Tanner v. Case

173 So. 2d 803, 277 Ala. 641, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 579
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 8, 1965
Docket1 Div. 237
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 173 So. 2d 803 (Tanner v. Case) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tanner v. Case, 173 So. 2d 803, 277 Ala. 641, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 579 (Ala. 1965).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The original suit (affirmed in the case of Tanner v. Case, 273 Ala. 432, 142 So.2d 688), which ultimately resulted in reference, register’s report and decree overruling appellant’s exceptions and confirmation of the report from which this appeal was taken, was by appellee against appellant to quiet title to' an 80-acre tract and a 40-acre tract of land in Mobile County. The trial court entered an original decree in favor of appellee, whose tracts of land were sold under a void tax sale, and ordered a reference as follows:

“This Court further ORDERS, ADJUDGES ' and DECREES that the Register of this Court hold a reference to ascertain the dates, amounts and reasonable value of timber cut and removed from the above described real property by the. respondent after the date of the filing of the original bill -.of complaint in this cause on September , h, 1949, further, that' the said Register ■ ascertain the interest -upon the same at the rate of six (6) per cent per annum . from the dates the same was so cut, and further that the Register at said reference ascertain the amount required for the redemption of said lands from said tax sales, by ascertaining the amount .paid "the State . of Alabama for said Tax Deeds with interest theréon at the rate of six (6) per cent per annum and the amount of taxes paid upon said land by the Respondent and his predecessor in title Laura L. Young since said tax sale "and the amount of interest thereon at hhe rate of six (6) per cent per annum and report to the Court the full amount of principal and interest' due on each of said Tax Deeds and the full amount of principal and interest due for subsequent ad valorem taxes paid by respondent thereon ánd the reasonable value of the timber cut and removed . from said premises since September 1, 1949, with interest thereon at the rate of six (6) percent per annum from the respective dates the same was cut.”

As a part of the same decree, there appears the following:

“The Court further FINDS that the respondent John L. Tanner claims said land by and through a deed from Laura L. Young and Claude V. Young, her husband, dated August 21, 1944 and recorded June 27, 1945, in Deed Book 377 page 489 of the records in the office of the .Judge of Probate of Mobile County, Alabama, and that the said Respondent. John L. Tanner cut and removed timber from said lands subsequent to the filing of the original bill of complainant in this cause on September 1, 1949.”

Pursuant to the above order a reference was held on January 23, 1963, and a report was made, in part, as follows:

“That the respondent Tanner cut and removed from the lands described in the decree 480 cords of pine timber after the date of September 1st, 1949 and before the date of April 20th, 1960, the reasonable value of which was $5.00 per cord, making the reasonable value of the timber cut and removed between the dates of September 1st, 1949 and April 20th, 1960, to be $2,400.-00; that in the opinion of the Register interest thereon at six per cent per annum should commence to run from April 20th, 1960, the date established by which the timber was shown to have been removed, and interest on said reasonable value hereinabove fixed for the cutting and removing of said timber is fixed at $432.00 through April 20th, 1963, making a grand total of principal and interest thereon through April 20th, 1963 of $2,832.00 for the cutting and removal of said timber.”

The register also found the total amount of principal and interest for the tax deeds and the taxes subsequently paid to be $1,340.43, making a difference of $1,491.57, which amount the register ascertained the [643]*643respondent, John L. Tanner, owes said A. B. Case, being the difference between the reasonable market value of the timber cut and removed, and interest thereon, and the amount of money paid for said tax deeds and subsequent taxes thereon..

Appellant filed a series of exceptions to the report. The circuit court, in equity, entered a decree overruling the exceptions, confirming the report, and entering a decree in favor of appellee, Mr. Case, and against respondent (appellant), John L. Tanner, in the sum of $1,491.57 with interest from April 20, 1963.

The issues raised by exceptions to the register’s report, and by the assignments of error made on this appeal, deal solely with the register’s findings in regard to the amount of timber cut by appellant from the two tracts (80 and 40 acres) in the suit during the period of time from September 1, 1949 to April 20, 1960. The testimony on the reference was taken ore tenus before the register and is conflicting. The findings of the register under such circumstances has the same weight and effect as the findings of a jury, and will not be disturbed on appeal unless palpably erroneous, or unless it would warrant a judge in setting aside a verdict under similar circumstances. Gulf Red Cedar Co. v. Crenshaw, 188 Ala. 606, 65 So. 1010(2).

Because of this rule and the insistencies of error, we have carefully reviewed and studied pertinent evidence appearing in the record and in appellant’s and appellee’s briefs. We are unwilling to hold that the findings of the register were palpably erroneous. We conclude that the decree of the trial court confirming the report and awarding judgment in favor of appellee should not be disturbed. We briefly advert to some of the evidence which was before the register in making his determination and findings. Some of this testimony was disputed, but the correctness and veracity of the witnesses were addressed to the judgment of the register.

Appellee Case testified about his familiarity with the' tracts shortly’ before September 1, 1949, when the orighial bill to quiet title was filed, and that thp land was 'heavily timbered, “had poles, paper wood and saw logs on it.” After testifying as to his experience in buying and selling timber in Mobile County for at least a year prior to September 1, 1949, he testified that pulp wood was $5:00 per cord, and that the property as a whole (the 120 acres), at a minimum, would .cut ten cords to the acre, which would include eyerything that would cut at that timé. He státed that he did not know when the timber was cut after September 1, 1949, at which timevthe timber was• there, 'but he learned for the first time, about cne year and one half before the trial, in 1960 that the timber had been cut. He further testified that in 1960 about one half of the timber was there when he bought it.: He testified that he couldn’t tell whether it had' been cut irlore than once, but from his knowledge of the growth of timber, “that the growth of timber on there' at that time-was about half of what it was when I bought it; * * * all of the timber had been cut at least' one time and this timber had grown back 'on it and new timber since it was cut after ’49, and in lopking at it, the timber that was on there at that time and still on there would average six to seven cords of wood to the acre now.”

“Q. Now, how does the timber that is presently on the property, proportion-wise, stand to the timber that was on the property at the time this suit was filed in September of ’49?
“A. I would say it’s just about half, in other words; there was twice as much in 1949 as there is now.”

Mr. W. M. Wright testified before the register as a witness for appellee. He testified that he was on the land in'question two or three months prior to suit being filed, and again on August 23, 1949 and later.

[644]*644“Q.

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173 So. 2d 803, 277 Ala. 641, 1965 Ala. LEXIS 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tanner-v-case-ala-1965.