Graham v. Gutierrez del Arroyo

6 P.R. Fed. 59
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 30, 1912
DocketNo. 672
StatusPublished

This text of 6 P.R. Fed. 59 (Graham v. Gutierrez del Arroyo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graham v. Gutierrez del Arroyo, 6 P.R. Fed. 59 (prd 1912).

Opinion

ChajrxtoN, Judge,

delivered tbe following opinion:

A contract for a deed in writing was entered into between tbe parties hereto about tbe year 1906, under and by virtue of tbe terms whereof tbe respondents contracted to deliver to tbe complainant a merchantable title to three parcels of land in tbe district of Pueblo Viejo, in tbe municipality of Bayamon, approximating in area 300 acres. A portion of tbe largest of tbe three tracts of land, approximating in area 200 acres, con[60]*60sisted of 19.19 acres of woodland, and upon said tract of woodland were various trees of merchantable size, containing lumber of considerable value.

Near the close of the'year 1910, and while the contract for a deed was not fully executed, by conveyance from the respondents to the complainant, and payment by complainant to respondents for the same, it appears from the evidence that the respondents, by their agents, entered upon said tract of woodland, and cut and removed therefrom trees of merchantable size, which were used for lumber and as timber, and also trees of smaller size, which were burned into charcoal. Upon.December 27, 1910, the complainant made application to this court for a restraining order to prevent the respondents from committing waste upon said tract of woodland by cutting down and removing therefrom trees of value, on the ground that it was in the contemplation of the contract that such trees were a valuable inducement to the complainant in entering into said contract. This court upon said day issued its restraining order, restraining the respondents, their agents, servants, or employees from “cutting, removing, selling, burning, or manufacturing any trees, timber, or wood of any character or kind now standing, being or growing upon the premises, or any part or portion thereof decreed by this court to be by you transferred and delivered to Robert Graham.”

The respondents thereafter did refrain from doing any of the acts against which the restraining order of the court had been directed.

Subsequently, and upon February 12, 1912, there was filed on behalf of complainant a petition for the appraisement of the waste alleged to have been committed by the respondents or their [61]*61agents in tbe removal, from tbe tract of woodland, of trees of value; and upon February 24, 1912, there was appointed by this court one Fred L. Hunter, who was instructed in said order to proceed upon said premises, and make a survey of tbe trees which had been removed within a recent time, and to assess the value of such trees.

Before proceeding to make such survey and assessment, the assessor so appointed gave notice to one of counsel for the respondents that he was proceeding upon said premises for the purposes of his appointment, upon a certain day. There appears to have been some difficulty in the delivery of said notice to counsel for the respondents, who at that time was engaged in his official duties as a member of the house of delegates of Porto Bico, and subsequently the assessor appears to have stated to counsel for respondents, verbally, that he would not proceed with such survey until a later day. In the absence of the judge of this court in Mayaguez, the marshal of the court admonished the assessor to proceed with his duties, which he thereupon did; and at the date when he made said, survey there were present upon said tract of woodland, and with said assessor, the complainant herein and several other persons, among them, one Bamos, who was related by consanguinity or marriage to Bafael Gutierrez del Arroyo, the principal respondent here. .

The assessor appears to be a man of experience in the estimate of timber, both standing and from stump age, and his report filed herein on March 8, 1912, shows that he made a careful, and as thorough as was possible, examination of the tract in question, the same being densely overgrown with underbrush and standing trees of small diameter. On his oral examination, at the request of counsel for the respondents, Mr. Hunter testified [62]*62that he had had some years of experience in scaling lumber from the stump in the United States; that he had observed, in other pieces of woodland, trees of the kind and diameter of those, the stumps of which remained upon the woodland tract in question, and that such examination of actual standing trees confirmed the figures of his report'as being conservative; the witness testifying that if an absolutely thorough scaling had been done of every stump remaining, the value of the timber so taken would, in his estimation, have been double the amount which he stated in his report filed March 8, 1912.

The main respondent, testifying on his own behalf, was not very definite as to the dates when the large timber had been removed, the stumps of which still remained. Tie did say, however, that some timber, in an amount not definitely determined, had been removed by his direction during the latter months of the year 1910. There was also evidence from an adjoining landowner and from a laborer in the employ of the principal respondent, that considerable amounts of timber were removed from said tract by direction of the main respondent during said latter months of 1910. The witness Hunter testified that he was unable to say from a wide experience what time would be necessary to cause by the action of the elements a rotting of stumps of trees of the character of those which had been removed from this tract. He did, however, say that from his experience he was able to state that no stump of any character, even of wood of the hardness of the large trees removed from this tract, could be exposed for any considerable number of years without showing signs of rot and disintegration. In his report he assessed the total damage indicted by the removal of the trees from said tract at $6,192, and stated, both in his report [63]*63and orally, that tbis figure was very conservative. He stated further in his report that the complainant, who was present at the time the survey and assessment were made, requested him to reduce the amount which he had estimated by one third, which would be the sum of $4,121. This he did not recommend, but simply stated that it was the request of the complainant.

Under such state of facts, the court is without any means of exact mathematical determination of which trees were removed by the respondents or their agents subsequent to the entering into of the contract between the parties hereto, but, with all the evidence before him, has reached the conclusion that without more definite testimony as to the date of the removal of the large trees, or of any trees, or of exact information as to what uses the timber so removed was put to, or of its value, the value of trees so removed from said woodland tract could be fairly assessed at the sum of $4,000.

It is contended on behalf of the respondents that the word “usufruct,” employed by the parties hereto in the contract between them, as permissive to the respondents in relation to the use of the land before its conveyance to the complainant, in accordance with the terms of said contract, contemplated in law the use of the timber which was merchantable upon the woodland tract here considered.

The court is unable to reach the conclusion, as matter of law, that “usufruct” as employed in said contract was, in contemplation of the parties hereto, a practical removal from said tract of all merchantable timber, as the testimony of all the witnesses showed.

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Bluebook (online)
6 P.R. Fed. 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-gutierrez-del-arroyo-prd-1912.