Gray Lumber Co. v. Harris

68 S.E. 749, 8 Ga. App. 70, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 25
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 19, 1910
Docket2360
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 68 S.E. 749 (Gray Lumber Co. v. Harris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray Lumber Co. v. Harris, 68 S.E. 749, 8 Ga. App. 70, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 25 (Ga. Ct. App. 1910).

Opinion

Powell, J.

The Gray Lumber Company brought trespass against Harris et al. for the cutting of the pine timber suitable for sawmill purposes off certain lands in Coffee county. The plaintiff proved title to the lands in John Vickers, and then showed conveyances as follows: A deed dated September 18, 1889, from John Vickers to E. L. and H. Vickers, conveying the timber in disputo, and providing that the grantees were to have three years, from the date of beginning to remove the sawmill timber, in which to remove the same. Also a conveyance of the same timber from E. L. and H. Vickers to W. W. Timmons and H. L. Covington, dated June 23, 1890. Also conveyance from W. W. Timmons to II. L. Covington, dated June 10, 1899, transferring to him an undivided half interest in the timber in dispute; thus putting the entire title in Covington. Also a conveyance from H. L. Covington to the Gray Lumber Compan}^ dated October 20, 1903, conveying not only the timber in dispute, but also the timber on many other lots of land in the same county. The plaintiff proved the value of the timber; and it was admitted that in the year 1904 the defendants cut and carried the timber away. The defendants introduced in evidence a conveyance from John Vickers to Peter Vickers, dated February 3, 1903, conveying the timber in dispute; and showed that Peter Vickers, in March, 1903, transferred this conveyance to the defendants. Both parties, therefore, claim under a common grantor, John Vickers; and so far as the question of title is concerned, it depends merely upon a comparison of the rights of the parties as respectively derived from John Vickers. No question of notice is involved, as the plaintiff’s conveyances were duly recorded. ' The ease mainly hinges upon the fact that in the year 1897 the employees of the Gray Lumber Company, while cutting other timber in the vicinity [72]*72of tlie timber in dispute, cut some few trees, variously estimated as being from four to seventy, upon tlie lands in dispute. The contention of the defendants was that the three-year period designated by the lease, after which the right to cut tlie timber under the lease would expire, began to run from the date of this cutting in 1897, and that Yickers had the right to resell the timber after three years from that time. The plaintiff, however, insisted that it owned the title to the timber in fee, and that the restriction as to the time of cutting was a covenant, and not a condition; also that the cutting of the timber in 1897 having been done at a time when the title to the timber was not in the Gray Lumber Company,' which did the .cutting, but in Timmons and Covington, the trespass of the Gray Lumber Company could not have operated to give a starting point for the running of the three years'after which the. rights of Timmons and Covington under the lease would expire; also that, even conceding that this cutting of the timber did operate as a starting point from which the three years were to be counted, Yickers, the owner of the reversion, had waived any right to insist upon this act as being sufficient to put the limitation clause of the lease into operation.

A previous suit between the same parties as to the same subject-matter has been before the Supreme Court for adjudication. See Gray Lumber Co. v. Harris, 127 Ga. 693 (56 S. E. 252). In that case a judgment of nonsuit was affirmed. In the present case the court directed a verdict for the defendants.

1. We consider that the decision of the Supreme Court has settled (at least so far as the present case is concerned) that the limitation clause of the timber conveyance from John 'Yickers, under which the plaintiff claimed, was such as to cause the estate held by the grantees in the timber to terminate within three years from the time that the grantees in that lease or any other person authorized by them began to cut the timber. If the point that the limitation clause in the lease was not a limitation upon the title, but merely a limitation upon the right of ingress and egress (i. e. was a covenant and not a condition), were well taken, it would have been a sufficient reason for the Supreme Court to have reversed the former judgment of nonsuit. Only upon the theory that the lease had terininated by the fact of the cutting and the running of the three yea,rs thereafter can the affirmance of the judgment of nonsuit be [73]*73justified, under the facts presented by the record in the case then before the Supreme Court; and, therefore, while the court did not in express language refer to this feature of the case, the judgment rendered must be taken as having by necessary implication decided this branch of the plaintiffs case adversely to it.

2. The evidence was substantially different on the trial under review from what it was on the former trial, as appears from an examination of the facts set out in the course of the opinion of the Supreme Court, and a comparison of them with the evidence in the present record. From the evidence on the former trial it appeared plainly that when the Gray Lumber Company, in 1897, did the cutting upon the timber in dispute, it did so intentionally, and with the consent of Covington, who was then the holder of the legal title to the timber under the first Vickers lease. In the present record the defendants, in order to establish this element of the case (that the cutting was done intentionally and by the consent, actual or implied, of Covington), offered two witnesses who testified as to the declarations of one H. L. Gray, an employee of the plaintiff corporation, alleged to have been made just before the timber was cut, that they had bought this timber from Covington and were going to cut it. However, Mr. Gray, as a witness on the trial, denied making any such statement. The woodsman of the Gray Lumber Company was introduced as a witness for the defendants, and testified that at the time this cutting in question was done, he understood that the Gray Lumber Company had bought the Covington timber. He testified to some conversation had with one of the Messrs. Gray on the subject, but admitted, on cross-examination, that he did not know whether the Gray Lumber Company did at that time own the Covington timber or not; and that he did not-remember whether Mr. Gray told him that he had bought the timber, or merely that he had bargained for it, or merely had an option on it. He further testified that at the time he did this cutting, he was under the impression that the Gray Lumber Company had bought all the timber owned by Covington, but later found that they had bought only part of it. Fairly construed, the testimony of this witness is susceptible of no other construction than that at the time this cutting was done, Mr. Gray had said something to him about either having bought the Covington timber or some part of it, or having bargained for it, or having taken an option on it, [74]*74and that the price was to be $325 per lot, to be paid before they should have the right to cut it. The expression, “the Covington timber,” it must be kept in mind, included a large amount of timber other than that contained in the tract in question. It was, therefore, under the evidence in the present case, issuable as to whether the Gray Lumber Company, at the time of the cutting of the few sticks of timber on the tract in dispute, had any right to do so, under color of any authority from the then owners of the timber. The written conveyance which they acquired from Covington was dated several years after the cutting in question was done.

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Bluebook (online)
68 S.E. 749, 8 Ga. App. 70, 1910 Ga. App. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-lumber-co-v-harris-gactapp-1910.