W. B. Thompson & Co. v. Union Sawmill Co.

46 So. 341, 121 La. 318, 1908 La. LEXIS 675
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 16, 1908
DocketNo. 16,713
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 46 So. 341 (W. B. Thompson & Co. v. Union Sawmill Co.) 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
W. B. Thompson & Co. v. Union Sawmill Co., 46 So. 341, 121 La. 318, 1908 La. LEXIS 675 (La. 1908).

Opinion

Statement of the Case.

NICHOLLS, J.

Plaintiffs allege that they are the owners of certain lands, which they described, and the timber thereon.

That on or about the 19th of May, 1903, they, without any consideration therefor, signed a written instrument purporting to be an offer to sell a license to cut and remove the pine timber standing on their lands to John A. McShane, of Omaha, Neb.; that said offer was personal to him and was never signed and accepted by him, said McShane.

That the Uxxion Sawmill Company had recorded or caused to be recorded in Deed Book 18, of the conveyance records of said parish, a pretended deed to the said timber on petitioner’s said lands, and was fraudulently pretending to be the owner of said timber under and by virtue of a pretended chain of title from the Pine Hill Lumber Company, Limited, and tracing by mesne conveyance from the said Pine 1-Iill Lumber Company, Limited, to petitioner, based upon the said pretended McShane instrument hereinabove set forth, and which was made a' part hereof for greater certainty of description only.

That said pretended contract and the pretended ownership of the said Union Sawmill Company based thereon was absolutely null and void for the followiixg reasons, to wit:

(1) That it was stipulated in said contract as follows:

“It is agreed that in case the Hamburg, Ruston & Southern Railway, or some other standard gauge railway, is not completed through this section within two years from the date hereof, this contract shall be null and void.”

Petitioner represented that no railroad was completed through this section of the parish within two years from the date of this contract as contemplated.

(2) That said pretended contract purported to be merely.an offer to sell a license to cut and remove said timber to the said Me-Shane, and was and is without consideration, and was personal to him, which said offer was never signed and accepted by the said McShane.

(3) In the event the court should hold the said pretended contract was not null and void for the reasons above alleged, then and in that event only, and in the alternative, petitioner alleged that the said pretended contract was null and void for want of mutuality ; that the said McShane did not bind himself to cut and remove the said timber or to pay the price or to do or perform, or ixot to do or perform axxy act or thing thereunder whatsoever; that the conditions therein contained instead of binding or obligating the said McShane to do or perform or not to do or perform any act or thing thereunder, as aforesaid, were cunningly and fraudulently designed and intended by him, the said McShane, to enable him to cut and remove the said timber or othex-wise to take advantage of the conditions in so far as it bound and obligated, or purported to bind and obligate, petitioner, if he so desired, or to leave him free and unbound in every particular, in the evexxt he might at any time see fit to cut and remove the said timber or [322]*322to do or perform any act or thing thereunder ; that the pretended price or consideration set forth in said pretended contract was not fixed definitely nor determined, nor did he ever bind himself to pay it should the court hold that the said price was fixed.

(4) That if the court should hold that said pretended instrument was not null and void for any reasons hereinabove set forth and in that event only, and in the alternative that it was null and void for the reason that its conditions had not been compliéd with.

That the recordation of the aforesaid instrument purporting to be an offer to sell a license to cut and remove the said timber to the said McShane and the recordation of the pretended deeds and claims of ownership of the Union Sawmill Company as aforesaid had damaged petitioner in the full sum of $500, and that the timber thereon was worth, at least, the sum of $2,500. That petitioner was entitled to judgment decreeing said pretended contract as an absolute nullity, and ordering the clerk of court and ex officio recorder of Union parish, La., to erase and cancel the same from the records of Union parish, and for damages as above set forth.

Petitioners alleged amicable demand without avail.

In view of the premises they prayed for citation and service thereof on the Union Sawmill Company, and on the Pine Hill Lumber Company, Limited. lie further prayed that the court appoint a curator ad hoc to represent the absentee John A. McShane; that after due proceedings there be judgment in favor of petitioners and against defendants, the Union Sawmill Company, the Pine Hill Lumber Company, Limited, and John A. McShane, decreeing the aforesaid pretended license or option to the said McShane and deeds or claims of the said Union Sawmill Company and the said Pine Hill Lumber Company, Limited, based thereon, an absolute nullity, and ordering the clerk of court and ex officio recorder of Union parish, La., to erase and cancel the same from the records of your parish and state, and finally for damages against the said defendants in the full amount set forth.

Petitioners prayed for all such orders and decrees as the facts and circumstances of the ease may warrant, and for full, general, and equitable relief.

The Union Sawmill accepted service of the petition through its counsel, and a curator ad hoc was appointed to represent John A. McShane, who acknowledged citation on him. The petition was filed on March 16, 1907.

On March 28, 1907, the plaintiffs filed a supplemental and amended petition in which they averred that the Union Sawmill Company were tresxiassing on the lands belonging to and described in their original petition; that they were themselves in the possession of said lands through themselves and their agents, and that the Union Sawmill Company was trespassing thereon, entering thereon, and cutting, destroying, and taking away the pine timber standing and growing thereon, and erecting, constructing, and operating tramroads, all against petitioner’s will, and unless restrained and prohibited by the court they would continue to trespass on said lands and cut said timber and construct and oper•ate tramroads to the great and irreparable injury of petitioners, and disturb them in their real and actual possession which petitioners had for more than one year and on the said land over which they claimed the ownership, the possession, and enjoyment.

That the aforesaid acts made their lands less valuable, and that the destruction of the said timber and other said acts of trespass would compel petitioners to use said land for different purposes than that for which it was intended, and that in view of the irreparable injury thereunder to petitioners and their said land a writ of injunction should issue from the court directing and commanding [324]*324and restraining said defendant, the Union Sawmill Company, its officers, agents, and employés from further trespassing on said land, and from further cutting any of the standing and growing timber thereon; that petitioners had already been damaged in the sum of $500 by the aforesaid wanton and malicious trespass.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 So. 341, 121 La. 318, 1908 La. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-b-thompson-co-v-union-sawmill-co-la-1908.