Ives v. Railroad

55 S.E. 74, 142 N.C. 131, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 229
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedSeptember 25, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 55 S.E. 74 (Ives v. Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ives v. Railroad, 55 S.E. 74, 142 N.C. 131, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 229 (N.C. 1906).

Opinion

*134 Walker, T.,

after stating tbe case: It may now be taken as settled that growing trees are a part of the realty, and a contract to sell or convey them or any interest in or concerning them must be reduced to writing. They are fructus naturales, and being rooted in the soil are by nature as much annexed to the freehold as any permanent fixture can be. Scorell v. Boxall, 1 Younge & Jervis, 396; Carrington v. Roots, 2 M. & W., 254; Rodwell v. Phillips, 9 M. & W., 501; Evans v. Roberts, 5 B. & C., 829. The course of judicial decision in England upon this subject, from the time of the dictum of Treby, C. J., in Anon., 1 Lord Raymond, 182, to the latest period, will be found well stated in Reed on the Statute of Frauds, secs. 707, 711. We have adopted the rule as given in the cases above cited, and a contract for the sale of standing timber has always been considered by us as within the meaning and intent of the statute. Brittain v. McKay, 23 N. C., 265; Mizell v. Burnett, 49 N. C., 249; Moving v. Ward, 50 N. C., 272; Plynt v. Conrad, 61 N. C., 190; Green v. Railroad, 73 N. C., 524; Mizzell v. Ruffin, 118 N. C., 69. The question was directly presented and decided in Drake v. Howell, 133 N. C., 162, and Hawkins v. Lumber Co., 139 N. C., 160. But the contract of the parties to this action was not one for the sale of standing trees, but, in the one case, for the sale and delivery of cordwood, and, in the other, for the conversion of trees growing on the defendant’s land into cordwood and the delivery of the same on the defendant’s right-of-way. It was not contemplated by the parties that there should be a transfer of any title to or interest in the trees as they stood upon the land; and this is essential to bring the agreement within the purview of the statute. 29 Am. and Eng. Enc. (2 Ed.), 880.

In Washburn v. Burrows, 1 W. H. & G. (Exch.), 115, Rolfe, B., for the Court, said that where the vendor, who is the owner of the soil, sells what is growing on the land, whether natural produce f prima veslura), such as timber, *135 grass, herbage or apples, or the annual fruits of industry (fructus industriales'), as corn, pulse, or tbe like, on tbe terms that be (tbe vendor) is to cut or sever them from tbe land and then deliver them to tbe purchaser, tbe latter acquires thereby no interest in tbe soil, “which in such case is only in tbe nature of a warehouse for what is to come to him merely as a personal chattel.”

It was ruled in tbe leading case of Smith v. Surman, 9 B. & C., 561, that where the owner of land agreed with another to cut timber from bis own land and deliver tbe trees, when cut down or severed from tbe freehold, to tbe latter for a stipulated price, tbe statute did not apply; and tbe particular agreement, in that case, being construed to have tbe said effect in law, was therefore held not to be within tbe statute. And tbe converse of tbe proposition is equally true, that where one contracts with another to cut timber from bis land and deliver it to him when cut or severed, the statute has no application. It has been so expressly decided. Killmore v. Howlett, 48 N. Y., 569; Forbes v. Hamilton, 2 Tyler, 356; Scales v. Wiley, 68 Vt., 39; Green v. Armstrong, 1 Denio, 550; Boyce v. Washburn, 4 Hun., 192; 2 Reed on Statute of Frauds, sec. Ill. Tbe courts ' properly said in the cases cited that to give tbe statute tbe construction contended for would be to destroy the right of recovery of almost every laborer at harvesting or mowing, which generally and almost universally rests on a parol contract, and, further, that it would make a writing indispensable to tbe validity of a contract by tbe owner of a peat-bed or a sand-bank to deliver even a load from it; and, we may add, it would jeopardize tbe rights of every woodman who for hire fells trees in tbe forest. The construction is utterly inadmissible.

It has been said in some cases, following a dictum of Little-dale, J., in Smith v. Surman., supra, that if the trees are sold by the vendor, who is the owner of the land upon which they *136 are standing, to the vendee, with a stipulation that they must be cut and removed at once, or within a reasonable time, the trees will be regarded as chattels, and the contract will therefore not be within the statute: and this because of the shortness of the time given for cutting and removing them. Marshall v. Green, L. R., I. C. P. Div., 35. This distinction is scholastic, if not arbitrary. It partakes more of formalism than it does of sound logic and cogent argument. We would not cite this class of decisions in support of our ruling in this case, as we cannot assent to the reasoning and conclusion of the courts in them. While they may seem to be in point, they really are not, as there the trees themselves, as standing timber, were sold to the vendee. Here they were not. The question as to whether the statute applies should not be determined by the mere accident that time is given to sever the trees or other growth, but by the nature of the thing, as being or not being a part of the freehold. This is the better reason and ground for decision, and it was so considered by Lord Ellenborough in Crosby v. Wadsworth, 6 East, 602, wherein the Court held an agreement, that the plaintiff should enter the defendants’ land and cut and carry away a crop of grass, to be for .an interest in land, because “conferring an exclusive right to the vesture of the soil during a limited time”; and to the same effect is Scorell v. Boxall and Killmore v. Howleft , already cited by us, and numerous other cases decided by courts of high authority. 28 A. and E. Enc. (2 Ed.), 540, and note 6; 29 ibid., 889, and note 5, where the authorities are collected. At any rate, the cases which hold that as the time fixed for cutting and removal shows whether or not it was intended that the trees or other growth should receive further nutrition from the soil, it should control in the decision of the question, are at variance with the reason assigned by this Court for its ruling that contracts for the sale of standing trees .are within the statute. What is the law, in this respect, *137 with, regard to the fruits of industry (fructus industriales), is not now before us. Flynt v. Conrad, supra. Our opinion is therefore against what appears to be the main contention of the defendant, that the contract is void because it was not in writing; for this is a contract not for the sale of trees, but merely for the cutting of them into eordwood. It is simply .a contract for employment and not for any interest in the article upon which the labor is to be bestowed. This is the practical view and accords with the intention of the parties.

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Bluebook (online)
55 S.E. 74, 142 N.C. 131, 1906 N.C. LEXIS 229, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ives-v-railroad-nc-1906.