King v. Earley

145 So. 2d 831, 274 Ala. 116, 1962 Ala. LEXIS 497
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 18, 1962
Docket6 Div. 785
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 145 So. 2d 831 (King v. Earley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Earley, 145 So. 2d 831, 274 Ala. 116, 1962 Ala. LEXIS 497 (Ala. 1962).

Opinion

HARWOOD, Justice.

This is an appeal from the Circuit Court reforming the description of the area of land involved in a timber deed.

The appellant here, Mr. King, originally filed a bill seeking to make the description more definite, a dispute having arisen between Mr. King, the vendor, and Mr. Gus Earley the vendee named in the deed, as to whether the deed included the timber west of Buck Creek on the land owned by Mr. King.

By cross bill the appellee, Mr. Earley, admitted that the description in the deed was vague, uncertain and confused and was not accurate and sufficient to describe the timber which Mr. King intended to convey.

The description of the area on which the timber was sold appears in the deed as follows:

“Beginning at the main gate, down center road of said 40 line, then north to northeast corner then west to the Branch and open Field, then South to said Fence, then East to main gate. All of the saw timber on the right of the Road leading into the Tom King Residents. And that timber on the left side of the road leading from the Tom King Residents to the main Highway. Beginning at the main gate.”

At the hearing below Mr. King testified that he owned the 180 acres in question, and that for several years Mr. Fulmer and Mr. Setliif began coming to his home in an effort to persuade him to sell the timber on his land.

Finally he told them he was willing to sell a portion of the timber and he showed the portion he was willing to sell, this being all of the timber east of Buck Creek in the stipulated quarter sections. Mr. King said he specifically told Fulmer and Setliff that the timber he was willing to sell was that located on the east side of Buck Creek.

Fulmer and Setliff testified that they had visited Mr. King over a number of years in reference to the sale of his timber. Finally in September 1959, Mr. King told them he had decided to sell some timber, and Mr. King walked with them and pointed out the area from which he was willing to sell the timber.

According to the testimony of both Setliff and Fulmer they walked down a road and Mr. King informed them he would sell at that time all the timber “from the road to the field.” This would include certain pockets of timber on the west side of Buck Creek.

A few days afterward Setliff and Fulmer contacted Mr. Gus Earley who operated a lumber mill under the name of Earley Lumber Company, and informed Mr. Earley that Mr. King was willing to sell some timber, and took him to the site and pointed out the area from which they said Mr. King was willing to sell the timber.

[118]*118Irl this connection we quote the following ' excerpt from the testimony of Mr. Fulmer:

“Q. You drew this deed up yourself, didn’t you?
“A. Yes.
“Q. When you drew it up, were you working for Gus Earley?
“A. I was helping him get the timber.
“Q. How long had you been working for Gus Earley?
“A. I wasn’t working for him.”

Mr. Fulmer further testified that he did not want the timber but that Mr. Earley did, and that he told Mr. King that he was buying the timber for Gus Earley.

Mr. Gus early testified that about three years prior to the date of the timber deed, Mr. Setliff came to him and asked if he would want to buy Mr. King’s timber, and he probably told Mr. Setliff that he would like to have it. Mr. Setliff asked him what he would give him to buy it and he told Setliff he would pay him $500.00 to buy the timber and sell it to him.

Three or four days before the deed was delivered to him Setliff and Fulmer told him they had bought Mr. King’s timber provided he could give them $5,800.00 and pay them $500.00.

He went with Setliff and Fulmer and looked at the timber and then told them to offer $5,000.00 for it. They came back shortly and informed him “they had bought Mr. King’s timber provided he could give them $5,800.00” that is “provided I could give Mr. King $5,800.00 and give them $500.00”.

In this connection the record shows the following during the examination of Mr. Earley.

“Q. Did they tell you Mr. King had agreed to sell the timber to them, or that he had agreed to sell it to you if you would give him fifty-eight hundred dollars?
“A. I aint going to say which one, because I don’t remember which way it went. I believe they said Mr. King had agreed to let them have it.
“Q. What did you tell them?
“A. I told them I would give fifty eight hundred dollars. I said, ‘I’m going to buy it because probably it will give me a chance to buy the rest of Mr. King’s timber.’ ”

Mr. Earley further maintained in other parts of his testimony that the agreement between him and Setliff and Fulmer was that they would buy the timber, and then sell the same to Mr. Earley.

The evidence is further undisputed that after Mr. Earley agreed to pay $5,800.00 to Setliff and Fulmer that Mr. Fulmer prepared the deed to the timber and carried it to Mr. King. Mr. King’s daughter apparently read part of the deed to him and informed him she did not know the meaning of it, and thereupon Mr. King asked her to sign his name to the deed. The deed conveyed the timber to the Earley Lumbar Company, and Fulmer and Setliff signed the deed as witnesses. Fulmer and Setliff and Mr. King then drove to the Earley Lumber Company. Mr. Fulmer took the deed in and presented it to Mr. Earley who examined it and said it was satisfactory. Mr. Earley then w.rote out a check for $5,800.-00 to Mr. King and took it out to the automobile in which Mr. King was sitting. Thereafter he paid $500.00 to Setliff and Fulmer.

We have set out rather fully the details of the transaction insofar as the parties are concerned, for in our opinion the crucial question in this case is whether or not Setliff and Fulmer were brokers and agents for Mr. Earley, or whether they were independent buyers or independent contractors, which is the view apparently held by the court below.

[119]*119Upon the conclusion of the hearing the court entered a decree, the pertinent parts of which are as follows:

“From the evidence it appears that all the negotiations leading up to the sale of the timber, and the execution of the timber deed, was between T. J. King, the complainant, and Fulmer and Setliff. The Court is of the opinion that the said Fulmer and Setliff, who contracted to buy the timber from the complainant, were not in any sense agents or employees of the respondent Gus Early or the Early Lumber Company; that there was never any contract or agreement between the complainant T. J. King and the respondent» Gus Early, or any meeting of the minds as between them relative to the purchase of the timber, and that a determination of this case must be based on the actual content of the timber deed. While it is true that the deed was made direct to Early Lumber Company, and delivered by King to Early, it does not appear from the evidence that there was any joint enterprize or other agreement which would bind Early to any of the conditions of the agreement prior to the execution of the deed.

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Bluebook (online)
145 So. 2d 831, 274 Ala. 116, 1962 Ala. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-earley-ala-1962.