Stybr v. Caflisch Lumber Co.

158 S.E. 669, 110 W. Va. 337, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 81
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1931
Docket6882
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 158 S.E. 669 (Stybr v. Caflisch Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stybr v. Caflisch Lumber Co., 158 S.E. 669, 110 W. Va. 337, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 81 (W. Va. 1931).

Opinion

Lively, Judge:

The chancellor refused to dissolve a temporary injunction restraining defendants from cutting and removing timber from a tract of land, and they appeal.

The motion to dissolve was heard upon bill and exhibits, answers and exhibits, and ex parte affidavits; and it, therefore, becomes necessary to set out at tedious length, and analyze, these pleadings and affidavits. Defendant, Cafliseh Lumber Company, on the one side, and plaintiffs, C. J. Stybr and Thomas Watson on the- other, claim title to the timber involved. Cafliseh Lumber Company (hereinafter called “Cafliseh”) claims ownership in this way: “Salisbury Coal & Lumber Company (hereinafter called “Salisbury”) in the year 1911 owned the land and timber thereon, known as the Musser tract, containing about 650 acres, and on April 21st of that year deeded the timber thereon to Jacob L. and Samuel A. Kendall, the purchase price therefor being $13,-333.33, with the right to enter on the land, cut and remove the timber at any time within 12 years from the date of the deed, upon condition that all rights of the Kendalls should cease and terminate within 12 years from the date of the deed, and all timber standing on the land at the expiration of that period should revert to and become the property of Salisbuiy. On November 18, 1915, the Kendalls conveyed the timber and timber rights to Kendall Lumber Company, a corporation. No timber had been cut at the expiration of the 12-year period in which it could be cut and removed; and on the day after it had expired, another agreement in *339 writing, bearing date April 22, 1923, was executed by and between. Salisbury and Kendall Lumber Company, reciting the sale made by Salisbury to tlie Kendalls on April 21, 1911, the expiration of the 12-year period, the reversion of the timber to Salisbury, and that the parties had agreed to an extension of the time for removal for another 12-year period, the consideration therefor being that, beginning on April 21, 1923, Kendall Lumber Company would pay a yearly lease or rental of $1,000 for each and every year the land was occupied, payments to be made on April 21st previous to the occupation for that year, and failure to so pay on that date would be considered a forfeit of the privilege to further occupancy of the land, and all timber standing or lying on the tract would revert. Yearly payments of this $1,000 were made according to this agreement until 1926, when Kendall Lumber Company tendered in payment its 60-day $1,000 note. Salisbury declined to accept the note and demanded strict compliance, and about May 4, 1926, Kendall paid the $1,000. The 1927 payment was promptly made. The 1928 payment was not paid promptly, but on May 23rd of that year a creditor of Kendall Lumber Company (Evans Manor Land Company) sent in its check for $1,000 to continue the agreement for another year, and this check was accepted. The 1929 payment was not made, demand was promptly made upon penalty of cancellation of the agreement (forfeiture), but it was not forthcoming. Then, on August 23, 1929, Salisbury sold and deeded the timber to Caflisch, retaining a vendor’s lien to secure unpaid purchase money. On September 12th, following, Evans Manor Land Company forwarded its check for $1,000 to Salisbury for the stated purpose of continuing the right of Kendall to April 1, 1930. The check was returned promptly with the information, previously given, that the timber had been sold to Caflisch, who, shortly after getting its deed, entered and began cutting timber; and this suit was instituted to March Rules, 1930, the decree refusing to dissolve the temporary injunction being entered July 28, 1930.

Plaintiffs Stybr and Watson claim title to .the timber as follows: On March 10, 1927, Kendall Lumber Company con *340 veyed to a trustee the legal title to all its property, including its timber rights on the Musser tract, to secure bonds which were acquired by Evans Manor Land Company or persons interested therein, including Stybr and Watson and defendant Weiler. Kendall Lumber Company became embarrassed by judgments against it, and in June, 1928, a general creditors’ suit was begun against it by Rowlesburg Grocery Company, which ran its course, being referred to a master commissioner for report of assets, debts and priorities. The master’s report was confirmed September 29, 1930, and a decree for sale entered. The master commissioner reported that the timber on the Musser tract (except locust) was owned by Kendall Lumber Company with the right to remove the same for a period of 12 years from November 18, 1915 (the date of the deed from the Kendalls to Kendall Lumber Company noted in the master’s report), and the decree of sale uses the same language. Sale of all the property of the Kendall Lumber Company (including its right to the timber) was made on October 19, 1929, by special commissioner, and plaintiffs Stybr and Watson became the purchasers; the sale was confirmed, and deed made to them on November 4, 1929, using the same language of the decree as to the ownership of the timber on the Musser tract. Plaintiff Watson, at the time of the commissioner’s sale and taking of the deed, knew that Salisbury had previously sold the timber, for it was Watson who sent the Evans Manor Land Company check to Salisbury on September 12, 1929, which was returned to him with information that Salisbury had then sold the timber to Caflisch. Under this purchase at judicial sale, plaintiffs Stybr and Watson claim superior right to the timber, and with their bill offered to pay into court $1,000 to meet the requirement of yearly payment under the agreement of April 22, 1923, between Salisbury and Kendall Lumber Company.

Plaintiffs’ bill avers the original ownership of the land and timber in Salisbury; the deed made to the timber by it to Kendalls in 1911; the deed from Kendalls to Kendall Lumber Company in 1915, and the agreement between Salisbury and Kendall Lumber Company of April 22, 1923, and the terms thereof. The bill avers that Salisbury became de *341

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kimble v. Wetzel Natural Gas Co.
61 S.E.2d 728 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1950)
Huffman v. Chedester
27 S.E.2d 272 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1943)
McGhee v. Stevens
3 S.E.2d 615 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1939)
Caflisch Lumber Co. v. Lake Lynn Lumber Co.
195 S.E. 854 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1938)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 S.E. 669, 110 W. Va. 337, 1931 W. Va. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stybr-v-caflisch-lumber-co-wva-1931.