State ex rel. Des Allemands Lumber Co. v. Allen

34 So. 804, 110 La. 853, 1903 La. LEXIS 720
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJune 22, 1903
DocketNo. 14,897
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 34 So. 804 (State ex rel. Des Allemands Lumber Co. v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State ex rel. Des Allemands Lumber Co. v. Allen, 34 So. 804, 110 La. 853, 1903 La. LEXIS 720 (La. 1903).

Opinion

BLANCHARD, J.

The Des Allemands Lumber Company conducted, owned and operated a saw mill plant.

In connection with same, it owned, or leased, or enjoyed the privilege of taking timber from (either or all), large bodies .of swamp lands in the neighborhood and having water connection with the mill through bayous, lakes, canals, etc.

The timber (logs) cut from the swamps, were trailed and pulled, or floated, over these water connections, to the mill and there sawed into lumber.

In June, 1901, the Des Allemands Company entered into a contract with another corporation, known as the Morgan City Timber Co., Limited, by the covenants of which the latter (which will hereafter be referred to as the Morgan Company) undertook to deaden, cut, pull or float, boom and tow all the cypress timber in the swamps, controlled as-aforesaid by the Des Allemands Company, that was accessible from the bayous and lakes bordering said lands, or that should become accessible by means of canals to be constructed by the Des Allemands Company and' at its expense.

The object of this contract was to supply the mill of the Des Allemands Co. with saw logs, and a period of “five years or more” was fixed as the time or duration of the contract.

Later, certain amendments were made in writing to the contract, but not altering its main features as above set forth.

The contract thus made and amended stipulated that the Morgan Company should be-paid in cash, at the time of delivery by it of logs at the mill, $5.50 per M. feet according to the measurement known as “the Doyle rule appearing in the Scribner Lumber and' Log Book.”

.Operations under the contract appear to' have gone on from the summer of 1901 until near the close of April, 1903 — nearly two-years — when the Des Allemands Co. brought a suit against the Morgan Co. the object of which was to have the contract canceled and annulled.

The contention of the plaintiff in that suit was that the Morgan Co. had violated the' contract in such way as to cause serious loss-' and damage to the plaintiff company, and among other things it charged that whereas the contract gave to the plaintiff company the right to designate from what parts of the swamps timber should be cut, and whereas it had given instructions as to where the-cutting should be done, such instructions had not been heeded by the Morgan Company,. [856]*856and timber had been cut and floated from places in the swamps other than those designated, and the Morgan Company had refused to cut and float from those localities indicated by the plaintiff.

Furthermore, that it had cut down, and was continuing so to do, trees above the circle deadening the same, in spite of its engagement not to do so and in violation of the contract, thereby causing a large loss of timber; that it had cut, and was continuing so to do, the timber so low down from the top of the tree, after it was felled, as,to cause a large loss of timber, in violation of the contract; that in this way it had delivered, and was continuing to deliver, parts of trees instead of the whole trunk of trees suitable for sawing into lumber, thereby causing great loss of timber; that it was obstructing with the branches and unused portions of trees, and with debris, the canals and waterways which the plaintiff had constructed and opened for getting the timber out, thus choking up and rendering useless such canals and waterways; that by such methods plaintiff’s swamps and timber lands were being ruined, etc.; and that already damages to the amount of' $5,000.00 had been inflicted and the aggregate of loss and damage would be largely increased if the Morgan Company were permitted to longer pursue the course complained of.

Lastly, the plaintiff averred that the Morgan Company had forfeited all its rights under the contract; that it had become a mere spoliator of plaintiff’s property; that plaintiff was entitled to have the contract annulled,* and to a writ of injunction to restrain the Morgan Company from further operations thereunder.

The prayer of the petition was for the writ of injunction, for judgment against the Morgan Company declaring the contract violated and canceling the same, and for judgment against it for $5,000.00 damages.

While the present proceeding does not bring before us the merits of this controversy, it is but fair to give the substance of the Morgan Company’s reply to this arraignment, and giving it will conduce to a better understanding of the case.

It answered that in order to meet its obligations under the contract entered into with the Des Allemands Company it made large outlays of money to build and equip pull boats, camp boats and to prepare the necessary plant and outfit for deadening the trees in the swamps, cutting, trailing, pulling and floating the same; that it established camps in the swamps, employed and organized forces of laborers, including men skilled in the operation of the pull boats and other instrumentalities necessary in the work; that in this wise it incurred expenses aggregating twenty-five or thirty thousand dollars; that it entered upon the work it had contracted to do in September, 1901, cutting, first, the timber around the edges of the lakes and bayous where the same could be reached with the pull boats without 'canals — this in order to give the plaintiff the opportunity to cut the canals and accessory waterways contemplated by the contract; that the plaintiff failed in its duty of cutting the canals, though called upon to do so, thus forcing the pull boats to remain idle many days; that plaintiff continually harassed and impeded the defendant in its operations under the contract, with the view of causing the defendant to default thereon and then take advantage of such default; and that failing in its said purpose, and failing to drive defendant to a law suit to protect its rights, it (the plaintiff company) finally resorted to law itself, filing the suit wherein it claimed violation of the contract on part of defendant, and sought its cancellation, and invoked the writ of injunction, which was resorted to not for the purpose of righting a wrong or preventing an injury, but for the purpose of preventing defendant from executing the contract and delivering timber under the same, and earning the large profits which the high water in the swamps, caused by a crevasse on the river front (thus enabling the logs to be floated out instead of pulled out by boats), made certain.

It charged that plaintiff’s object was to save for itself and make this profit, which is figured at forty to fifty thousand dollars; that immediately upon the issuance of the injunction applied for, which had the effect of stopping all operations by defendant and practically dispossessing it, plaintiff company entered upon the land and began to pull and float the timber which defendant had deadened and cut, taking possession of defend[858]*858ant’s camp, employing its labor, demoralizing its entire force, and thus placing it in a position of inability to meet its obligations under tbe contract.

Defendant denied the acts" of violation of the contract charged by plaintiff; represented the injunction to have been wanton and malicious; and that it (defendant company) had been greatly damaged by the same.

It set forth in detail the items of this damage and estimated the aggregate amount thereof to be largely over one hundred thousand dollars.

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Bluebook (online)
34 So. 804, 110 La. 853, 1903 La. LEXIS 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-des-allemands-lumber-co-v-allen-la-1903.