Griffith v. Woods Lumber Co.

11 Tenn. App. 380, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 22
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 3, 1930
StatusPublished

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 380 (Griffith v. Woods Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Griffith v. Woods Lumber Co., 11 Tenn. App. 380, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 22 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1930).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

The Woods Lumber Company, a corporation doing business in Shelby county, Tennessee, has appealed from a- judgment rendered against it in favor of the complainant, George C. Griffith, a resident and citizen, of St. Louis, Missouri. The material allegations of complainant’s bill consisted of the following: “That J. G. Tarkington & Sons, on or about the 19th of May, 1925, purchased. all of the standing timber on a tract of land containing about 1253 acres, lying partly in Haywpod county and party in Lauderdale county, Tennessee, stating that this purchase was from T. 0. Bond, et al. That on the same day, said J. G. Tarkington & Sons con *381 veyed said standing timber, tiras acquired, to George C. Griffith under a mortgage, which mortgage was duly recorded in the Register’s Office of Lauderdale county, Tennessee, a copy of which was exhibited with the original bill. That by the terms of this mortgage, title to that timber was to remain in George C. Griffith until he was either paid $6 per thousand on any such timber cut and removed from the land, or until a contract was made with a responsible party to pay to George C. Griffith this $6 per thousand feat on any such timber cut.

“That this mortgage agreement and conveyance was made to the complainant to secure him in the payment of $7500, evidenced by note, which $7500 was the money advanced by Griffith to Tarkington, with which Tarldngton made the original cash payment to Bond. That pursuant to this agreement and in compliance therewith, the said J. G. Tarkington & Sons entered into a contract with the defendant, Woods Lumber Company, by which they agreed to sell to the Woods Lumber Company all of the timber removed from said lands at a price agreed between them, with the further understanding and agreement that the defendant, Woods Lumber Company, was to pay a stumpage of $6 per thousand to the complainant pursuant to this contract. That the Woods Lumber Company did agree to pay this $6 per thousand feet on all such timber delivered to it by the said J. G. Tarkington & Sons from these lands. That the Woods Lumber Company agreed to purchase and did purchase this timber with the full knowledge, actual and constructive, that Griffith had this stumpage right, title and lien to this timber, and with the further understanding and agreement that such stumpage right, title and lien, the Woods Lumber Company would pay off promptly as the timber was received by it from the said J. G. Tarkington & Sons at $6 per thousand feet.

. “That pursuant to this contract agreement and notice, the Woods Lumber Company did pay to George C. Griffith part of the stumpage on timber so received under this contract with Tarkington, but that since February 2, 1926, the Tarkingtons, of this timber, had sold and delivered to the Woods Lumber Company, some 600,000 feet of logs, and that the Woods Lumber Company had refused to pay to Griffith the $6 per thousand due on this remaining 600,000 feet. That repeated demands had been made for this amount of money with no result, wherefore, suit was brought against the Woods Lumber Company for the $6 per thousand feet, or a total of $600 on account of this agreement. The mortgage contract betwteen J. G. Tarkington & Sons and Griffith w¡as exhibited with the bill.”

The answer of the defendant denied the material allegations of the bill and alleged that it had bought the timber from the Bond lands from the Tarkingtons, or rather had the contract from the Tark-ingtons to buy one million feet of logs f. o. b. cars at a certain price *382 according to grade and according to character of timber, logs to be f. o. b. cars at Rialto, or Henning, on the I. C. Railroad. The contract or agreement between the Tarkingtons and the defendant was made an exhibit to the answer.

The defendant also pleaded the statute of frauds and that the complainant had waived a lien on said timber, but permitted Tarkington to sell and had denied the delivery of the amount of the logs as claimed by the complainant. The Chancellor sustained complainant ’s bill. He. filed a lengthy finding of facts; also a written opinion which appears in the transcript and the opinion is as follows:

“The mortgag-e contract between the Tarkingtons and Griffith specifically provides that the Tarkingtons “"Will make a contract with the parties to whomsoever they may sell said timber that $6 per thousand is to be held by the purchaser and paid over to the party of the second part.” (Griffith).
“J. G. Tarkington testified that he did make an agreement with defendant that it would pay $7 per thousand feet to the bank at Brownsville, on the Bond contract, and $6 per thousand feet to Griffith. Haynie, representative of defendant, denies such agreement was made and he and Wood assert they never heard of, or had any knowledge of, the Griffith contract. They admit knowledge, of the Bond transaction and show that on December 15, 1925, defendant advanced $6,500' to take up the first of the Bond, notes made by the Tarkingtons. O'n the issue of fact as to whether or not defendant agreed to pay Griffith $6 per thousand feet, it appears to me that Tarkington’s testimony on the point is more reasonable, than the denials of Haynie and Wood. Tarkington was required by his contract with Griffith to make such agreement with the purchaser of the logs. This was a condition named in the contract. It was provided then in the event of the failure of the Tarkingtons to carry out the provisions of the contract that Griffith should have the right to take over the timber and contracts. Thus there was compelling reason why J. G. Tarkington should have an agreement with defendant to pay Griffith the, $6 per thousand feet. From defendant’s standpoint, there could have been no reason why it should not agree to pay Griffith $6 per thousand out of the purchase price of the logs. It was not money out of defendant’s pocket. • Wood, it appears from his own testimony (Ans. 5) knows nothing about the defendant’s contract with Tarkington, except what was told him by Haynie. It appears that Haynie looked after the transaction and himself dictated Tarkington’s letter to defendant of October 29, 1925, which constitutes the contract for the sale of the logs to defendant. Haynie left out of this letter any reference to the payment of $6 per thousand feet to Griffith; but it wlas understood, according to the testimony of Tarkington, that this sum should be paid Griffith. It is not reasonably possible, as I see it, to read the correspondence between *383 Griffith and defendant, and the testimony, of J. G. Tarkington and defendant’s bookkeeper, Tribble, and find otherwise than that defendant knew, from the beginning of the transaction that $6 stump-age, per thousand feet, was owing Griffith and that defendant was to pay it out of the purchase price of the logs.
‘‘The agreement made by defendant with Tarkington & Sons to pay Griffith the stipulated amount of $6 per thousand feet of logs. an agreement made for the benefit of Griffith, was a part of the trade for the logs and, wherefore, for a valuable consideration; and, hence, may be enforced by him. A beneficiary of a contract, though not a party thereto, may sue in his own name. Title Guaranty & Trust Co. v. Bushnell, 143 Tenn., 681; Disney Bros. v. Campbell County, 6 Tenn. App., 569.

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Related

Disney Bros. v. Campbell County
6 Tenn. App. 569 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1926)
Richardson v. Marshall County
100 Tenn. 346 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1898)
Heggie v. Hayes
141 Tenn. 219 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1918)
Title Guaranty & Trust Co. v. Bushnell
143 Tenn. 681 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1920)

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Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 380, 1930 Tenn. App. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffith-v-woods-lumber-co-tennctapp-1930.