Tyler County Lumber Co. v. Withers

260 S.W.2d 896, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1969
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 17, 1953
DocketNo. 4867
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 260 S.W.2d 896 (Tyler County Lumber Co. v. Withers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tyler County Lumber Co. v. Withers, 260 S.W.2d 896, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1969 (Tex. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

WALKER, 'Justice.

The plaintiff, who is the appellee Withers, conveyed to Bradshaw and Windham, by deed dated May 6, 1949 “all that certain merchantable pine timber ten (10) inches in diameter and up, twelve (12) inches from the ground, at the time of cutting, and all that certain merchantable hardwood timber twelve (12) inches in diameter and up, twelve (12) inches from the ground at the time of cutting” upon a tract of 1,020 acres in the R.A. Irion League. Rights of ingress and egress were also granted, as were the rights to erect sawmills and lay roadways on the land and to use all necessary means to cut and remove the timber. This deed provided that “this conveyance is made upon the condition that — grantees shall have, and they are hereby granted, five (S) years from the date of this instrument within which to cut and remove said timber from said land, and any and all of said timber not having been cut and removed therefrom within such time shall revert to the grantor — and all of the right, title and interest of the said grantees — in and to said timber and all rights of whatsoever kind or character in anywise herein — granted—shall thereupon fully and finally — terminate.”

This deed also provided: “It is further understood and agreed that the grantees herein shall cut over the area hereinabove described only one time. If it be necessary, because of weather conditions to cease cutting operations in one area and to carry on cutting operations in another area, they shall be permitted to do so with the express understanding, however, that this contract provides for only one cutting operation over said area here described.”

This deed also provided: “It is further understood and agreed — that after the grantees — shall have completed their timber cutting operations over the entire tract— and shall have removed their mills, logging equipment, logs and other personal effects, they shall execute and deliver unto the grantor herein their release of the timber deed and grant here executed.”

The habendum clause provided in part that grantees, their successors and assigns, should have and hold “the above described timber with all and singular the rights and appurtenances thereto in anywise belonging — for and during the period of time hereinabove mentioned and granted,” and following this was a warranty of the rights conveyed.

The defendant is the appellant The Tyler County Lumber Company, and this concern is a partnership of which Rouse and Bate are the members. Bradshaw and Windham entered into negotiations with the defendant to sell to defendant the property conveyed to them by the plaintiff’s deed; but the defendant’s lawyer refused to approve this sale to the defendant until Bradshaw and Windham procured from the plaintiff the following letter from him to them dated May 31, 1949:

“Messrs. Minor Bradshaw and Wyman Windham Sr.
Livingston, Texas
“Gentlemen:
“Hertofore on or about May 6, 1949, I delivered to you a timber deed on approximately 1020 acres of land in the R.A. Irion League and in said timber deed it was expressly provided that you should cut over the area described in said deed only one time in a continuous operation.
“Confirming telephone call with Mr. Windham on this date, it is agreeable to me for you or your assignees or. grantees to cut pole timber first and then cut sawstock timber provided that after you cut the pole timber you commence cutting the sawstock timber within ninety days. Such cutting will be considered a continuous operation within the provisions of said timber deed.
“Very truly yours,
Js/ C. I. Withers”

When this letter was delivered to him, the defendant’s lawyer approved the sale to the defendant and paid to Bradshaw and [898]*898Windham the purchase price agreed upon between defendant and them, and Bradshaw and Windham delivered to him a deed by them to the defendant. The provisions of their deed to the defendant were identical with those of the plaintiffs deed to them except for differences necessarily caused by the difference in parties. The 5-year period within which the right to cut and remove the timber ran from the date of the plaintiff’s deed, and the reversion at the end of this period was made to the plaintiff, his heirs, etc.

The deed of Bradshaw and Windham to the defendant was dated May 21, 1949, 10 days prior to the date of the plaintiff’s letter quoted above, but the letter and the deed were delivered to the defendant’s lawyer at the same time and were parts of the same transaction. This transaction, that is, the delivery of the deed and letter and the payment of the purchase price occurred on June 1, 1949.

The evidence does not show what Bradshaw and Windham paid the plaintiff for the latter’s deed, nor what the defendant paid them for theirs; but the consideration must have been substantial and was fully paid in both cases. The deeds show that payment was in full, in advance, and Wind-ham said that the defendant’s lawyer paid him when he delivered the plaintiff’s letter to the defendant’s lawyer.

The plaintiff Withers received no consideration for his letter to Bradshaw and Windham' — except such consideration as may be involved in the provisions of the letter or incidental to its delivery and acceptance.

In June, 1949, very soon after the defendant completed the purchase from Bradshaw and Windham, the defendant began to cut and remove the timber and continued to do so until the defendant’s mill at Warren was closed. Following this, Ogden Coats, who had managed this mill for the defendant, leased a small mill, put it on the land, cut timber on the land and sawed it into lumber at this mill and sold this lumber to the defendant. He did this for about a month and then stopped his mill. He then carried timber to the mill of another person but stopped this about Christmas, 1949; and since that time there have been no other operations on the land. Coats acted under an agreement between him and the defendant, and his conduct represents a means whereby defendant attempted to utilize the timber on the land.

There was much rain during the period when these various operations were conducted on the land, and this bad weather caused the defendant to close the mill at Warren and eventually forced the stoppage of the operations on the land. There is evidence, however, that in the Spring of 1950 the weather became dry (there is some evidence to the contrary) and that logging operations could have been conducted on the land throughout the rest of the year.

Some parts of the land were cut over but the entire tract was not cut over completely. A plat, based on a cruise made of the land, is in evidence which shows areas cut over, and there is also evidence that a small area along a road in the southernmost part of the land, indicated on the plat by a red line, was also cut over. However, taking this evidence as an amendment of the plat, the plat shows large areas of the land on which no timber has been cut; and the estimate made by Norman Coats, dated July 25, 1950, about seven months after operations ended on the land, shows that almost two million feet of pine timber and more than a half a million feet of hardwood timber remains standing in these areas. Before the defendant’s purchase the timber had been estimated at 3,800,000 feet. Plaintiff Withers gave some evidence in general terms which seems not necessarily to be inconsistent with that plat.

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Related

Withers v. Tyler County Lumber Company
326 S.W.2d 173 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
260 S.W.2d 896, 1953 Tex. App. LEXIS 1969, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tyler-county-lumber-co-v-withers-texapp-1953.