Petteway v. McIntyre.

42 S.E. 851, 131 N.C. 432, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 309
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 2, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 851 (Petteway v. McIntyre.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petteway v. McIntyre., 42 S.E. 851, 131 N.C. 432, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 309 (N.C. 1902).

Opinion

MONTGOMERY, J.

On the 29th day of October, 1897, the Parmalee-Eccleston Lumber Co., of New Jersey, a corporation, and Ernest V. Baltzer, of Wilmington, N. C., entered into a paper writing which is called by the parties thereto a lease. It consists of nine pages of closely printed matter. In it, it was recited as a part of the preamble that the company owned a valuable mill plant for the manufacture of lumber, at Jacksonville, Onslow County, North Carolina, together with valuable standing timber, timber options, timber rights and privileges, and logs, in the counties of Onslow and Jones, North Carolina, and that Baltzer was desirous of *433 cutting, logging and liauling the timber and of manufacturing the same and the logs; and for that purpose, by himself and in conjunction with others, was ready to operate the mill and undertake the lumbering operations.

In the paper writing, it was also recited that Baltzer had entered into an agreement with Enoch Ludford to operate the same mill plant and to cut, log and haul the timber referred to, and to manufacture it into merchantable lumber, upon the terms and conditions in that contract with said Lunford fully set forth. A copy of that contract was annexed and made a part of the contract between the Parmalee-Eccleston Company and Baltzer. It was also recited in the preamble that Baltzer had entered into an agreement with Horace M. Dickford, of Boston, for the sale of the lumber manufactured as aforesaid, upon commission, a copy of which contract was annexed and also made a part of the contract between the company and Baltzer. It was also recited that in order to carry out the provisions of all the instruments and agreements above referred to, it would be necessary to purchase rail for a log railroad, and a locomotive and log cars, and to repair and place in proper condition, as in the contract with Ledford set forth, the mill and plant at Jacksonville.

After those recitals in the premises, it was declared: “Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises, and for the recitals hereinafter set forth, this indenture witnesseth, that the said, the Parmalee-Eccleston Lumber Company, has leased, and by these 'presents does grant, demise and lease unto Ernest V. Baltzer all those certain premises situate, lying and being at Jacksonville, Onslow County,” etc. The property embraced in the contract, the mill plant, all its fixtures and appurtenances, and all the standing timber in Onslow and Jones counties, and their timber rights.

Baltzer was authorized, “upon- payment of such stump- *434 age or other charges as' the said Parmalee-Eccleston Lumber Company itself was under contract to make, and such charges and disbursements only to cut and remove all standing timber and logs thereon, and to convert and manufacture the same into lumber, and without any further costs than aforesaid to said Baltzer, to exercise all the privileges and authority which the company owned and had, or may hereafter ácquire, to any railroad or railroads, and upon or over the rights of way now owned or controlled by the said company, appurtenant to, or used by or in connection with, the said mill at Jacksonville aforesaid, and also the privilege of cutting-timber for railroad ties and construction, or for other railroad or mill or logging purposes, and of laying, using, operating, maintaining, taking up and removing such rail and railroad from time to time, as its best interest may, in his judgment, require, and any railroad constructed by said Baltzer, and all materials .entering therein, whether obtained from rights of way of said company or from its lands or elsewhere, shall be and remain the absolute property of said company, its legal representatives and assigns, and subject to its or their exclusive domination and control for all purposes, to the same extent as though the same, and all parts thereof, were upon land the property of it or them in fee simple; which said assignment and transfer of timber rights and right to manufacture logs into lumber as aforesaid shall be, however, only for the term of the lease aforesaid, and to terminate with the expiration of said lease, and which indenture of lease and assignment as aforesaid is made for and in consideration of the yearly rent or sum of one dollar, payable annually on the 31st day of December in each and every year of said term; as an additional Trent, the said Baltzer, for himself, his legal representatives and assigns, agrees that he will promptly, and not less often than once in each month, turn over and deliver to the said Parmalee-Eccleston Lumber Company, or its assigns, the net *435 proceeds and profits of the business to be conducted under the instrument described in the recitals hereto (copies of which are hereto annexed), and under this instrument, less only such sum or sums' of money as shall be necessary to- pay the premiums for fire and boiler insurance on said mill plant and its appurtenances and stock on haiid, and that he will not apply any portion of the same to any other use or purpose, except by and with tho express consent of said company or its assigns. By the term ‘net proceeds/ as used in this paragraph, is meant the gross amount of all moneys received from the manufacture and sale of lumber out of the timber herein-before referred to, less the following: (a) Amounts due Led-ford under his contract as therein set forth, (b) Amounts due Dickf ord under his contract, therein set forth, (c) Costs of inspections, clerk hire, stationery, postage, traveling, and the like, necessary to the due prosecution of the business and the preservation of its best interests, (d) Amount of stump-age necessarily paid by Baltzer, being at the same rate as now contracted for by the Parmalee-Eceleston Lumber Company. The remainder of surplus of income, after deducting the foregoing", shall be the ‘net proceeds/ as the term is used and understood in this instrument, and shall be paid over by said Baltzer to said company or its assigns, as rental for said premises, except only as the same is ultimately subject to fire insurance premiums as aforesaid, and to Baltzer’s' contingent interest therein by way of additional compensation, as hereinafter appears.”

The additional compensation to Baltzer provided for in the contract is in thes'e words: “The Parmalee-Eceleston Lumber Company, for itself, its successors and assigns, agrees that for his labor and services in fulfilling his obligations under the provisions of this lease, the said company will, during the term of this lease, except as herein provided, pay said Baltzer the yearly sum of $1,500, in equal monthly instalments, com *436 mencing with the day of the date hereof, and in addition to this amount, at the close of each year, will pay him the further sum equal to' ten per cent of the net proceeds and profits of the business to be conducted as aforesaid. The said company in like manner also agrees that it will cause to be given to said Ludford a sufficient bond in the penal sum of five thousand dollars, conditioned for the faithful performance by said Baltzer of his said contract with said Ludford.”

Certain other provisions of the contract were that the company was to furnish the locomotive, log cars and rail, and the necessary bolts and fastenings and switches with which to build and equip the log railroad, and the sum of $2,500, with which to put the mill in order.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 851, 131 N.C. 432, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 309, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petteway-v-mcintyre-nc-1902.