St. Regis Paper Company v. Aultman

280 F. Supp. 500, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8034
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Georgia
DecidedMarch 23, 1967
DocketCiv. A. 908
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 280 F. Supp. 500 (St. Regis Paper Company v. Aultman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Regis Paper Company v. Aultman, 280 F. Supp. 500, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8034 (M.D. Ga. 1967).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER ON MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

ELLIOTT, District Judge.

St. Regis Paper Company brought this diversity Declaratory Judgment proceeding to judicially determine its timber cutting rights under a lease and timber sales contract dated December 29, 1952, effective January 1, 1953 and expiring December 31, 2012.

The Georgia contract granted to St. Regis certain rights and imposed upon it certain obligations with respect to the production, care and cutting of, and payment for, timber growing and to be grown on the leased property located in Worth County, Georgia.

In general terms, the controversy involves a difference of opinion between St. Regis and the defendant owners of the subject property as to whether St. Regis has the right during 1967 and the remaining years of the contract to cut what is referred to as a “back-log” of timber which St. Regis claims that it paid for but did not cut during the first fourteen years of the contract.

In this connection, St. Regis contends that during the first fourteen year period (not including the last three months in 1966) it paid for 259,594.25 cords of timber; that during the same period it cut only 179,336.57 cords; and that under the terms of the contract it is now and during the remaining years thereof entitled to cut as a “back-log” the 80,-257.68 cords so paid for but not cut, without the payment of any additional consideration.

On the other hand, the owners assert that St. Regis only paid for and in fact cut all of the timber growth on the property during the first fourteen years, and that there is therefore no existing “backlog” under the terms of the contract which St. Regis is entitled to cut.

Both St. Regis and the owners have filed Motions for Summary Judgment.

The Court has concluded that the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by the owners should be granted; and consequently the Motion of St. Regis should be denied.

The contract is a lengthy document, covering some 30 pages and containing 35 numbered paragraphs each of which carries an identifying title. However, it will not be necessary to set out the entire contract in order to dispose of the question presented. Aside from Paragraph 13 which specifically deals with and is entitled “CUTTING BACK-LOG”, the other paragraphs referred to by counsel in their briefs and oral argument are: 2. PURCHASE PRICE; 7. FOREST MANAGEMENT; 8A. LUMP SUM SALE OF 29,000 CORDS; 8B. CUTTING RIGHTS FIRST FOURTEEN YEARS; 9. SURVEY; 10. CRUISES; 11. CUTTING ANNUAL GROWTH, AFTER FOURTEEN YEARS; 12. QUARTERLY PAYMENTS ; 14. CUTTING REDUCED BY FIRE; and 26. CONTINGENCIES.

ANNUAL CUTTING RIGHTS FIRST FOURTEEN YEARS

Under Paragraph 8A St. Regis purchased and the owners sold 29,000 cords of timber to be cut at the rate of 5,800 cords a year for the years 1953 through 1957. In connection with this sale it was provided that: “No provision of this agreement shall be construed in any *502 way to restrict or limit the unconditional right of the Purchaser to cut and remove the above pulpwood at the rate specified after the payment therefor has been made to the Sellers.”

In Paragraph 8B the parties agreed “that during the first fourteen years the lands,” (not including the cleared lands to be planted with trees by St. Regis) “if operated in accordance with good forestry practices and pursuant to the provisions of this contract, in addition to the pulpwood sold under the provisions of Paragraph 8A * * *, should produce * * * timber growths equal to or greater than the quantities set opposite the respective years in the following schedule:”. Following this is a schedule of the agreed predicted growth for each of the years 1958 through 1966,- — the growth as shown by the schedule for 1953 being 9,450 cords and gradually increasing to 22,615 cords for the year 1966. It was then provided that during each of these years St. Regis would “have the right to cut and remove * * * up to the number of cords of pulpwood, indicated by the * * * schedule with respect to such year;” but with the proviso “that should the * * * growth during such year actually amount to less than the quantity so indicated, the quantity of pulpwood * * * which Purchaser is given the right to cut * * during or with respect to such year shall be reduced to the amount of such actual * * * growth.”

In Paragraph 9 it was provided that the predicted growth set forth in the schedule contained in Paragraph 8B was based on the assumption that the described property exclusive of “cleared land” contained 25,200 acres, and that if a survey should establish more or less acreage then the predicted growth shown in the schedule was to be changed to an amount “which bears the same ratio to said number of cords as the total acreage thus determined, of said described lands, exclusive of said ‘cleared lands’, bears to 25,200”.

ANNUAL CUTTING RIGHTS AFTER FIRST FOURTEEN YEARS

In Paragraph 11 it was provided that after the first fourteen years St. Regis would “have the right to cut * * * from said lands the number of cords of pulpwood * * * last established pursuant to Paragraph 10 * * * as the current annual rate of * * * growth of timber upon said lands”.

Under Paragraph 10 it was stated that if in 1966 the parties could not by agreement establish the annual rate of growth of timber then being produced upon the lands for 1967 and subsequent years, determination of the “current rate of growth * * * of timber upon said lands in terms of the number of cords of pulpwood per year”, would be made by a cruise of the timber, and it was agreed that “the annual rate thus established shall be conclusive for the purposes of this contract”. Either party could thereafter require a new determination of rate of growth, but not until the expiration of five years after a previous determination.

PAYMENTS TO BE MADE BY ST. REGIS

The consideration for the 29,000 cords was $100,000.00, payable on or before January 20, 1953.

Paragraph 2 provided that St. Regis would buy and have the right to cut timber “in the amount hereinafter more specifically set out during each year of the * * * term,” and that “subject to the provisions hereinafter contained,” and except with respect to the 29,000 cords sold under Paragraph 8A, St. Regis was to pay the owners $3.75 a cord subject to adjustments based upon an increase or decrease of the wholesale price index published by the United States Department of Labor, or a minimum of $20,000.00 in each of the first fourteen years, and a minimum of $40,000.00 a year thereafter.

However, the contract further provided with respect to the consideration to be paid by St. Regis in connection with *503 its cutting rights in the first fourteen years, that whether or not St. Regis cut and removed “The quantities of timber indicated in the schedule or any part thereof,” it would nevertheless pay to the owners on January 1,1953 and thereafter quarterly during the first fourteen years, “as the purchase price of the timber authorized to be cut during the year such payments are due, a sum equal to one-fourth (%) of the purchase price of the quantity of wood * * * growth above set forth in the schedule of this Paragraph 8B for such year”.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
280 F. Supp. 500, 1967 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8034, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-regis-paper-company-v-aultman-gamd-1967.