Hilton & Dodge Lumber Co. v. Alwood

81 S.E. 1119, 141 Ga. 653, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 97
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedMay 14, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 S.E. 1119 (Hilton & Dodge Lumber Co. v. Alwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hilton & Dodge Lumber Co. v. Alwood, 81 S.E. 1119, 141 Ga. 653, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 97 (Ga. 1914).

Opinion

Evans, P. J.

A bill of exceptions was taken to the judgment of the court on an interlocutory hearing, refusing to enjoin the defendants from cutting and removing the timber • on a certain tract of land. Both parties derived their title from a common propositus. It appeared that B. L. Lane died testate, seized and possessed of a large estate in land. By item three of his will, probated April 1, 1895, he devised the tract of land upon which the timber in dispute is located to his son George W. C. Lane, “for and during his natural life, with remainder to-his living children at the time of his death.” Certain other devises were made to other children of the testator, with like remainders. The twelfth item of his will is as follows: “It is my will that my children whom I have hereinbefore given life-estates in the lands of this will given, then [they?] shall have full power and authority to sell and dispose of the timber on all said lands, and shall have the full use and enjoyment of said lands, without impeachment of waste. Said Emma S. Lane, as trustee for said Lucinda Y. Lane, shall have the same power and authority in the disposition of the timber on [655]*655the lands given herein to said Lucinda Y. Lane, applying all money arising from such disposition of said timber to the support and maintenance of the said Lucinda Y. Lane.” On February 6, 1902, George W. C. Lane sold and conveyed, by deed with warranty of title, to the Hilton & Dodge Lumber Company "all the cypress timber and trees of every sort and description” on certain land -included in the devise o£ the third item of B. L. Lane’s will, with "all privileges necessary to the removal or manufacturing of the said timber and trees.” The deed contained the following covenant : "It is agreed that the time limit of this conveyance as above set forth shall be (20) twenty years from the date of this conveyance, but the first parties agree that the said time limit may be extended from ye'ar to year thereafter, not exceeding ten years extension, upon the payment by the second party, its successors or assigns, of interest on the original purchase-price at the rate of 6 per cent, per annum.” This conveyance was duly recorded on March '3, 1902. The present action was begun July 22, 1913.

1. The first step in the plaintiff’s case is to determine whether the conveyance of the timber by George W. C. Lane is a good execution of the power contained- in the will of B. L. Lane, inasmuch as there is no reference to the power or the will in the conveyance. We think it is a good execution of that power. The donee of the power was a life-tenant, and he had no right to sell the timber on the land except by virtue of the power. The remainder estate was subservient to the life-tenant’s power to sell the timber. It -is therefore apparent that the deed evidencing the sale of the timber by the donee of the power is not reasonably susceptible of any other interpretation than as indicating an intention to execute the power. Grayson v. Germania Bank, 140 Ga. 467, 473 (79 S. E. 124), and cases cited.

• 2. It is contended that the life-tenant, in execution of the 'power of sale, exceedéd his power by inserting in his conveyance of the timber a covenant that his vendee was - given twenty years within which to cut and remove the timber, with the right to extend the time from year to’ year, not exceeding ten years, upon the payment of interest on the original purchase-price at the rate of six per cent, per annum. Whether the power to sell the timber' embraces a power to make this covenant depends on a construction of the will of B. L. L'ane. The devise of the land was tó G. W. C, [656]*656L'ane for life, with remainder to his living children at the time of his death. It is clear that the testator intended that the life-tenant’s living children should take the land on the death of the life-tenant, and it is equally clear that in giving, the life-tenant a power to sell the timber off the land he did not intend to destroy the remainder estate, nor authorize the life-tenant to impose upon that estate such burdens as would practically deprive the remaindermen of its enjoyment after his death. If the life-tenant in execution of' the power could contract for the removal of the timber within thirty years, why not in sixty or an hundred years ? If he be permitted to do this, then it would be within his power to substantially destroy the remainder estate, and frustrate the testator’s intention. We do not think that the testator intended that the donee’s power of sale over the timber should be used to the destruction or serious impairment of the estate in remainder, but, on the other hand, it seems clear that the testator contemplated a severance of the timber from the land within a reasonable time by the ■purchaser.

It is argued by counsel for defendants in error that the timber must be removed from the land by the vendee during the life of the life-tenant, and that upon the vendee failing to do this he loses all right to sever or remove the timber from the land after the life-tenant’s death. This contention is not sound. The testator gave to-the life-tenant a power to sell the timber, and this implies that thé purchaser shall have a reasonable time within which to cut and remove same. It would do violence to this implication to hold that ■the death of the life-tenant before the purchaser had a reasonable time within which to cut and remove the timber'would forfeit the purchaser’s right to the fruits of his bargain. On the other hand wé do not think the donee of the power was vested with any right to contract with the purchaser that he should have more than a reasonable time within which to cut and remove the timber. The life-tenant has an estate for life in the whole land, and is also vested with a power of sale of the timber. In exercising the power of sale he is the instrument of his testator, and can not exceed the limitations of his agency. As donee of the power of sale he can not enlarge that power, and the purchaser from him must remove the timber within a reasonable time after his conveyance. If the purchaser or his successor in title failed to do this, their interest [657]*657in the timber ceased and determined. McRae v. Stillwell, Millen & Co., 111 Ga. 65 (36 S. E. 604, 55 L. R. A. 513); Shippen Lumber Co. v. Gates, 136 Ga. 37 (70 S. E. 672). What would be a reasonable time is a question of fact, and must be decided in the light of all the attendant circumstances. Ibid.

3. Exception is taken to the reception in evidence of certain deeds to the defendants. One of these purports to have been executed by the administrator of a remainderman under the will of B. L. Lane, and two others by the guardians of other remainder-men. The objection was that these deeds recited that they were made under appropriate orders from the proper courts, and that no order was produced. A deed purporting on its face to have been made by the guardian of a minor, under authority of a decree of the superior court, is inadmissible in evidence without the production of the decree or a certified copy of it. McCamy v. Higdon, 50 Ga. 629. Likewise, where one claims title to land under an administrator’s deed, pursuant to a sale under an order from the ordinary, he must show the order granting the administrator leave to sell the land. Clements v. Henderson, 4 Ga. 148 (48 Am. D. 216).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 S.E. 1119, 141 Ga. 653, 1914 Ga. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hilton-dodge-lumber-co-v-alwood-ga-1914.