Richmond Cedar Works v. J. L. Roper Lumber Co.

161 N.C. 603
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 26, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 161 N.C. 603 (Richmond Cedar Works v. J. L. Roper Lumber Co.) 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
Richmond Cedar Works v. J. L. Roper Lumber Co., 161 N.C. 603 (N.C. 1913).

Opinion

Walker, J.,

after stating the case: That an appeal lies from an order denying a motion for the removal of a case to the proper county for trial has been thoroughly settled by repeated decisions of this Court. Manufacturing Co. v. Brower, 105 N. C., 440; Connor v. Dillard, 129 N. C., 50; Brown v. Cogdell, 136 N. C., 32; Perry v. R. R., 153 N. C., 117. It is provided by Revisal, sec. 419, that actions for the recovery of real property, or of an estate or interest therein, or for the determination, in any form, of such right or interest and for injuries to real property, must be tried in the county where the subject of the action, or some part thereof, is situated, “subject to the power of the court to change the place of trial in the cases provided by law.” It is difficult to determine the exact nature of plaintiff's intended cause of action by the allegations of its complaint. The best we can make of it is, that the whole gravamen of its action is that the defendant unlawfully entered upon the land for the purpose of cutting down and removing the trees thereon, which were afterwards done. The allegations of the pleading are so blended as to render it impossible to separate any one or more of them from the others, and therefrom to frame a cause of action for a simple conversion of the [607]*607timber wbicb bad been severed from the soil. The doctrine with respect to local and transitory actions, where there has been a cutting of trees from land, is well stated in 40 Oyc., 75, with a copious citation of authorities to support the following text: “Although an action to recover damages for felling a tree upon plaintiff’s land, or digging- sand in it, or cutting down a telegraph pole fixed in its soil, is local, and may remain local even when the act of cutting down or digging is accompanied with an act of removal of the property from the land, defendant’s wrongful act will often result in giving plaintiff the option of suing in a transitory cause. When that which is upon the land and part of the realty has been severed from the soil and removed, it ceases to be part of the realty and becomes personal property. When the trespasser has sold the severed property and received money for it, plaintiff’s cause, as a cause of assumpsit for money had and received, is admittedly transitory at common law. It is not the less transitory when asserted' with direct reference to the thing severed, as a cause in detinue, or as a cause in trespass de bonis asportatis, or as a cause in trover and conversion. Nor is its transitory character affected by the fact that it is brought against the original trespasser, or that plaintiff’s pleading alleges his ownership of the land, if the gravamen of the action is the conversion.” When timber is cut from land, the title to it is unchanged. It belongs to theowner of the soil as before the act of severance, and he is entitled to all remedies which the law affords for the recovery of any other personal property or chattels, wrongfully taken or detained from its owner. Halleck v. Mixer, 16 Cal., 574; Emerson v. Turner, 95 Ark., 597, distinguishing Jacks v. Moore, 33 Ark., 31; Buckley v. Dalbeare, 7 Conn., 232; McGonigle v. Atchison, 33 Kan., 726; Riley v. Boston Water Power Co., 11 Cush. (Mass.), 11; Nelson v. Burt, 15 Mass., 204; Moore v. Wait, 3 Wend. (N. Y.), 104; Greeley v. Stilson, 27 Mich., 153. Those cases not only state the general rule, but clearly show the distinction between actions for injuries to the land or freehold and those for the simple and unmixed conversion of trees, growing com, or cornstalks cut, or sand or earth dug therefrom and afterwards converted, not as a part of the act of cutting or [608]*608digging, but as a separate and distinct act in itself. Discussing tbe question in Greely v. Stilson, supra, and after stating tbat actions for trespass on land and injuries thereto are local, and tbat tbe- testimony in an action for tbe trespass and one for tbe conversion of tbe timber or logs cut and carried away may be practically tbe same, tbe Court says: “A difference bas been recognized, however, arising out of tbe fact tbat until tbe timber bas become personalty, by being severed from tbe soil, it is not subject to conversion, and tbat whenever it may be moved in an unmanufactured form, whether in tbe same or in another county, a conversion may be charged as taking place where it is sold, or otherwise disposed of or appropriated, as well as on tbe first removal. Locating it as no longer freehold when it bas become personalty, -the law distinguishes actions for its conversion from those for tbe act whereby it became changed from realty, and puts all suits on a similar footing and makes them transitory. Tbe distinction is technical, but it seems to be well established.” But a further distinction bas also been recognized by two courts of high authority, one having a code system like ours. In Am. Union Telegraph Co. v. Middleton, 80 N. Y., 408, defendant was sued for cutting down and converting telegraph poles, and it was said by the Court: “Tbe telegraph poles, with tbe wires and attachments thereto, which, it is alleged, were cut down by the defendant, were affixed to the soil of a highway, and constituted a part of the freehold. As they could not be cut down without an entry on the realty, and this constitutes a material part of the damages, the only action which can properly be brought is an action of trespass qúare clausum fregit. This is clearly manifest; and as such action is local in its character, by the statute as well as by the common law, it will not lie in this State, where the land is located in another State. Watts’ Administrators v. Kinney, 23 Wend., 484. In the case last cited it was held that although the courts will entertain actions which are in their nature transitory, notwithstanding they arise abroad, actions for trespass quare clausum fregit, ejectment, etc., where the land lies in a foreign country, cannot be tried here. It is claimed that the damage to the real estate is not the cause of [609]*609action; and as tbe tortious acts were committed upon the highway where the defendant had a right to be, there could be no trespass on the close. The answer to this position is that the plaintiff had affixed their poles to the realty, and the cutting away of the same was a trespass for which damages could only be recovered by an action quare clausum fregit. It is also insisted that the gravamen of the complaint was for carrying away and converting the poles which were severed, and were personal property after the cutting, even if they were a part of the realty previously. It is quite obvious that the cutting of the poles and the removal of them was one continuous and uninterrupted transaction, inseparably connected together, which constituted a single cause of action which cannot be divided into two actions — one for the cutting and another for the conversion. The one was a part of the other, and the conversion so coupled with the cutting that they were the same, and both of them are thus made local. Howe v. Wilson, 1 Den., 181.” In Ellenwood v. Chair Co., 158 U. S., 105, the allegations were much like those in this case, and the Court said: “The petition contained a single count, alleging a continuing trespass upon the land by the defendant, through its agents, and its cutting and conversion of timber growing thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
161 N.C. 603, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-cedar-works-v-j-l-roper-lumber-co-nc-1913.