Young v. Turnipseed
This text of 764 So. 2d 1172 (Young v. Turnipseed) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
James A. YOUNG, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
Billy TURNIPSEED, Defendant-Appellee.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.
*1173 Cook, Yancey, King & Galloway by Jerald R. Harper, Nicole Montagnet Smith, Shreveport, Counsel for Appellants.
Rogers & Hearne by W. Lake Hearne, Shreveport, Counsel For Appellee.
Before BROWN, DREW and CRIGLER (Pro Tempore), JJ.
CRIGLER, Judge Pro Tempore.
The seller, James Young, appeals a judgment rejecting his claims for an accounting and balance due on a timber sale agreement with the purchaser, Billy Turnipseed. The District Court denied the accounting and accepted the expert opinion of its court-appointed forester to find that Turnipseed had compensated Young in accord with the agreement. Finding no manifest error, we affirm.
Factual and procedural background
Young is a real estate appraiser. In 1996 he decided to clear a tract of his land in Caddo Parish near Wallace Lake and develop it as his home place; he intended to clear-cut a small area for a pond and merely "thin" the rest.[1] He retained a forester, Paul Smeltzer, to perform a "cruise" of the tract, admitted as Exhibit D-1. This involved counting trees on one-tenth of the tract and extrapolating the quantity (not value) on the whole. A year later, Young was ready to proceed with the project. He again retained Smeltzer, but this time to perform a "tally," or complete count of every tree to be harvested, together with diameter measurements and height estimates, in order to project the total merchantable timber. All witnesses agreed that a tally is much more accurate than a cruise; Smeltzer's tally was admitted at trial as Ex. J-2. Witnesses testified that this tally, at the time, indicated a harvest valued at $105,000. Young then asked Smeltzer to find a buyer.
Smeltzer contacted Turnipseed, who visited the property and reviewed Smeltzer's tally. Turnipseed offered Young $104,640, but Young turned it down. After a few weeks of negotiations, on June 6, 1997 the parties signed a timber sale agreement which called for Turnipseed to purchase and harvest all marked trees in the thinning area and all trees in the pond area. The contract, admitted at trial as Ex. J-1, fixed prices per thousand board feet ("MBF"), measured by mill scale, for grade pine longs and rough pine logs (the most lucrative portion of the harvest), as well as for chip and pulp. The whole was subject to a minimum price of $90,000. The agreement also stated, in ¶ 3, "Documentation in the form of weigh slips, and *1174 any other documentation provided by the mills will be submitted to the seller."
Turnipseed entered the property and began gathering trees. He testified, and Young confirmed, that Young's contractors had already removed all the trees and most of the stumps from the pond area. Turnipseed's men hauled the logs, depending on their grade, to various local mills. By late June, however, Smeltzer phoned Young with concern that the weigh slips forwarded by Turnipseed reflected much less timber than he expected. Turnipseed insisted that his slips showed he harvested only about $77,000 worth of timber. Nevertheless, he paid the contractual minimum, $90,000, with the note that he "lost $15,728."
Young filed the instant suit in May 1998, seeking an accounting and damages. In June 1998, he filed a motion to appoint a special master, a graduate forestry consultant, to evaluate the actual amount of timber harvested by Turnipseed. The court appointed Gary Patterson. Because by then all the trees had been removed, Patterson performed a "stump count," admitted at trial as Exhibit J-3. In the thinning area, Patterson measured the diameter of each remaining stump, and estimated each tree's height by the diameter and comparison to nearby trees; in the pond area, he roundly estimated the former contents. He assumed that Young's trees were a maximum height of two 16-foot logs, and that the pond area consisted of "average quality pine and hardwood soft timber." He estimated the harvest value was $77,321.
The matter came to bench trial in March 1999. Patterson, the court-appointed forester, admitted that his stump count was not very accurate, and that he would defer to any forester who performed a tally before the trees were removed. Smeltzer, who had performed the tally, criticized Patterson's findings on technical grounds, and testified that Young had been underpaid by at least $15,000. Another of Young's expert foresters, Stephen Muslow, agreed that Young had been underpaid. Smeltzer and Muslow both testified that the documentation provided to Young was incomplete, riddled with errors and insufficient to meet industry standards.
Turnipseed disputed the quality of Young's timber, describing it as "average, at best," adding that Smeltzer's 1996 cruise confirmed this; in fact, had he seen the cruise before he bought the timber, he would not have offered $104,000 or guaranteed $90,000 for the harvest. He further testified that most of the trees in the pond area had been damaged when Young's track hoe operators knocked them down and dragged them into rubbish heaps. He admitted that some weigh slips were erroneous, but claimed that they did not affect the final count. On cross examination Smeltzer admitted that at one point he may have said the pond area contained only about 30% grade logs; based on this estimate, Young's other expert, Muslow, calculated the harvest would be worth about $74,000.
The District Court rendered a written opinion finding first that the contract was a timber sale, not an agency relationship between the parties, and thus Young was not entitled to any more of an accounting than the weigh slips or scale tickets than Turnipseed received from the mills. The court then expressly accepted the opinion of the court-appointed expert, Patterson, as to the volume and quality of the timber cut. The court concluded that Young had been compensated in accord with the contract and rejected all claims.
Young has appealed, advancing two assignments of error.
Discussion: Enforcement of contract
By his first assignment Young urges the District Court erred in failing to enforce the terms of the contract, specifically the duty to provide adequate documentation under ¶ 3 of the agreement. Young contends that even though Turnipseed forwarded weigh slips or mill tickets, this did not discharge his burden *1175 of proving the volume of timber removed from Young's land.
Contracts have the effect of law between the parties and must be performed in good faith. La. C.C. art. 1983. When the words of a contract are clear and explicit and lead to no absurd consequences, no further interpretation may be made in search of the parties' intent. La. C.C. art. 2046. While the determination that a contract is ambiguous is legal in nature, the District Court's factual finding of compliance or substantial compliance with a contract is subject to the manifest error rule. Noel v. Discus Oil Corp., 30,561 (La.App. 2 Cir. 5/13/98), 714 So.2d 105, 138 Oil & Gas Rep. 571.
The timber sale agreement obligates Turnipseed to furnish Young with "documentation in the form of weigh slips, and any other documentation provided by the mills." This provision is not apparently ambiguous. The finding that Turnipseed complied is subject to manifest error analysis.
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764 So. 2d 1172, 2000 WL 793952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-turnipseed-lactapp-2000.