Pokegama Sugar Pine Lumber Co. v. Klamath River Lumber & Improvement Co.

96 F. 34, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3208
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California
DecidedAugust 7, 1899
DocketNo. 12,578
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 96 F. 34 (Pokegama Sugar Pine Lumber Co. v. Klamath River Lumber & Improvement Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Northern California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pokegama Sugar Pine Lumber Co. v. Klamath River Lumber & Improvement Co., 96 F. 34, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3208 (circtndca 1899).

Opinion

MORROW, Circuit Judge.

This is an action to restrain the respondent from interfering with the complainant in the occupation, [35]*35conduct, and management of its lumbering business at Klamathon, in Siskiyou county, Cal. It is alleged in the bill that complainant is a corporation organized under and by virtue of the laws of the state of California, and that respondent is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the state of Oregon; that on February 24, 3897, respondent and one Hervey Lindley entered into a written agreement by which respondent agreed to lease to Hervey Lindley or his assigns its entire lumber plant in Siskiyou county, Cal., and Klamath county, Or., for the term of two years from and after March 30,1897, the consideration for the lease being an annual rent of one dollar per year and a division of the profits, by which respondent corporation was to receive one-third and said ILervey Lindley two-thirds of the total profits. It was further agreed that the said Lindley or his assigns should have the privilege of continuing the lease under the same terms and conditions to March 80, 1902, which privilege was afterwards extended by an additional agreement to March 30, 3904, and the division of the profits changed for this additional period to 45 per cent, for respondent and 55 per cent, for Lindley and his assigns. It is alleged that on April 7, 1897, respondent corporation made, executed, and delivered to lindley a lease of all (lie property described in the agreement of February 24, 1897, and in accordance with its terms; that upon the execution of this lease Lindley signed and accepted the same, and entered into possession of liie property mentioned therein, and undertook the management and operation of it as a lumbering business; that on the 151 h day of ¡¿September, 1897, Lindley sold, assigned, and transferred to the .Pokegama Sugar Pine Lumber Company, the complainant herein, the said instrument in writing, and all his right, title, and interest. therein, and thereupon the complainant entered into the possession of said property under and pursuant to the terms of said instrument in writing, and thereafter conducted, operated, and carried on the plant and lumbering business in accordance with the terms of the lease, and kept and performed all the covenants and requirements provided in the lease until the occurrence of the interferences. unlawful acts, and interruptions described in the bill; that the lumbering plant consists of a sawmill and log jack, with booms, lumber yard, tramways from the planing mill to the yard, planing mill, etc., on the hank of the Klamath river, at Klamathon, on the line of the California & Oregon Railroad, in the county of Siskiyou; a log slide about. 24 miles above the sawmill; that the logs are conveyed to tins log slide by a railroad about 9 miles in length, about 2 miles of which was actually built by complainant, and complainant holds the legal title to all of the railroad, together with the rolling stock, including' the engine; that the logs hauled over the railroad are cut from lands occupied by complainant, and that respondent has no right, title, or interest in the lands whereon the logs were cut; that between the 7th day of April, 1897, and the - day of February, 1898, the said Lindley and complainant cut and caused to be cut 15,000,000 feet of logs, to be sawn at the sawmill during the sawing season of the year 3.898; that of this about 4,500,000 feet were in the woods adjacent and contiguous to [36]*36tlie railroad, about 6,000,000 feet ready to be loaded upon the cars, about 4,500,000 feet in the river, accessible to the sawmill at Klama-thon, and about 1,000,000 feet in the booms connected with the mill; that in cutting and preparing the said logs for the mill complainant had expended more than $50,000, and had expended more than $20,000 in equipping the mill, railroad, and other portions of the plant in readiness for operating the said plant during the sawing season of 1898, which began about the-day of February, 1898, and for which complainant had the whole plant in readiness; that on the-day of February, 1898, in the nighttime, respondent, acting by and through its president, J. R. Cook, and by W. E. Cook and John S. Cook, as directors and agents of said corporation, violently and by force of arms entered the sawmill, drove the watchman of complainant out of the sawmill, excluded the complainant therefrom by force and violence, and then proceeded to block up the said mill so as to prevent the use thereof, or the taking of logs from the booms or lumber from the yard, by barricading the openings of the mill; that in so forcibly taking and occupying said sawmill respondent employed not only its president, J. R. Cook, and its directors and agents, W. E. Cook and John S. Cook, but also from four to six fighting men, who entered the mill in the nighttime, armed with shotguns and rifles, drove out complainant’s watchman by threats and violence, and have ever since remained in the mill, armed with shotguns, rifles, and ammunition, and by threats and force and the exhibition of firearms have excluded and still exclude complainant, its agents, representatives, and employés from the mill, and prevented the use and occupation thereof by complainant; that the cause and purpose of the forcible and violent entry by respondent was to compel complainant to abandon the said premises, and because respondent has entered into a contract for the sale of the said property, provided that it can deliver possession to the proposed purchasers, and that respondent has threatened to annoy and harass complainant so as to prevent its operating the plant; that the acts of respondent were not preceded by any peaceable entry upon the said property, or any part thereof, or any attempt to make such entry, or any demand upon complainant for the possession of the same, or the privilege of entering thereon, or any complaint that Lindley or complainant had failed to keep or perform any of the covenants or conditions of the lease dated April 7, 1897; that, on the contrary, on. the-day of December, 1897, at the request of respondent, complainant furnished to it a written statement showing the result of the operations of Lindley and the complainant to that date; that respondent has never since interposed any objections, but that since that date complainant has continued to cut logs, to make repairs, and to conduct the lumbering business at an outlay of more than $10,000, all of which will be lost to complainant, as well as amounts heretofore expended, and profits which would arise, unless complainant can continue to operate the plant; that, on account of the violent and unlawful acts of respondent, complainant has suffered great and irreparable injury by delay and interference in the prosecution of its lumbering business, and, unless respondent be enjoined and [37]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 F. 34, 1899 U.S. App. LEXIS 3208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pokegama-sugar-pine-lumber-co-v-klamath-river-lumber-improvement-co-circtndca-1899.