Pearl River County v. Wyatt Lumber Co.

270 F. 26, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2387
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 27, 1921
DocketNos. 3607, 3608
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 270 F. 26 (Pearl River County v. Wyatt Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pearl River County v. Wyatt Lumber Co., 270 F. 26, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2387 (5th Cir. 1921).

Opinion

KING, Circuit Judge.

Each of these suits was brought in the chancery court of Pearl River county, Miss., by Pearl River county, alleging itself to be a political subdivision and corporation of the state of Mississippi, against the respective defendants above named, to construe certain timber deeds made by the board of supervisors of complainant, conveying to said defendants, respectively, the merchantable pine timber standing or growing on section 16 of two townships in said county, with the right as to one of said sections at any time within 25 years after the date of said deed to enter upon said lands for the purpose of removing the said pine timber, which said time was by subsequent deed for a further consideration extended to October 22, 1929, and as to the other section with a right to enter upon said lands for such purpose [or the space of 15 years, which said time was for a valuable consideration extended to the 1st day of September, 1932.

The defendant in each suit removed the same to the United States District Court for the Southern District of Mississippi, alleging itself to be a corporation chartered by and a citizen of a state other than Mississippi. No resistance to the removal was offered, and no motion [28]*28to remand made in said District Court; but the point has been raised in this court that the complainant is only a nominal party, that the suit is really maintained in behalf of the state of Mississippi, and that the suit does .not, therefore, present a controversy between citizens of different states.

The legal title to said sixteenth sections in the several townships was acquired and vested in the state of Mississippi for school purposes under the Enabling Act of the United States admitting the state of Mississippi into the Union (3 Stat. 348, c. 23). The several counties wherein are situated any of such lands have, through their respective boards of supervisors, under the general supervision of the land commissioner, jurisdiction and control thereof, and of all funds arising from any disposition thereof, heretofore or hereafter made, and shall cause all such fun.ds to be paid into their respective county treasuries. The boards of supervisors in said counties are empowered to sell “the merchantable timber of any and all varieties” on such land. The funds arising from such sale shall be credited to the proper township by the county treasurers, the same to be loaned out by the board of supervisors, and the interest arising therefrom to be expended for the support of th(e township school.

The board of supervisors and a competent person, whom they are directed to employ, are ordered to institute and prosecute in the chancery court of the county where the land lies in the name of the county all necessary suits to establish and confirm the title to each such parcel of such land or to fix the date of the expiration of any lease of the same. Hemingway’s Annotated Code of Miss. §§ 7505-7527; Code of Miss. 1906, §§ 4695-4716. These statutes have been held to confer on the counties all powers of suit in regard to such sixteenth sections. Jefferson Davis County v. James-Simrall Lumber Co., 94 Miss. 530, 49 South. 611.

[1] It is manifest t from these sections that the counties have a direct interest in the Suits and in the results thereof and that in each case the decree would construe deeds made by this complainant through its board of supervisors and directly affect its pecuniary interest. We therefore think that the complainant had such an interest as to authorize it to bring each suit and that it does present a controversy between the county and the defendant.

[2] Counties have been recognized as corporations, and as such citizens, for the purpose of suits based on diverse citizenship in the federal court. Mercer County v. Cowles, 7 Wall. 118, 19 L. Ed. 86; Lincoln County v. Luning, 133 U. S. 529, 531, 10 Sup. Ct. 363, 33 L. Ed. 766. We therefore think the United States District Court had jurisdiction of these cases.

The exhibits in the bills in these cases show the execution of timber deeds to the grantees named therein by the board of supervisors of Pearl River county, through its president, to all the merchantable pine timber standing or growing on the land described in said named townships, with the covenant for entry upon said lands heretofore mentioned.

[29]*29The bills averred that these deeds conveyed only the right to cut and remove from said land those pine trees which were at the date of said deeds merchantable pine timber, and averred that defendants claim the right to cut and remove, not only such merchantable pine trees, but all of the pine trees on said lands which were not as aforesaid merchantable at the date of said deed: that by merchantable pine trees were meant trees of a certain diameter and with certain other descriptions. While each answer denied any purpose to presently cut any timber upon said lands, or any purpose other than of cutting and removing said merchantable timber, it denied that defendant was confined by its deed only to the cutting of such timber as at the date of said deed fell within the description of merchantable pine trees as stated in said bill of complaint.

By agreement of the parties the case was submitted to the court on two questions of law: First, did the defendant have a right as a matter of law to cut any timber from the sixteenth section of laud involved in each suit? Second, if the defendant had such right, was its right confined to the merchantable timber on the land at the time the deed was executed, or did it extend to the timber that had become merchantable between the date of the deed and the time the timber was cut?

The District Court after argument decided: First, that the defendant had the right as a matter of law to cut and remove the timber from said sixteenth section of land; second, that such right was not confined to the merchantable timber on the land at the date of the execution of the deed, but the lessee and vendee had the right to cut and remove any timber that became merchantable between the date of the deed and the expiration of the lease.

The court in each case entered a decree reciting that said case coming on to be heard on the bill of complaint and answer of the defendant and upon the written agreement of the parties complainant and defendant sttbmitting to the court these two preliminary law questions, and being of opinion that the law on both of said points as submitted is with the defendant, which decision and determination goes to the whole of said cause, and entirely determines the controversy thereof in behalf of the defendant, dismissed the bill on the merits, at complainant’s cost.

The court in its opinion, recognized the general rule that a provision as to the size of timber conveyed will generally be held to refer to the date of the conveyance rather than to some time in the future in the absence of anything showing a contrary intention, but held that in this case under the instruments as drawn, and the facts as appeared from the record, it was the intention of the parties for the vendee to acquire the right to cut and remove the merchantable pine timber which became so during the lease, holding that the case came within the ruling of this court in Nelson v. Americus Mfg. Co., 186 Fed. 489, 108 C. C. A. 467.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 F. 26, 1921 U.S. App. LEXIS 2387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pearl-river-county-v-wyatt-lumber-co-ca5-1921.