Ruth Sheek v. Mark A Morin Logging, Inc.

993 N.E.2d 280, 2013 WL 4603242, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 415
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 29, 2013
Docket07A01-1211-PL-509
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 993 N.E.2d 280 (Ruth Sheek v. Mark A Morin Logging, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ruth Sheek v. Mark A Morin Logging, Inc., 993 N.E.2d 280, 2013 WL 4603242, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 415 (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

VAIDIK, Judge.

Case Summary

Ruth Sheek, who owned fifty-three wooded acres in Brown County, Indiana, entered into a contract with a logging company to have specific trees cut down. When Ruth realized the severity of the damage being done to her property during the timber-harvest process, she stopped the entire operation. The logging company performed some remediation work, but damage to Ruth’s property still remained. Ruth sued for breach of contract, and the logging company counterclaimed for breach of contract. The trial court awarded Ruth $55,572.50 in damages.

Ruth appeals arguing that the trial court used the wrong measure of damages for the injury to her real property and that the court erred by reducing her damages by the value of the unharvested trees the loggers left on her property. Because the record shows that the damage to Ruth’s property is temporary rather than permanent, the trial court properly used the cost of repair, and not the difference between the market value before and after the inju *283 ry, to calculate the damages. We also conclude that, because Ruth was paid for all the trees and the loggers left behind $4000 in unharvested trees, the trial court properly reduced Ruth’s damages by $4000 to avoid a windfall. We therefore affirm the trial court.

Facts and Procedural History 1

Ruth owns approximately fifty-three wooded acres on Gatesville Road in Brown County, Indiana. She purchased the property in 1966. The property has a small cabin with a stone path leading to a 2.5-acre lake. The cabin is a second home for Ruth, who lives in Greenwood.

In June 2009, an agent for Bedford, Indiana-based Mark A. Morin Logging, Inc. (“Morin Logging”) stopped by the cabin to see if Ruth was interested in selling her timber. Ruth’s timber had been harvested approximately fifteen years earlier. After some discussion, on June 27, 2009, Ruth and Morin Logging entered into a written contract entitled “Sale of Standing Timber.” Pl.’s Ex. 8, p. 1. According to the contract, Ruth agreed to sell all trees “18 diameter inches and larger at the stump” on her fifty-three-acre tract to Morin Logging. Id. The contract also called for any trees within thirty feet of the lake to be cut and pulled back and for Morin Logging to “level skid roads [and] loading area.” Id. at 3. The contract, which was in effect from June 27, 2009, to July 1, 2010, provided that the timber harvest would be done in a “workmanship like manner without undue disturbance or residual damage to the premises.” Id. at 1, 2. However, the contract also warned that “the timber harvest process involves the use of men, tools, and equipment upon the premises and incidental forest growth[,] and residual damage occurs.” Id. at 2.

The contract price was $21,000. Morin Logging paid $1000 down. Morin Logging used Hamilton Logging, Inc., from Mar-tinsville, Indiana, as a subcontractor to harvest Ruth’s timber. 2 Hamilton Logging began to harvest the timber in December 2009, at which point Ruth was paid the remaining $20,000.

The timber-harvest process requires the use of heavy equipment called skidders. Hamilton Logging used the loading area and skid roads that were present on Ruth’s property from the previous logging operation to avoid additional damage. However, Hamilton Logging expanded the loading area and skid roads and added twenty tons of stone to the loading area, even though this was not specifically addressed in the contract. Tr. p. 237.

When Hamilton Logging began logging Ruth’s property in December 2009, the ground was frozen. However, the weather warmed up in mid-December and the ground quickly thawed, causing the skid-ders to sink. The logging was approximately two-thirds finished at the time. Hamilton Logging continued operations because they “thought [they] could get it done,” id. at 205, but doing so caused deep ruts in the skid trails. Some ruts were three feet deep and three feet wide.

At about the same time, one of Ruth’s Brown County neighbors called her in Greenwood and advised her to check on her property. Ruth immediately went to her Brown County property where she *284 discovered a “huge” staging area with “a whole bunch of rocks,” huge ruts, damaged standing trees, and discarded tree tops and tree trunks piled up with dirt or mud. Id. at 142. Ruth, who was very upset, approached the loggers and told them to leave. Ruth also took pictures and went to the Brown County sheriff and prosecutor in an effort to stop the logging, but she was unsuccessful. On December 18, Ruth’s attorney sent Morin Logging a “cease and desist” letter. Def.’s Ex. 13. According to Ruth, the logging did not stop until sometime in February 2010. When the loggers finally left Ruth’s property, there were numerous trees that remained to be cut pursuant to the contract with a value of $4000.

Remediation measures were required to repair the extensive damage to Ruth’s property. Ruth gave Hamilton Logging permission to reenter her property to remediate the damage. Hamilton Logging hired a forester to advise them on what should be done. In November 2010, Hamilton Logging brought in a bulldozer to fill and level the rutted areas, installed water bars to prevent further erosion from the skid trails, and hired a landscape company to seed and straw the graded areas. Hamilton Logging spent $20,427.50 in remediation. Def.’s Ex. 17.

Before Hamilton Logging completed this remediation .work, Ruth hired forest consultant Don Duncan in March 2010 to inspect her property. According to Duncan, the harvesting of Ruth’s timber occurred at the worst time of the year — generally November and December when the ground is wet but not yet frozen. Duncan, who took numerous photographs that were admitted into evidence at trial, was “very surprised at the visual damage done on [Ruth’s] woodland.” Id. at 18. Duncan explained that timber operations always produce rutting, but what occurred on Ruth’s property was “extreme.” Id. at 25. Duncan explicated that “the hidden effect of logging in the mud is the removal of air pockets in the soil, and root mortality, resulting in very compacted conditions and future tree mortality during the hot summer months.” Pl.’s Ex. 85. Duncan also observed skid damage to the pond emergency spillway which could compromise the dam, ruts leading to the pond which would result in sedimentation and shortened pond life, and the ruts themselves which would result in permanent stagnant water, increased mosquitos, major aesthetic disturbance, the inability to enjoy the property, and tree mortality. Id. Duncan concluded that contrary to the contract between Ruth and Morin Logging, the work was done with both “undue disturbance” and “residual damage” to Ruth’s property. Id. According to Duncan, it would take 40 to 100 years for Ruth’s woods to regenerate. Tr. p. 62-63.

Duncan inspected Ruth’s property again after Hamilton Logging completed the remediation work and noted a “huge improvement” from the “very deep ruts closed in and water-bars installed.” Id. at 54; Pl.’s Ex. 86.

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993 N.E.2d 280, 2013 WL 4603242, 2013 Ind. App. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ruth-sheek-v-mark-a-morin-logging-inc-indctapp-2013.