Turner Lumber Co. v. Robinson Land & Lumber Co.

125 So. 86, 155 Miss. 882, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 342
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1929
DocketNo. 28153.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 125 So. 86 (Turner Lumber Co. v. Robinson Land & Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Turner Lumber Co. v. Robinson Land & Lumber Co., 125 So. 86, 155 Miss. 882, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 342 (Mich. 1929).

Opinion

*884 Cook, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Turner Lumber Company, filed a petition before the board of supervisors of Greene county, seeking to condemn a logging railroad right of way over lands of the Robinson Land & Lumber Company; the petition and proceedings being under the provisions of chapter 259 of the -Laws of 1920; section 8351, Hemingway’s 1927 Code. Upon the hearing of this petition the appellant was granted the right of way as particularly described in the petition, and thereupon an appeal was perfected to the circuit court; and upon the hearing of the matter in the circuit court, the order of the board of supervisors granting the right of way was reversed, and the petition dismissed; and from this judgment of the circuit court an appeal was prosecuted to this court.

The facts necessary to be stated for an understanding of the point upon which we base this decision are substantially as follows: Alt the time the petition to condemn the rig*ht of way was filed, the Turner Lumber Company, a corporation, was the owner of a sawmill plant located at Avera, in Greene county, Mississippi, and was likewise ■ the owner of a private logging railroad, 'and certain timber and timber lands located in Greene county. The *885 sawmill and railroad owned by the Turner Lumber Company were operated by the Turner Timber Company, a partnership composed of the stockholders of the Turner Lumber Company. The logging railroad extends several miles over the lands of the appellant, and at or near the terminus thereof the appellee owns a body of land which separates the lands of appellant, upon which the railroad is located, from other lands and timber owned by it some distance north of the railroad. It was to secure a right of way across the intervening* lands belonging to the appellee that the petition was filed before the board of supervisors.

. Shortly after perfecting this appeal from the judgment of the circuit court dismissing the petition to condemn a right of way under and by virtue of the provisions of the said chapter 259 of the Laws of 1920, section 8351, Hemingway’s 1927 Code, the stockholders of the appellant lumber company obtained from the state of Mississippi a charter for the Avera & Northeastern Railroad Company; and after this charter was obtained, this railroad company began eminent domain proceedings in Greene county, seeking to condemn a right of way for the railroad corporation over the lands of the appellee, the right of way so sought to be condemned embracing and including the entire right of way involved in the original proceedings and in this appeal. After this condemnation proceeding was begun by the said Avera & Northeastern Railroad Company, the appellee filed a bill in the chancery court seeking to enjoin such proceeding. A temporary injunction was issued, and on the hearing of the injunction suit, it was developed in the testimony of Horace S. Turner, president of the appellant lumber company, that the appellant had conveyed by sale or lease the entire railroad owned by it, together with all rights of way and locomotives and cars constituting the equipment of said railroad, and that the said Turner *886 Timber Company had acquired the right to cut the timber which it was desired to reach by means of the right of way sought to be condemned; and that the Turner Timber Company had contracted with the Aivera & Northeastern Railroad Company to haul the timber over a line of railroad to be constructed by it from its present railroad to this timber.

After the development of the facts' in reference to the conveyance of the railroad, and the contract of the railroad to transport the timber in question to the sawmill .owned by the appellant and operated by the Turner Timber Company, the appellee filed in the cause pending in this court a plea in bar of the appeal, setting up that on account of the above-stated facts, which had happened since the appeal was perfected, whatever necessity and right, if any, had previously existed for the appellant to obtain the right of way sought by. the proceeding pending in this court, had ceased to exist, and consequently the appeal should be dismissed.

Upon the filing of this plea in bar, the appellant filed an answer thereto, denominated a replication and demurrer, which challenged the legal sufficiency of the plea, but also expressly admitted the averments of the plea, and affirmatively set forth the detailed facts with reference to the conveyance of the railroad, and the contract with the railroad company to transport this timber. To this answer there was attached a copy of a warranty deed from the appellant to the Avera & Northeastern Railroad Company, conveying to the said railroad companv all the railroad, together with certain locomotives and log cars, and the right of way along the entire length of the said railroad, and also a right of way through all lands then owned by the appellant in Greene county. There was also attached to this' response to the plea in bar, as a part thereof, a copy of the contract between the Turner Timber Company and the said Avera & North *887 eastern Railroad Company, which recites that the Turner Timber Company had acquired the right to cut the timber in question, as well as other standing timber. This contract obligated the said railroad company to extend its railroad from its present terminus to the timber in question, called the Dantzler timber, and to begin within five weeks from the date thereof to haul and transport to the mill operated by the timber company at Avera, Mississippi, all logs cut from said lands that might be delivered to it by the said timber company. The compensation to be paid to the railroad company by the timber company for transporting these logs is set forth in the contract, and also the mutual obligations of the respective parties with reference to necessary spur tracks and sidings.

The proceedings in the case at bar were instituted under the provisions of chapter 259' of the Laws of 1920, section 8351, Hemingway’s Code of 1927, which reads as follows: “When any person shall desire to have a private road or logging and tram road laid out through the land of another, when necessary for ingress and egress, he shall apply by petition, stating the facts and reasons, to the board of supervisors of the county, which shall, the owner of the land being notified at least five days before, determine the reasonableness of the application; and if the petition be granted, the same proceedings shall be had thereon as in the case of a public road, or logging and tram roads, but damages assessed shall be paid by the person applying for the private road and he shall pay all the costs and expenses incurred in the proceedings. Provided that the right of ingress and egress provided herein shall not be for more than three years, and provided further that either party thereto shall have the right of appeal from the orders of the board of supervisors to the circuit court. That any logging or tram companies granted right-of-way over private land in *888 said bill shall be compelled to level off right-of-way and fill up all ditches and barrow pits.”

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Related

Insured Savings & Loan Assn. v. State, Ex Rel. Patterson
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Robinson Land & Lumber Co. of Alabama, Inc. v. Avera & N. E. R.
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Bluebook (online)
125 So. 86, 155 Miss. 882, 1929 Miss. LEXIS 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/turner-lumber-co-v-robinson-land-lumber-co-miss-1929.