Sorensen v. Jacobson

232 P.2d 332, 125 Mont. 148, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 96
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1951
Docket9029
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 232 P.2d 332 (Sorensen v. Jacobson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sorensen v. Jacobson, 232 P.2d 332, 125 Mont. 148, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 96 (Mo. 1951).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE BOTTOMLY:

Action for conversion of saw logs and for cost of building logging road. The jury’s verdict was for defendant. Plaintiffs’ motion for new trial was denied and they here appeal from the judgment entered.

Defendant owned rough timber lands upon which was growing timber from which lumber could be manufactured. In October 1946, he entered into a parol agreement with plaintiffs granting them the right to enter his timber lands and to cut and remove therefrom the marketable timber for which plaintiffs were to pay $4.00 per thousand board feet. Plaintiffs immediately began the cutting of the timber and construction of a logging road on defendant’s land. There was no time limit for the completion of the cutting of the timber or the removal of the logs.

During the years 1946 and 1947 plaintiffs cut, trimmed, bucked into log lengths, skidded and hauled from defendant’s lands to plaintiffs’ sawmill and sawed into lumber 300,000 feet board measure of such saw logs, all of which were sealed at *150 plaintiffs’ sawmill and upon sale of the lumber, plaintiffs paid the defendant therefor at the agreed rate.

In July 1948 defendant, through his counsel-, directed a written notice to plaintiffs reading:

“Mr. Rex Sorensen:
“Hall, Montana
“Dear Mr. Sorensen:
‘ ‘ Pursuant to a certain verbal agreement entered into between yourself and Mr. Paul Jacobson, owner of certain lands near Helmville, Montana, and by the terms of which verbal agreement you were to cut and haul from Section 18, Township 12, North of Range 12 West, certain timber and to pay Mr. Jacobson, the owner thereof at the rate of $4.00 per thousand feet for such timber cut and hauled. There is now laying on said lands of Mr. Jacobson, between 40 and 50 thousand feet of such timber cut by 'you, which has not been hauled away or paid for by you. Unless such timber is disposed of in the near future, its value shall be materially decreased, and it shall soon become worthless.
“Therefore, you are hereby notified that unless you pay for and haul away said timber within ten days after receiving this notice, Mr. Jacobson will consider your contract at an end, and dispose of said timber as he best sees fit. Any and all timber hauled by you is to be paid for in advance of taking the same from the said Section 18.”

At the time of receving the above notice there were between 70,000 and 75,000 board feet of logs all cut by plaintiffs, lying on defendant’s land.

Following the receipt by them of the notice, plaintiffs were engaged in hauling their logs when defendant stopped the operation and demanded that plaintiffs, unload the logs from their trucks and ordered that none of the logs be removed until plaintiffs had sealed the logs on the ground where severed and pay defendant therefor.

Thereafter defendant took possession of the logs, caused them to be sawed into lumber, which he claimed and used.

*151 Plaintiffs contend: That as and when such trees were cut and severed from the land they became their personal property; and their title could not .be divested except by due process of law and that defendant is liable in damages for the conversion of their logs.

Defendant asserts that the logs were not removed from his land within a reasonable time after notice and that plaintiffs thereby forfeited not only their right to enter upon defendant’s lands for the purpose of removing their property, but that they also forfeited whatever rights they may have theretofore had therein and that defendant as owner of the land succeeded to plaintiff’s rights in the logs.

The trial court adopted defendant’s theory and, over plaintiffs’ objections, instructed the jury:

“You are instructed that if you find that no time for removal of said logs was set that plaintiffs had to remove the same in a reasonable time, and if they failed to remove said logs in a reasonable time, then they lost not only their rights to enter the premises, but also whatever right in the logs they may have had.”

The parties operated under their simple oral agreement from the fall of 1946 to the summer of 1948, cutting and removing 300,000 board feet of logs all sealed at plaintiffs’ mill for which they paid defendant at the agreed rate and in addition thereto plaintiffs also cut, trimmed, bucked and skidded prior to July 3, 1948, between 70,000 and 75,000 board feet of logs which were on defendant’s land and ready for hauling when defendant gave his notice; stopped further cutting and hauling and attempted to impose entirely new conditions, namely, that before any of the severed logs could be hauled they were to be first scaled in the woods rather than at the mill and that they were to be paid for in full.

Following this stoppage of plaintiffs’ operations, defendant laid claim to the severed logs, delivered a part of them to one Tubbs, and a portion thereof defendant sawed into lumber and used.

*152 By the weight of authority such a parol or simple contract for the sale of growing timber, to be cut and removed from the land by the purchaser, is not to be construed as intended by the parties to convey any interest in land, but as an executory contract for the sale of the timber after it shall have been severed from the soil. Such a contract implies a license to enter the lands of the licensor for the purpose of severing the timber and removing the same. The severing of the trees constituted part performance of the contract, the logs becoming the personal property of the licensee. Such partly performed contract does not come within the provisions of the Statute of Frauds. R. C. M. 1947, sec. 13-606; Stillinger v. Kelly, 66 Mont. 441, 443, 214 Pac. 66; Restatement, Contracts, sec. 200(c). See: J. P. Miller & Sons v. Hanberg, 79 Wash. 144, 139 Pac. 1085. Partial performance of an oral contract takes it out of the Statute of Frauds. McIntyre v. Dawes, 71 Mont. 367, 376, 229 Pac. 846, and cases cited therein; Conner v. Helvik, 105 Mont. 437, 452, 73 Pac. (2d) 541. The Statute of Frauds was never intended to cloak fraud, but to prevent it. See: Wells v. Waddell, 59 Mont. 436, 196 Pac. 1000.

It is also well settled that, while the license to enter upon the land and cut timber thereon is irrevocable as to that part of the timber which has been severed from the land, yet while the contract remains executory it is revocable at the will of the owner of the land.

Here the defendant revoked the license as to the growing timber which had not been severed, as was his right, and the plaintiffs did not cut or sever any timber after such revocation. However defendant went further and attempted to revoke the license as to the severed logs. These he could not take without due process of law.

Such contract and license may not be revoked as to acts already done under it. The revocation is prospective and not retrospective. It does not affect the title to the timber which has been severed prior to revocation. Compare: Gullicksen v. Shadoan, Mont., 218 Pac. (2d) 714, 719, and cases cited therein.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P.2d 332, 125 Mont. 148, 1951 Mont. LEXIS 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sorensen-v-jacobson-mont-1951.