National Surety Co. v. Webster Lumber Co.

244 N.W. 290, 187 Minn. 50, 1932 Minn. LEXIS 958
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedSeptember 16, 1932
DocketNo. 28,713.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 244 N.W. 290 (National Surety Co. v. Webster Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
National Surety Co. v. Webster Lumber Co., 244 N.W. 290, 187 Minn. 50, 1932 Minn. LEXIS 958 (Mich. 1932).

Opinion

Dibell, J.

Action by the National Surety Company to recover of the defendant, Webster Lumber Company, some $5,000 or $6,000. The *52 basis of the action is the right of subrogation claimed by the plaintiff to the unused remedy of the state against the defendant, which purchased ties of the Larson Brothers Lumber Company, a corporation, which were cut by the company from state lands under a regularly issued permit and sold to the defendant, Webster Lumber Company. The Webster company paid the Larson company. The latter company did not pay the state. The plaintiff as its surety paid the state under compulsion and seeks to recover of the Webster company. The court directed a verdict for the plaintiff for $1,685.54. The defendant appeals from the order denying its alternative motion for judgment or a new trial.

The sale of timber involved was under the state timber act of 1905, L. 1905, p. 258, c. 204, now embodied with amendments unimportant here in G. S. 1923, §§ 6347-6394. The state timber act of 1925, L. 1925, p. 325, c. 276, effective May 25, 1925, which superseded the 1905 act, is embodied in 1 Mason, 1927, §§ 6394-1 to 6394-40.

On October 30,1923, the Larson Brothers company obtained three permits in the usual form to cut timber from lands of the state in Koochiching county. The statute provided that the state auditor upon the purchase should issue a permit authorizing the purchaser to enter upon the land and cut and remove the timber according to the provisions of the statute. The statute, G. S. 1923, § 6364, provided :

“A separate bark, end or other mark shall be used on the timber cut under each permit, and, if the permit covers more than one season, it shall specify a separate mark to be used each season. It shall provide that the purchaser shall place the specified mark upon every piece of timber cut, and also plainly upon the end thereof the stamp mark MINN., and, that, in case of any failure to place the stump mark upon any such piece, the state shall have the right to take possession of the same wherever found. It shall contain such other provisions as may be necessary to secure to the state the title of all timber cut thereunder, wherever found, until full payment *53 thereof, and until all provisions of the permits have been fully complied with.”

G. S. 1923, § 6379, provided:

“Every person who shall cut timber on state lands, and fail to mark the same as provided by the permit, or shall place any other mark thereon, and every person who shall sell, transfer, or manufacture any timber cut on state lands, before the amount due to the state therefor shall have been paid, shall be guilty of a gross misdemeanor.”

G. S. 1923, § 6365, relative to a bond, is as follows:

“The purchaser, before execution of any permit, shall give bonds to the state, in double the value of timber covered by the permit, as shown by the amount of the bid and the record of appraisals as to quantity, conditioned upon the faithful performance of the terms of said permit and all requirements of law in respect to such sales, which bonds shall be approved in Avriting by the auditor and filed for record in his office.”

G. S. 1923, § 6386, relative to the method of collection for the stumpage sold, provided as follows:

“Whenever the auditor shall deem it for the best interests of the state, he shall take possession of the timber for Avhich such amount is due, wherever the same may be found, and sell the same at public auction. The proceeds of such sale shall be applied, first, to the payment of the expenses of seizure and sale; and second, to the payment of the amount due for such timber, with interest; and the surplus, if any, shall belong to the state; and, in case a sufficient amount is not realized to pay such amounts in full, the balance shall be collected by the attorney general. Neither payment of such amount, nor the recovery of judgment therefor, nor satisfaction of such judgment, nor the seizure and sale of such timber, shall release the sureties on any bond given pursuant to this chapter, or preclude the state from afterwards claiming that such timber was cut or removed contrary to Iuav, and recovering damages for the *54 trespass thereby committed, or from prosecuting the offender criminally.”

G. S. 1923, § 6383, provided that the auditor should keep a record of all sales in a book known as the “timber sales book”; and G. S. 1923, § 6394, provided that “the records kept by the auditor, pursuant to this chapter, shall be deemed notice of the facts therein set forth.” Section 6364 required permits to be filed with the surveyor general.

Each permit issued to the Larson Brothers Lumber Company provided as follows:

“Whereas, the statute provides and the purchaser agrees that the title to all of said timber before- and after cutting, wherever found, shall remain in the state until full payment therefor, and that any attempted sale or disposition thereof by the purchaser before he has made full payment therefor as herein provided, shall be without force or effect, and the title of the state to said timber or the lumber manufactured therefrom shall continue unimpaired until the same and the whole thereof has been fully paid for as herein provided.
“Now, therefore, by this permit, * * * (here follows a recital that 25 per cent of the 'estimated total purchase price of said timber so conditionally sold’ has been paid).
“This permit is issued and accepted upon the condition and subject to the terms and limitations, contained in the statutes of the state and those above specified, as well as those hereinafter recited, to all of which the state, the purchaser and the sureties upon the bond executed by the purchaser, approved and filed contemporaneously herewith, severally agree.”

The ties taken from the state by the lumber company bore the state mark, that is, the number of the contract with the word “MINN.” indented on the end.

The plaintiff, National Surety Company, on December 28, 1923, executed a bond with this condition:

“The condition of this obligation is such that whereas, the state under the provisions of - the statute in such case made and provided, *55 has granted a permit for the cutting and removal by the principal of certain timber from certain state lands therein described, * * *
“Now, if the said principal shall faithfully comply with all the terms and conditions of said permit, and any duly granted extensions thereof, and shall fully perform the terms thereof and shall keep, perform and obey all the requirements of law in respect to such timber sales, and shall pay to the state all such sums of money as shall accrue to it under said permit, then this obligation shall be void, but otherwise shall remain in full force and effect.”

The Larson Brothers company did not pay the state. The defendant, Webster Lumber Company, paid Larson Brothers company. The plaintiff under compulsion paid the state.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
244 N.W. 290, 187 Minn. 50, 1932 Minn. LEXIS 958, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/national-surety-co-v-webster-lumber-co-minn-1932.