Royal v. . Dodd

98 S.E. 599, 177 N.C. 206, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 102
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedMarch 19, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 98 S.E. 599 (Royal v. . Dodd) 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
Royal v. . Dodd, 98 S.E. 599, 177 N.C. 206, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 102 (N.C. 1919).

Opinion

Hoke, J.

On the hearing it was made to appear that the defendants P. F. Pope and W. H. Parrish, a partnership trading as Pope & Parrish, *208 owned the timber, with the right to cut and remove same, on the lands of J. C. Jones, one of plaintiffs, sometimes designated as the Smith, or Jim Smith, place, and in November, 1915, they sold and conveyed the said timber and all their rights and appurtenances in reference thereto to their eodefendant J. D. Pope, who continued to own same to the time of trial.

The deed, executed in November, 1915, and duly proved and filed with the register during the trial week, was allowed in evidence by his Honor, and plaintiff excepted. That on 27 January, 1916, the defendant J. D. Pope, then owner of the timber, contracted with L. N. Dodd, who owned and operated a steam sawmill, to cut the timber on the said tract of land, the agreement being in terms as follows: “This indenture, made this the 27th day of January, 1916, by and between L. N. Dodd and J. D. Pope, of Harnett County. L. N. Dodd agrees to cut all of the long-leaf timber on the Smith tract of land for $1.50 per thousand and stack each grade separately at mill, convenient for hauling, said timber to be cut clean as he comes to it, down to the ten-inch stump age. J. D. Pope agrees on his part to take said shingles at the mill and advance enough every two weeks to meet the expenses of manufacturing said shingles and at the end of each month to settle in full for all cut the previous month. It is also agreed between the two parties that L. N. Dodd shall have all the cull grade of shingles, and that the tar is to be divided after all the expenses are paid, equally.”

That pursuant to the agreement said Dodd, on 14 March, 1916, having duly placed his mill and engine, commenced to cut the timber into shingles, and a few hours thereafter the fire caught near the mill, burned over the lands of J. C. Jones, where the mill was situated, and the lands of the other plaintiffs, adjoining proprietors, doing substantial and extended damage to all of said tracts.

There was testimony on the part of plaintiffs tending to show that the mill had a smokestack, defective in structure, and that it threw sparks and live coals to a degree that was a menace, and there was pine straw, wiregrass and leaves lying around the mill which had not been cleaned away and where the fire caught, and that the man in charge had been warned by one of plaintiffs not to fire his engine till he cleaned up the straw, leaves and litter around the mill, and that the owner (Dodd) was heard to say after the fire that “the place where he missed it was not in raking off around the mill.” There was evidence on the part of defendant in contradiction to that of plaintiff and to the effect, also, that the damage done to the land was not near so extensive as plaintiffs claimed, and that some of the land was not injured at all. Further, that, before contracting with him, J. D. Pope had made inquiry about L. N. Dodd and had been informed that he was a capable and reliable sawmill man.

*209 On these facts, relevant and sufficiently full for a proper apprehension of the questions presented, we concur in his Honor’s view that in no aspect of the evidence is a recovery permissible-against’the partnership of Pope & Parrish, they having conveyed the timber several months before by deed absolute in terms and retaining no interest whatever either in the timber or its manufacture. For the purpose presented, the deed, properly established, was sufficient to pass the title without registration, and the deed having been duly proved and filed for registration with the proper officer we see no reason why, on the facts of this record and as between the parties, the deed should not be received in evidence as a registered instrument. Smith v. Lumber Co., 144 N. C., 47.

We approve also his Honor’s ruling that, under the contract presented, there was no partnership created between L. N. Dodd and J. D. Pope in reference to the manufacture of this timber within any definition of partnership recognized by our decisions. Gorham v. Cotton, 174 N. C., 727, and authorities cited. The instrument shows that, so far as the shingles were concerned, the mill man was engaged in sawing the timber into shingles for J. D. Pope, the owner, at so much per thousand.

It was further objected by plaintiff that his Honor left it to the jury to determine whether, under the contract between them and the attendant facts, the conditions were so menacing as to deprive defendant J. D. Pope of any defenses which might arise from the fact that L. N. Dodd was at the time an independent contractor. If this relationship be conceded, the exception is hardly presented on the record, for the jury have, in their verdict, declared that neither Dodd nor Pope is liable, but as it will no doubt come up on a second trial we deem it well to make some further reference to the matter.

In Thomas v. Lumber Co., 153 N. C., 352, it was held that a company operating a steam railroad for logging purposes is liable in damages for fires caused by its locomotives by reason of its foul right of way; so dangerous that it might reasonably have been anticipated that injury would thereby occur to adjacent owners, and the principle of independent contractor will not avail the employer in such instances; and again,, the operation of a defectively equipped engine or of a good engine not carefully managed, or managed by an unskillful engineer, is such source of danger to the adjacent landowners from fire that an employer cannot relieve himself of the consequent damage under a contract with an independent contractor.

This decision has been cited and approved by us in Strickland v. Lumber Co., 171 N. C., 755, and many other cases, and in his learned and well-considered opinion Associate Justice Manning, speaking further to fires caused by a defective engine, said: “We will now consider the view based upon a finding that the fire was caused by a spark emitted by a *210 defectively equipped engine, but not communicated from tbe right of way. Would the defendant be liable? If the defendant itself had been at the time operating the engine its liability is governed by the third rule formulated in Williams v. R. R., 140 N. C., 623, as follows: ‘3. If fire escapes from a defective engine or defective spark arrester, or from a good engine not operated in a careful way or not by a skillful engineer, and the fire catches off the right of way, the defendant is liable.’ The liability of the employer rests upon the ground that mischievous consequences will arise from the work to be done unless imecautionary measures are adopted, and the duty to see that those precautionary measures are adopted rests upon the employer, and he cannot escape liability by entrusting this duty to another, though he be employed as an ‘independent contractor’ to perform it.”

In Covington, etc., Bridge Co. v. Steinbrock,

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.E. 599, 177 N.C. 206, 1919 N.C. LEXIS 102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/royal-v-dodd-nc-1919.