M. C. McCorkle & Son v. Kincaid

93 S.E. 642, 121 Va. 546, 1917 Va. LEXIS 56
CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 20, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 93 S.E. 642 (M. C. McCorkle & Son v. Kincaid) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. C. McCorkle & Son v. Kincaid, 93 S.E. 642, 121 Va. 546, 1917 Va. LEXIS 56 (Va. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

Prentis, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

B. F. Kincaid and Martha E. Kincaid, his wife, hereinafter called the landowners,. by contract -dated the 10th of December, 1912, sold the timber growing upon three tracts of land owned by them to M. C. McCorkle & Son, the plaintiffs in error, hereinafter called the lumbermen, and this suit is brought to recover damages of them for alleged breaches-of that contract. So much of the contract as is involved will be hereinafter referred to and quoted. There was a verdict and judgment for the landowners.

The questions to be determined are not easy of solution.

[549]*549One of the points of controversy requires the consideration of these clauses of the contract:

“It is agreed between the parties hereto that the parties of the second part” (meaning the lumbermen) “shall have two years from the date hereof within which to manufacture and remove said timber from the said premises; provided, however, that if the parties of the second part shall find it necessary to suspend operations for a time, on account of unfavorable market conditions, or a general business depression, the time for the manufacture and removal of said timber shall be extended for a like period.
“The parties of the first part (meaning the landowners) “hereby reserve the tan bark on the aforesaid chestnut oak trees, which said trees are to be felled and peeled by the parties of the first part at such time during the peeling seasons as will not be inconvenient to the parties of the second part for the manufacture of said trees¡”

It appears that tan bark can only be conveniently and profitably taken from the trees during the months of April, May and June, when the trees are green and the sap is rising. The lumbermen commenced cutting the timber in the early part of 1913 and completed it in April,'1914, so that the landowners had only one tan bark season, that of 1913, in which to fell these chestnut oak trees and secure the tan bark. A large part of these trees were felled by the lumbermen in 1914, before the tan bark season began, notwithstanding the protest of the landowners and they were thus deprived of their right to fell them and thus to secure the tan bark therefrom.

It is claimed for the lumbermen that the reservation of this bark and the right reserved by the landowners to fell the chestnut oak trees was only a subordinate feature of the contract and subject to their right to manufacture and remove all of the said timber within two years; that while they had the right to take two years in which to fell, manu[550]*550facture and remove it, they were under no obligation to take as long as two years, if they found it convenient to complete their work in less time'; and that there being less timber upon the land than was anticipated, it would have been very inconvenient and expensive for them to have prolonged their operations through the tan bark season of 1914.

On the other hand it is claimed for the landowners that a fair construction of the contract shows that they were to have at least two tan bark seasons in which to secure the tan bark, and that the lumbermen violated the contract by felling the chestnut oak trees before the second tan bark season began and thereby deprived them of' the tan bark which they had expressly reserved.

The trial court gave an instruction for the plaintiff, marked No. 1, which reads thus:

“As to tan bark the court instructs the jury that where there is a plain written contract and nothing more, it is the duty of the court and not the jury to construe the contract and determine the meaning thereof; but where a contract is of doubtful meaning then verbal conversations and agreements between the parties before and at the time the contract is made are admissible in evidence for the purpose of clearing up such doubt, provided such verbal conversations and agreements do not contradict the written contract. It is for this reason that the court has let in evidence of what occurred between the parties about the tan bark before and at the time the contract was made. Under such circumstances it becomes the duty of the jury, guided by the court, to determine the meaning of the contract'after considering the writing itself and all evidence in the case; and the jury are instructed that if they believe from said writing and said evidence that it was the intention of the parties that the plaintiffs should have two peeling seasons in which to cut and peel said tan bark trees, [551]*551and were only to be required to cut and peel during the first season the trees on the mountain side, then they will find for the plaintiffs as to said tan bark the amount they may believe from the evidence the same was worth as it stood on the trees at the time the trees were cut by defendants.”

This instruction is attacked upon the ground that it submits to the jury the construction of the contract, whereas it was the duty of the court to construe it. This is undoubtedly true, but in this case that error was favorable .to the plaintiffs in error and not injurious to them. While by no means free from doubt, it seems to us that the fair construction of this contract is that, as both parties understood and believed that it would take at least two years to cut and remove the timber, and that as the lumbermen were to have two years in which to perform their contract, so the landowners were also to have a reasonable time in which to secure the tan bark. That reasonable time is not only indicated by the two years fixed for the benefit of the lumbermen, but also by use of the plural “seasons” in the contract. The antecedent conversations and agreements between the parties, so far as they are in conflict with the written contract, cannot, of course, be received to vary or contradict it, but if its meaning be doubtful the surrounding circumstances, the condition and avowed purposes of the parties, as well as the subject matter of the contract, may be proved by parol testimony in order to enable the court to determine its meaning. It will be noted that in the contract not only is the tan bark on the chestnut oak trees reserved by the landowners, but the trees are to be felled by them, and this reservation should be considered in connection with that part of the contract giving the lumbermen two years in which to fell the other trees.

Upon a fair consideration of the lánguage and subject matter of the contract as well as the avowed purposes and [552]*552objects thereof, we are of opinion that the court should have construed it to mean that the landowners were to have at least two peeling seasons within which to fell these trees and secure the tan bark; hence, that the action of the lumbermen in felling them before the two peeling seasons had elapsed was a violation of the contract, and that the landowners are entitled to recover as damages the fair value of the tan bark of which they were thus deprived by such violation.

2. The contract provided (referring to all of the timber) that “the said timber is to be of sound, merchantable qual-. ity, and is to be measured in the log, at the smallest diameter, according to Scribner’s and Doyle’s rules, as adopted by the Hardwood Manufacturers Association of the United States, on the skidway at the mill or mills to be erected by the parties of the second part on said premises, said measurement to be made at the joint expense of the parties hereto,” etc.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Monger Et Ux. v. Dimmick
210 P.2d 929 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1949)
Kanawha Banking & Trust Co. v. Gilbert
46 S.E.2d 225 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1947)
Protestant Episcopal High School v. Parrish
190 S.E. 146 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1937)
C. G. Blake Co. v. W. R. Smith & Son, Ltd.
133 S.E. 685 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1926)
Jones v. Gammon
125 S.E. 681 (Court of Appeals of Virginia, 1924)
Williamsburg Power Co. v. City of Williamsburg
124 S.E. 215 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1924)
Big Vein Pocahontas Co. v. Browning
120 S.E. 247 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1923)
Knight v. Knight
100 S.E. 504 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1919)
Furrow v. Bair
100 S.E. 506 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1919)
Adams v. Hazen
96 S.E. 741 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1918)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
93 S.E. 642, 121 Va. 546, 1917 Va. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-c-mccorkle-son-v-kincaid-vactapp-1917.