Hill v. State Box Co.

249 P.2d 903, 114 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1133
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 5, 1952
DocketCiv. 8167
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 249 P.2d 903 (Hill v. State Box Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. State Box Co., 249 P.2d 903, 114 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1133 (Cal. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinion

SCHOTTKY, J. pro tem.

Appellants, as successors in interest of Eldon L. Cleveland, commenced an action to enjoin respondent, State Box Company, from cutting and removing timber from Section 27, T. 18 N., R. 11 E., in Nevada County, and to quiet appellants’ title to said timber.

Respondent filed an answer denying that appellants had any right to said timber and also filed a cross-complaint in *45 which they asserted their right to said timber under a written contract entered into on June 5, 1944, between Cleveland and respondent, State Box Company.

Said agreement recited that Cleveland was the owner of six described parcels of land, and that he agreed to sell and respondent agreed to buy the merchantable timber on said' land at certain specified price for the different varieties of timber. Respondent was to pay for the timber cut on the tenth of each month of operation, covering the last half of the preceding month, and on the 25th of each month covering the first half of such month. And, as an advance payment, a credit to the extent and in the amount of $20,000 upon anticipated production and upon the ultimate purchase price as determined by the true amount of such merchantable timber. Respondent agreed to pay, however, $10,000 in cash at the time of executing the agreement, receipt of which was acknowledged, and two notes of $5,000 each of even date, without interest, one to mature April 25, 1945 and the other July 1, 1945. Thereafter respondent was not to be called upon for further payments until $20,000 had been consumed in the quantity of timber cut, whereupon payments for timber cut would be made semimonthly.

Paragraph ¡3 of the agreement reads as follows:

“6. The parties agree that all timber shall be paid for by the State Box Company within four (4) years from the date hereof. This obligation prevails as against any provision above indicating otherwise. It is further agreed, however, that the State Box Company shall have and is hereby given a period of fourteen (14) years from the date hereof within which to cut and remove such merchantable timber, within which period State Box Company agrees to cut and remove the same. In the event that the State Box Company fails to cut and remove all of said merchantable timber within said fourteen-year period, it shall lose and forfeit any further right, title or interest in or to said timber, which shall thereupon revert to Eldon L. Cleveland, free of any claim by the State Box Company and all money theretofore paid by State Box Company to Eldon L. Cleveland shall be retained by him as liquidated damages for such breach. If the State Box Company does not cut and remove all of said merchantable timber within the years [written in ink] period four /from the date hereof, the remaining merchantable timber on said premises shall be cruised by a timber cruiser sufficiently in advance of the date herein named for such final *46 payment to permit such final payment to be made on said date and such final payment shall be made at the prices stipulated in the first paragraph of this Agreement upon the basis of such final cruise. If the United States Forestry Service will undertake such final cruise for the parties hereto, the United States Forestry Service shall be engaged for such work, and the expense shall be paid by the parties hereto half and half. If the United States Forestry Service will not undertake such final cruise, then the cruise shall be made by some competent timber cruiser satisfactory to both parties and the fee or expense of such cruise shall be upon both parties half and half. If the parties are unable to agree upon such a timber cruiser, the cruise shall be made by someone selected by State Box Company at its expense, with the privilege of reviewing and checking by Eldon L. Cleveland. The right of the State Box Company, after the expiration of the first four (4) years of this Agreement, shall, in the purchasing and cutting of timber, be limited to such quantity as was included in the said final cruise used as the basis for final payment hereunder.”

All of the timber on these six parcels was cut and removed, and was fully paid for, and there is no dispute with reference thereto. The controversy involved in the instant case is over the timber on the parcel described in paragraph 12 of the agreement, which reads as follows:'

“12. Eldon L. Cleveland has an uncertain and undetermined interest in or claim upon that certain real property situate in the County of Nevada, State of California, and more particularly described as follows: NW%, SW14, of SE% and S% of NE^ of Section 27, Township 18 North, Range 11 East, M.D.B.& M., less valid overlapping mining claims. In the event that Eldon L. Cleveland perfects title to said real property and the timber thereon or acquires or perfects title to the timber thereon, said timber shall become and shall be subject to the terms and provisions of the foregoing Agreement the same as though originally included in and made a part hereof, the said timber so located on said real property being treated as though originally described herein as part of the subject matter of this Agreement. Eldon L. Cleveland agrees to press and establish such right or interest as he may have in and to said timber so that the same, if such action on his part be successful, may be included as a part of this agreement.”

The court found that respondent cut all the timber from said six parcels and overpaid Cleveland $4,605.80, that is, *47 the initial payment of $20,000 was not used up in timber cut. The court also found that appellants acquired their title to the timber in Section 27 from Cleveland with full knowledge of the rights of respondent to cut timber; that Cleveland’s title or claim to the timber in Section 27 “was uncertain and undetermined” and that Cleveland was bound and obligated “to press and establish such right or interest as he then had in the timber on said Section 27 ”; that Cleveland took no court action to quiet his title to the timber, and refused to press or establish his right or interest; that respondent was not obligated to pay Cleveland or his successors any money for timber in Section 27 until Cleveland established his title or interest to that timber; that Cleveland’s title to the timber in Section 27 was established by reason of litigation arranged and conducted, not by Cleveland, but by respondent in the case of United States of America v. P. S. Waldron, Margaret A. Waldron, State Box Company, and Tahoe Sugar Pine Company, action No. 6105 in the United States District Court, wherein Judge Dal M. Lemmon, on or about November 21, 1949, made his decision; that the issue of title to timber land in the Waldron case was the same as the title of Cleveland; that Cleveland took no part in the Waldron litigation, bore no expense thereof and contributed nothing; that the decision in the Woldron ease made November 21, 1949, was subject to appeal by the United States but was finally settled on or about January 20, 1950, with the entry of an agreed modified judgment; that ever since the clearing of the title of Cleveland by the decision in the Waldron ease respondent has been ready, willing and able to perform all the terms of the agreement of June 5, 1944, and so advised Cleveland and the appellants, and also Cal-Ida Lumber Company to whom appellants gave a contract for cutting the same timber.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
249 P.2d 903, 114 Cal. App. 2d 44, 1952 Cal. App. LEXIS 1133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-state-box-co-calctapp-1952.