McCreary v. Mercury Lumber Distributors

268 P.2d 762, 124 Cal. App. 2d 477, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1758
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 9, 1954
DocketCiv. 8361
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 268 P.2d 762 (McCreary v. Mercury Lumber Distributors) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCreary v. Mercury Lumber Distributors, 268 P.2d 762, 124 Cal. App. 2d 477, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1758 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

SCHOTTKY, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment holding that a timber contract between the parties had been rescinded and quieting title to the real property involved.

The appellant is the K. D. Lumber Company, sued as and doing business under the name of Mercury Lumber Distributors. Appellant was the only party defendant to answer or appear at the trial.

Appellant outlines its contentions on appeal as follows:

“It is appellants’ position that the uncontradicted evidence of all parties was that the contract of September 27, 1950 was not terminated and cancelled by mutual agreement, which was the gravamen of the complaint, and that the contract of September 27,1950 could not be modified, altered, or enlarged by parol evidence so as to create a time limit within which the downed timber had to be removed; and that it was not in default in payments for timber removed and that even if there had been a time limit for the removal of downed timber that any default could be compensated for in damages and did not justify a rescission.”

-Before discussing these contentions we shall summarize briefly the evidence as shown by the record, bearing in mind the familiar rule that all conflicts in the evidence must be resolved in favor of the prevailing party.

*479 On September 27, 1950, appellant and respondents entered into a written agreement for the purchase, by the former from the latter, of the merchantable fir and pine timber on said lands of respondents. This included, in addition to growing timber, some logs and tops from trees felled during previous logging operations on the land and allowed to remain there. The contract was prepared by appellant and omits provisions usually contained in such contracts for the protection of the seller. The contract provides for the purchase and sale, describes the lands, defines the term “merchantable timber,” specifies a purchase price of $2.00 per thousand board feet “on all logs to be felled,” and $1.00 per thousand for usable timber previously felled (usability to be determined by appellant), provides that a Spaulding's loggers’ scale shall be used in making measurements, provides that payments (based on footage determined by mill scale) are to be made by appellant on the 5th and 20th days of each month for timber removed during the preceding half-month, provides for rights-of-way for appellant’s operations, and requires appellant to carry workmen’s compensation and other insurance on its operations, at no cost to respondents.

The contract is silent regarding the time within which appellant was to remove the timber (either the standing or downed timber), and this time factor provides one of the chief points of contention between the parties. There is the usual conflict in the evidence as to what was said. Mr. McCreary testified that during negotiations for the contract he told appellant’s representatives, Mr. Howard and Mr. Olson, that he wanted the downed timber removed as soon as possible because it would “go bad,” and that they said they would take it out as soon as they possibly could. His testimony also shows that the removal of the downed timber was one of his main reasons for entering into the contract. Mrs. McCreary was present and heard this conversation and she confirmed her husband’s testimony that Howard and Olson promised to get the downed timber out as soon as they could. She testified that respondents understood this to mean that this timber would be removed right away, within the next year (1951) at least, and she also testified that the price for the downed timber was fixed at $1.00 per thousand because respondents wanted to get rid of it soon. According to Mr. McCreary, the time required to remove the standing timber was also discussed and it was estimated that it would take about two years. Both Howard and Olson testified that they *480 told Mr. McCreary that they had other timber to get out first, and that they would take his out when they could get to it. Both denied that any specific time was agreed upon or even mentioned. Howard admitted that he discussed the matter of spoilage (of the downed timber) with McCreary at the time, but explained that the timber had already been down for two or three years, that the fir would not deteriorate much if it took a little longer to get it out, and that the pine was already blue and unmerchantable. Olson, also, testified that the pine logs had started to blue. This was controverted by Mrs. McCreary who testified that the downed timber had been cut the previous year (1949), and by Vernon Miller who logged part of respondents’ land for appellant and who testified that the downed timber was still good in October, 1951, but was unmerchantable in the spring of 1952. Howard was appellant’s general manager, and Olson was the manager of appellant’s local sawmill at the time.

The record shows that appellant did not commence logging operations under the contract until July, 1951, although operations could have been conducted for 30 to 60 days during the remainder of the 1950 season and although appellant started operations on government land as early as May, 1951. ■ The testimony is not entirely clear, but it appears that this government tract was adjacent to lands covered by the contract and that appellant intended to move from the one tract onto the other, logging as it went. The boundary between the two tracts was in dispute and appellant discontinued operations there, apparently after it had taken approximately 67,000 board feet of logs out of the disputed strip. Appellant did not do the actual logging, but instead had it done by a contract logger. Logging operations under the contract were stopped sometime after their commencement in July, and were not resumed until mid-October, 1951, when Vernon Miller went onto the property and logged it for about three weeks. Cuy McCloud, who was appellant’s millwright at the mill, testified that Miller took out a total of 288,000 board feet from respondents’ property. Inasmuch as Howard estimated that the total amount taken out under the contract was 200,000 to 250,000 board feet, the July operation could not have been very productive. The amount of timber left to be removed was variously estimated at over a million board feet by Howard, and at a million and a half to two million by Miller. Howard thought that it would take appellant two years to remove it.

*481 Miller quit logging, after three weeks, because he was not being paid. It appears from Howard’s testimony that appellant’s sawmill was being operated by Lou Azrow and that it was Azrow who was supposed to pay Miller for the logging. In any event, the logging operations stopped in early November and Miller’s equipment lay idle on the property for five weeks before it was removed. Miller testified that there was good weather for at least 30 days while the equipment was idle and that he could have taken out more than 100,000 board feet of logs each week. Appellant’s sawmill had a capacity of between 15,000 and 20,000 feet, log measure, per day.

Respondents became dissatisfied with appellant’s performance, and early in December, 1951, they sought to rescind the contract and they also locked the gate across the road leading into the timber land. A letter of rescission dated December 3, 1951, was prepared by respondents’ attorneys, and presumably was mailed to appellant at an Oroville, California, address.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
268 P.2d 762, 124 Cal. App. 2d 477, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1758, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccreary-v-mercury-lumber-distributors-calctapp-1954.