, the remainder being evidenced by eleven promissory notes of $300 each, and a twelfth note for the sum of $200, payable one each year for twelve years after date, all bearing interest at the rate of 5% per annum. A vendor’s lien was retained for security for the unpaid portion of this purchase money, and a deed of trust had been taken by the said C. A. Pitchford on the land and timber from his vendee as additional security. Both of these instruments were of record at the time the timber was later sold to the appellee lumber company, and insofar as the rights of C. A. Pitchford were concerned he was fully protected whether the lumber company had actual notice of these outstanding liens or not, but as to its grantor, Roosevelt Flowers, the lumber company was entitled to rely upon its warranty from him.

The deed of trust provided among other things that the said Roosevelt Flowers “shall have the right to cut such timber from the land as he might desire for use in making improvements and repairs thereon, but he shall not, without the consent of the said Pitchford, sell any timber therefrom, and should any such timber sales be made the proceeds thereof shall be paid to the said Pitch-ford and apply to the payment of the indebtedness hereby secured.”

When appellant Roosevelt Flowers sold the timber to the appellee lumber company on September 25, 1944, he *427 did not inform the mortgagee Pitchford of snch fact until five days thereafter. He then paid to the mortgagee a sufficient sum to take care of one of the $300 notes, and soon thereafter paid $150 on the second note, but with the understanding in the outset that he was to pay two of the said notes in full out of the proceeds of the sale of the timber or at least the sum of $600. Having paid only $450 of the amount agreed upon, and having failed and neglected for several months to pay the remaining $150, the mortgagee during the month of June, 1945, notified the lumber company not to cut and remove any timber from the land until the remaining $150 was paid. A similar notice in writing was also given on July 3, 1945. The lumber company was required to observe these notices under penalty of being sued by the trustee in the deed of trust for a conversion of a part of the security contracted for by the beneficiary for the unpaid balance on the purchase of the land and timber.

Thereupon the lumber company caused one of its representatives to contact its grantor and inform him of the fact that “Mr. Pitchford stopped us and says we can’t cut any more without paying him $150.00,” and with the result that the grantor, Flowers, stated, “Well, I have got that all fixed, and you can cut when you get ready.” However, as a matter of fact, he hadn’t done anything toward securing the consent of the mortgagee for any further cutting of the timber, and the trial court was warranted in believing from the testimony that the lumber company had no actual notice of these outstanding liens until it received the letters from the mortgage; that otherwise the proceeds of the timber sale would have been paid to the lienor.

As between the grantor of the timber and his vendee, it was the duty of such grantor to pay to the mortgagee in the first instance the full proceeds of the timber .sale so as to protect his warranty, and having failed to do so and having induced the mortgagee to permit bim to retain a part of such proceeds on condition that he would *428 pay at least two of the purchase money notes out of the remainder thereof, it then became his duty both to the mortgagee and to the grantee in the timber deed to comply fully with such subsequent agreement to pay to the mortgagee at least $600 of the proceeds of such sale. His failure to do so prevented the lumber company from cutting and removing the timber prior to September 25, 1946, since the timber was situated around a large lake where the land was overflowed by water a good portion of the year or could not be cut and removed because of general weather conditions.

It further appears that during the summer of 1946 the attorney for the lumber company, after considerable negotiations with the vendor of the timber, his attorney, and the mortgagee, brought about an agreement between all the parties whereby the lumber company would pay the remaining $150 to the mortgagee, take a waiver of his lien on the timber, and an extension of 90 days within which to cut and remove the timber. After all this was assented to by the mortgagee, as well as the grantor and grantee in the timber deed, a written agreement was prepared accordingly, and the grantor Flowers refused to execute the same. Whereupon, his attorney withdrew from the negotiations because of his refusal to do so after having verbally agreed to grant such extension, and on September 26, 1946, the waiver was executed by the mortgagee alone, when the remaining $150 was paid to him by the lumber company and credited on the indebtedness of Flowers under the deed of trust.

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381 So. 2d 617 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1980)

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Bluebook (online)
35 So. 2d 300, 203 Miss. 420, 1948 Miss. LEXIS 288, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flowers-v-r-a-vinton-lumber-co-miss-1948.