Quigley Furniture Co. v. Rhea

76 S.E. 330, 114 Va. 271, 1912 Va. LEXIS 136
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 21, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 76 S.E. 330 (Quigley Furniture Co. v. Rhea) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quigley Furniture Co. v. Rhea, 76 S.E. 330, 114 Va. 271, 1912 Va. LEXIS 136 (Va. 1912).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The bill filed in this cause by appellees (complainants below) sets out that on the 10th day of August, 1899, they, or their predecessors in title, together with one John O. Real, executed to the Chilhowie Lumber Company, a corporation, a deed whereby they granted and conveyed to said company, upon the terms and under the limitations therein set out, all the timber and trees, except as in the deed reserved and excluded, standing, being and situate upon certain lands in Tazewell county, known as the “Sheffey landsthat in the deed (filed as “Exhibit A” with the bill) it was provided, among other things, that all trees under fourteen inches in diameter were excluded (except for building roads, tramways, etc.) ; and that the deed further expressly provided as follows: “that the said second party shall have the term of six years from the date hereof for the purpose of cutting, felling, using, manufacturing and removing the timber hereby conveyed, and the lumber and material manufactured therefrom * * * provided, further, that if through sickness of any of the managers or operating agents of said second party, or serious accidental cause, the said second party has not, at the expiration of said term of six years, gotten off all of the timber herein conveyed, then an additional time, not exceeding one year, will be given to do so.”

[273]*273The hill then recites provisions of the deed usually found in deeds conveying standing timber, the right of ingress and egress in, over and upon the lands upon which the timber is located; the right to locate and operate machinery, plants, tramroads, etc., necessary for the cutting, manufacturing and marketing of the timber conveyed, and then alleges that, at the expiration of the term of six years, the Chilhowie Lumber Company had not cut and removed all the timber sold as aforesaid, but that there remained on the land a large quantity of standing timber above fourteen inches in diameter, and also a large quantity of timber which had been felled by said company; that there was no such sickness of the managers or operating agents of the company, and no such serious accidental cause, as entitled the company to the additional period of one year after the expiration of the six years. The bill further alleges that the Chilhowie Lumber Company, having become involved financially, had all of its business placed in the hands of B. F. Buchanan, as receiver, who sold to the Quigley Furniture Company, a corporation of the State of New York, such rights as the Chilhowie Lumber Company had under and by virtue of the timber deed, “Exhibit A.”

It appears from the record that the contract of sale to the Quigley Furniture Company was made by B. F. Buchanan, as trustee, on February 15, 1906, and the deed of conveyance executed on March 21, 1906, by which Buchanan, trustee, under and by virtue of a deed of trust and assignment executed to him by the Chilhowie Lumber Company on August 19,1904, sold and conveyed to the Quigley Furniture Company for the consideration of $7,500 all of the right, title and interest of the Chilhowie Lumber Company in and to the timber then standing and situate on the “Sheffey lands,” also all the buildings, structures, etc., of the Chilhowie Lumber Company, then situate on the [274]*274said lands, and other personal property of the Chilhowie Lumber Company.

It is further charged in the bill in this cause that all of the timber, standing or felled, which remained on the lands in question after the expiration of six years from the date of the deed (“Exhibt A”), became the property of the complainants, and that neither the Chilhowie Lumber Company nor the Quigley Furniture Company had or have any right or title thereto; that upon information and belief the Quigley Furniture Company had, since the expiration of the said time limit, cut a large quantity of valuable timber upon said lands, and had removed a large quantity of logs therefrom; that the Quigley Furniture Company had done other acts, operations and trespasses in and upon the lands, which wrongful acts and continuing trespasses done by it, a non-resident corporation, constituted a cloud upon the title and possession of the complainants, for which there was no adequate remedy other than an injunction from a court of equity. Complainants were unable to state in their bill accurately how much timber in quantity and value the Quigley Furniture Company had wrongfully removed from their said lands, but averred that up to the date of their bill (June 15, 1907) they were entitled to recover from the Quigley Furniture Company “for removing down timber, and for the use and operation of certain tramroads and rights of way upon the premises at least the sum of fifteen hundred ($1,500) dollars.”

The bill made the Chilhowie Lumber Company, B. F. Buchanan, receiver (trustee) as aforesaid, and the Quigley Furniture Company, parties defendant thereto, and its prayer was for an attachment to be issued and levied on the property of the Quigley Furniture Company to secure the amount of its indebtedness to the complainant; that the Quigley Furniture Company be restrained and enjoined “from further trespassing upon said lands and from [275]*275cutting or removing any timber or logs therefrom;” and also prayed .for an accounting, for a perpetual injunction on final hearing, a recovery of the amount ascertained to be due the complainants, a sale of the attached property, and for general relief.

The Quigley Furniture Company alone filed an answer to the bill, its answer admitting that at the expiration of the six-year limit stipulated in “Exhibit A” with complainant’s bill the Chilhowie Lumber Company had not cut and removed all of the timber sold to it and set out in said deed, but averred that it, the Quigley Furniture Company, assignee of the rights, etc., of the Chilhowie Lumber Company, under the deed, was entitled “to the additional period of one year provided for in said deed, because the said Chilhowie Lumber Company suffered great and serious loss by washing out of its tramroad and the burning of its saw mill within said six years, which caused a serious embarrassment in the conduct of its business, and was of such a nature and was sufficient to entitle it to the additional year after the expiration of said six years provided for in said contract.” The answer also set up and elaborated other grounds of defense against the relief asked by the complainants, but it is not deemed necessary to set them out here.

The summons and attachment in the case were issued by the clerk, the attachment levied and due return thereof made, depositions were taken and filed by both parties, and the circuit court, by its decree of June 22, 1908, settled the principles of the cause and adjudicated as follows:

“1. That the Quigley Furniture Company was only entitled .to six years from the 10th day of August, 1899 (the date of the timber deed), to cut and remove the timber, and was not entitled to the one year extension provided for in the deed.

“2. That all timber mentioned in the timber deed which [276]*276had not been severed at the expiration of the six-year limit reverted to and became the property of the complainant; and that all of the timber which had been severed within the said six years, but which had not been removed from the premises, was the property of the defendant company, and that the complainants had no title to the timber severed within the said period of six years.

“3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
76 S.E. 330, 114 Va. 271, 1912 Va. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quigley-furniture-co-v-rhea-va-1912.