Marion County Lumber Co. v. Hodges

79 S.E. 1096, 96 S.C. 140, 1913 S.C. LEXIS 72
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 10, 1913
Docket8683
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 79 S.E. 1096 (Marion County Lumber Co. v. Hodges) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marion County Lumber Co. v. Hodges, 79 S.E. 1096, 96 S.C. 140, 1913 S.C. LEXIS 72 (S.C. 1913).

Opinion

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Hydrick.

In 1904 William Evans conveyed to Cape Fear Lumber Company “all the timber, except such as may be necessary for plantation use, rails, wood and board,” on a plantation containing 1,113 acres, 350 of which were then in cultivation, together with the rights of way *142 necessary for its removal. The grantee is to have ten years from date of the deed to cut and remove the timber; and, if it has not done so at the end of that time, it is to have ten years longer, by the payment of 6 per cent, on the purchase price. Plaintiff is the successor of Cape Fear Lumber Company in title to the timber, and defendant has acquired the title of William Evans to the land.

In 1913 plaintiff began to cut and remove the timber. Defendant tried to get plaintiff to come to some agreement as to what amount of timber should be left under the exception in the deed, which is quoted above, but plaintiff declined to make any agreement, contending that it has the right to cut and remove all the timber on the land, and that defendant’s right is limited to the use of timber for the purposes mentioned in the deed only so long as it lasts; in other words, until plaintiff has cut and removed it.

Thereupon, under the advice of counsel, defendant had five disinterested landowners of the community to view the premises and set off to him the quantity of timber which, in their judgment, would satisfy the exception. Assuming that the exception embraced enough timber to satisfy the needs of the plantation not only in its condition at the date of the deed, but also as they supposed that it would be after more of it had been brought into cultivation as the result of having had the timber removed from it, and assuming also that those needs must be supplied, until a new growth of timber would attain sufficient size to supply them, which they estimated would require from twenty-five to thirty years, these gentlemen set off to defendant the timber on 94 acres of the tract. Defendant had the boundaries of the body of timber set off to him marked, and notified plaintiff not to cut any of it.

Defendant and his witnesses say that plaintiff’s agents agreed fi> let defendant know, before going upon said tract to cut — presumably that he might have opportunity to take such steps as he might be advised to protect his interests— *143 and that, for some time, while they were cutting the timber on other parts of the plantation, they observed the boundaries of the part set off to defendant. But on the night of July 28th, 1912, in defiance of defendant’s notice, and contrary to their said agreement, they laid their logging railroad on said tract, and began cutting the timber early the next morning with such a great force of hands that, by eleven o’clock in the forenoon, they had cut and carried away fourteen carloads of logs, aggregating 50,000 feet of timber. On discovering that plaintiff was thus endeavoring, as he supposed, to defeat his. rights, defendant took with him an armed force of men, and drove plaintiff’s logging crew out of the woods, threatening to shoot any who dared to remain to cut or remove any more of the timber. He also tore up 240 yards of plaintiff’s logging railroad which had been laid on said tract.

Thereupon plaintiff brought this action for injunction, and, on an ex parte showing, his Honor, Judge Spain, issued an order enjoining defendant from “interfering with plaintiff’s laborers, logging equipment and railroad, and otherwise interfering with plaintiff in the cutting and removal of the timber.”

Under protection of this order, plaintiff resumed its operations, and was cutting and removing the timber on said tract at the rate of about 100,000 feet a day, when defendant obtained a rule requiring plaintiff to show cause why the order enjoining him should not be dissolved, and, in the meantime, restraining further operations by plaintiff. On hearing the return, and the affidavits pro and con, his Honor dissolved the injunction which he had issued against defendant, but enjoined both parties, pending the litigation, from “cutting, removing, or in anywise interfering with any of the timber” on said 94 acres. From this order plaintiff appealed.

*144 1 *143 Counsel for both parties agree that the case depends upon the proper construction of the clause in the Evans deed *144 which, for the sake of convenience, we have referred to as the exception, although, in legal effect, it is, perhaps more nearly a reservation. It is not material, however, whether we call it an exception or a reservation. While there is a well defined and established difference between the two, the Courts, with practical unanimity, agree that the use of the technical word “exception” or “reservation” will not be allowed to control the manifest intention, for they are often used interchangeably and synonymously. 13 Cyc. 674; 11 A. & E. Ene. L. (2d) 555. It is our duty, therefore, to give the clause in question a fair and reasonable interpretation, and, having ascertained the intention of the parties to the deed, to give effect to- it.

Thus construing the exception, we cannot sustain plaintiff’s contention that it has the right to- cut and remove all the timber from the plantation, and that defendant has no right, except to use thereof so long as it lasts. The language is plain, and- the intention is clearly expressed to except from the grant so much timber as may be necessary for plantation purposes. In view of the ever present and well known necessity for timber and its products to supply the various needs of a large plantation, it is highly improbable that the grantor would have intentionally conveyed all the timber on his plantation so that he would then, if the grantee had exercised the right to1 cut immediately, or afterwards, the cutting having been deferred to a later date, be compelled to go into the market and buy timber for his plantation uses. The words “such as may be necessary” look to the future as well as the present; and we think the intention was that enough timber should be left to supply both the present and future needs of the plantation. The deed fixes no limit of time — how long such needs must be supplied — and we should, therefore, fix such as appears, from the language used and all circumstances, to be the most reasonable and most probably that which was within the contemplation of the parties to the contract.

*145 The plaintiff’s own testimony strongly supports the construction which we have adopted, for it tends to show that the method of cutting and removing timber adopted by such companies is such that, for various reasons, almost invariably, if not necessarily, scattered saw timber enough is left to supply the ordinary demands ,of a plantation, and that no trees under ten inches in diameter are cut, and that this case has been no' exception to the rule. It is not improbable, therefore, that the parties had in mind this method and custom of cutting, and contracted with reference to it.

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70 S.E.2d 432 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1952)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 S.E. 1096, 96 S.C. 140, 1913 S.C. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marion-county-lumber-co-v-hodges-sc-1913.