Case Name: Emma Decker, Respondent, v. Abram Hunt, Appellant
Court: New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division
Jurisdiction: New York
Decision Date: 1906-03-07
Citations: 111 A.D. 821
Docket Number: 
Parties: Emma Decker, Respondent, v. Abram Hunt, Appellant.
Judges: 
Reporter: Appellate Division Reports
Volume: 111
Pages: 821–827

Head Matter:
Emma Decker, Respondent, v. Abram Hunt, Appellant.
Third Department,
March 7, 1906.
Trespass by cutting timber — reservation pf right to cut timber construed—when no time set timber must be removed within reasonable time — when such right not acquired by prescription.
In an action for trespass upon plaintiff’s land by cutting and taking timber therefrom it was shown that plaintiff’s predecessor in title, one M., in 1856, had conveyed the farm by contract and subsequent .warranty deed containing a reservation in these words, “ excepting and reserving the standing" timber on the south end of farm * * * and the right of way to and therefrom.” The lands came to the plaintiff by several mesne conveyances containing similar reservations. It was. shown that one of the intermediate owners of said land had agreed with the grantee of other lands from the original owner that the timber should be removed under said reservation within four years.
Held, that when the grantor of lands has reserved the right to remove timber therefrom, and no time is specified in which to remove it, a reasonable time only is intended;
That the reservation aforesaid must be construed to mean that the grantor or his successors in title must remove. the timber within a reasonable time, and that at the expiration of such reasonable time the timber remaining became the property of the grantee;
That under the circumstances said reasonable time had expired, and that the plaintiff was' entitled to recover for the timber cut by the defendant;
Thatj although the defendant’s predecessors in title had resided upon the lands received from the original grantor for twenty-six years, and during that time had taken wood and timber under the so-called “ reservation,” such fact was insufficient to establish a right to take such timber by prescription;
Held,- further, that the acquiescence of plaintiff’s predecessors in title in the taking of such timber by the defendant’s predecessors in title did not bar the plaintiff from insisting that the defendant must cease from taking such timber after the reasonable time to remove the same had expired.
Appeal by the defendant, Abram Hunt, from a judgment of the Supreme Court in favor of the plaintiff, entered in the office of the clerk of the county of Delaware on the 20th day of December, 1904, upon the report of a referee.
The plaintiff commenced this action against the defendant for ■trespassing upon her lands and cutting and taking timber therefrom. The action was referred to a referee, who rendered a report in favor of the plaintiff, and from the judgment entered thereon this appeal is taken.
O’Connor & O'Connor, for the appellant.
F. M. Andrus, for the respondent.

Opinion:
Parker, P. J.:
The plaintiff, upon.this -appeal may claim that the following facts have been established.: - .
In 1856 Charles More was the owner of two farms, the dividing line between them running nearly north and south. , On April 10, 1856; he contracted to «ell the westerly of such farms, describing it by metes and bounds, to one Bloomburg. Such contract contained a reservation of the timber on the south end of the farm. .J.ust what its phraseology was is not certain, as it has been lost; but it is not very material as that contract, having been assigned from Bloom-burg to one Powell, More; on December 1, 1860, in pursuance and satisfaction thereof, conveyed the farm to Powell by a warranty' deed dated on that day, in which is contained an exception in these words: " Excepting and reserving the standing timber on the south end of farm adjoining Rufus W. Bakey and the right of way to and therefrom!' Powell resided on the farm for several years and then conveyed it to' one Lawrence Conro by a warranty deed, containing an exception of the said timber- hi the samé language as above. Lawrence the next .year, viz., on May 1, 1866, conveyed to Isaac Conro by a warranty deed* containing the same exception and in the same language as above, stated. Thus in May, 1866, the- title and possession of the westerly farm had passed to Isaac Conro, but evidently he had not acquired any title to the " standing timber " on the south end thereof. '
On September 27, 1856, the said More contracted to sell and convey to one Hiram Conro the easterly farm above mentioned, describing the same by metes and bounds, and such contract also contained the following clause : " The said More hereby conveys to said Conro all his right -. to the wood ón the south end of the farm,' by reason of a reservation of th.e same .in a contract of sale of land made qn .or about the 10 day of April; 1856, to Wilson Bloom-burg." This contract was signed by More, was witnessed and was under seal. Conro went into possession of such easterly farm, and on December 1, 1860, More executed to him a conveyance of the same by a warranty deed of that daté. There was no mention, however, in such deed of the wood mentioned in such contract. Hiram Conro resided on such easterly farm until April 10, 1876, and then conveyed the same to one Stephen Pecbham, and in such conveyance was included the following provision: " Also all the wood on the south end of a farm now owned by Isaac Conro by reason of a reservation of the same in a deed of the farm Isaac Conro now owns from Charles C. More to Wilson Bloomburg and by virtue of a contract between the party of the first part (Hiram Conro) and Charles C. More, dated September 27, 1856, which I have this day assigned to the party of the second part (Stephen Pecbham). •' The party of the second part has at all times the right to enter upon the said wood lots for the purpose to cut, get, draw timber or wood off from said lot."
Thus it appears that "when Isaac Conro became the owner of the westerly farm in 1866, Hiram Conro, who was his father, owned and occupied the easterly farm, and claimed to own, and did own, under the provision in his contract from More whatever wood or timber More had excepted in his conveyance to Powell; and it is plain that up to this time he had taken off from such south end of the westerly farm both timber and wodd whenever he desired. After Isaac became the owner he stated to his father that he wanted a stated time fixed when the timber was to be taken, off, and it was then agreed that it should be all removed in four years. Isaac Conro testified that after the expiration of four years his father took no more wood or timber from there while he owned the place, and that it was substantially all taken off during that four years. He, however, testifies further that he thinks his father left on the place about twenty-five first-growth trees that he did not take off. Isaac's evidence that his father • took no timber off of the place after the expiration of the fotir years is contradicted by several other witnesses, but the referee has found .that by mutual agreement between Isaac and his father, Hiram Conro, the .rights of Hiram under the reservation were terminated,» As bearing upon this question, it also appears that subsequent owners of- the east farm have actually taken off timber and wood from the south. end of the west farm to the knowledge of its owners.
Isaac Conro resided on such westerly farm from May 1, 1866, ' until April, 1879. The farm was then sold by a referee on the foreclosure of a mortgage given by. said Isaac, and a referee's deed thereof given to Hannah E. Martin dated April 24, 1879. Such deed described the westerly farm by metes and bounds, but made no reservatiomof and no reference to the timber on the south end. Such lot was subsequently conveyed by several mesne conveyances, and on April 23, 1896, became vested in one Agnes Cronk, and in none of such conveyances was there any mention made of the timber on its south end. Oh March 1, 1897,- said Agnes Cronk conveyed the said westerly lot by a warranty deed dated on that date to Emma Decker, this plaintiff, who took possession of the samé and has since resided thereon. "Her conveyance contained the following reservation : "Also subject to a reservation of certain timber on.a portion of said premises by Charles More, according to' the terms' of said reservation,":
It is for the cutting of some twenty trees, which the defendant claims .under such reservation, that, the plaintiff has brought this action.
When Hiram Conro conveyed the easterly farm and the wood on the south end of the westerly farm to Stephen Peckham by deed dated April 10, 1876, John Peckham, such grantor's son, moved onto such premises and continued to reside there until he conveyed them to this defendant, being a period of twenty-six years. During all that time he and his father took wood and: timber off of the " reservation," so called, whenever they wanted to, and when he conveyed to this defendant on April 1, 1902, he pointed out to the defendant the "reservation." and explained it to him. Each of the deeds from Stephen to John Peckham and from John Peckham to Abram Hunt, this defendant, contained the grant of the wood', etc.,' in the same language specified in the deed to Stephen Peckham, as above quoted. ' And thus the defendant claims'the right to take .the trees in question by virtue of the exception thereof which Charles More-made in liis deed to Powell'dated December 1, 1860, and by virtue of the ownership, thereof, which through the several above-mentioned mesne Conveyances has been transferred from said More to him. .
The trees in question grew upon lands- owned by the plaintiff, and they were in her possession when cut and taken therefrom. Prima facie, therefore, the defendant is liable. to the plaintiff for their value, and this judgment against him must be sustained unless he has shown a justification for such taking. The substance of the justification set up in his answer is, that he had purchased the right to take the same by the deed from John Peckliam, given him April 1, 1902, and above referred to, and that the plaintiff never had any title to such- trees.
Did the defendant acquire the right to take such trees by the deed through which he claims ?
We must, I think, assume that the reservation made by More, when he contracted to Bloomburg, was of the " standing timber " only, for that is all that he excepted and reserved in his conveyance to Powell, which was given in performance of. such contract; and conceding that all which he so excepted and reserved was transferred and conveyed to -Hiram Conro by the contract executed on September 27, 1856, we can only' assume that by the phrase " wood," therein used, only " standing timber " was intended. Assume, then, that Hiram Conro, by such contract, became the owner of the " standing timber " then on the south end of the farm that is now owned by the plaintiff, and that he then also acquired " the right of way to and therefrom," the question is presented whether he thereby acquired the right to forever keep and maintain such standing timber on the premises, with the continuing right to take it, or any part of it, off whenever he or his grantees might desire, or whether he or his grantees were not required, under such a .title, to remove such "timber" within a reasonable time thereafter, no definite and particular time having been specified.
I cannot agree with the referee that tlie reservation was operative to Morp only. The title to the timber was " excepted " from the operation of the deed to Powell and remained in him (More), but I think that the plain intent of the parties was that such timber should be removed within a reasonable time, and so such exception should be construed. If More and his grantees might for all time neglect to remove such timber, and still hold and own the same, it would practically prevent Powell and his grantees from clearing up and using that part of the farm on which it was standing, and would, in effect, be an exception of all that part of the farm itself, a purpose which clearly is in direct contradiction of the whole conveyance.
It has been frequently held that when the owner of a tract of land has conveyed to another all the • timber on such tract, with the right tp enter thereon and remove, the same, and no time is specified in which to remove it, a reasonable, time only is intended, and that the conveyance must be so construed. (28 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law [2d ed.], 542, and cases cited.)
And that when a definite time is: expressed in the conveyance, as for instance ten years, and the grantee does not take it off within-'such time, the timber remaining shall be considered as belonging' to the owner of the land, and the conveyance must be construed as a grant only of so much of the timber which the grantee shall take off within that, period. (Boisaubin v. Reed, 1 Abb. Ct. App. Dec. 161; 2 Keyes, 323; Kellam v. McKenstry, 6 Hun, 381; affd., 69 N. Y. 264.)
Construing the exception and reservation contained- in the Powell deed by the above rules, we must concludé that More and his grantees acquired thereunder the right to cut aqd take away ,so much of the " standing timber " on the south end .of the plaintiff's farm as they should cut and take within a-reasonable time after such conveyance, and that' at the expiration of such time so much thereof as remained became the prqperty of Powell and his grantees.
• If, then,- More's right to take off such timber did not .'extend, beyond a reasonable time after the -Powell"deed -was given, it is plain that Hiram Conro, Iris grantee, could' not extend such right by any conveyance he could give to the Beckhams, and the arrangement which Isaac Conro testified he made with his father, Hiram, that such timber should all be taken off in four years — and which evidence the referee seems to have believed — seems to bé very satisfactory evidence that,a reasonable time to remove such timber.had passed before Hiram Conro had left the place on conveyed anything whatever to, Stephen-Beckham, Such deed was given on April 10, 1876, more than sixteen years after the Powell deed, and the timbbrnn question was located on about five' acres of land. It would appear that a reasonable time to take off such timber had long expired, and .that the above-mentioned conveyance from Conro to Peckham in fact conveyed nothing whatever from the-south end of the westerly farm since Conrq's rights therein had then fully, terminated!
The defendant, however, claims that even if John Peckham did not acquire the right to take such lumber by a paper title, he acquired title to the wood and-timber in question by prescription. John Peckham went into possession of the easterly farm in April, 1876, under a conveyance from Hiram Oonro, which deed also assumed, to convey the right to take the wood and timber from the south end of the westerly farm. He resided there for twenty-six years before he conveyed to the defendant, and he testifies that during all that time he took wood and timber from the " reservation," so called, whenever he desired with the knowledge of the owners thereof. Such evidence as to what he and his father did in taking such wood and timber is very indefinite,-but it seems clear that such user was not sufficient within the authorities to vest in them title to either the land or the wood and timber thereon. (Mission of the Immaculate Virgin v. Cronin, 143 N. Y. 524.)
Nor do I think that such user on the part of More's successor and' acquiescence on the part of Powell's successors, as appears from the evidence in this case, has operated as an extension of the reasonable time which More and his successors acquired by the exception .and reservation in which to cut and remove the timber in question. Acquiescence on the part of Powell's successors that Oonro or the Peckhams take a tree or so each year from the reservation would not bar the owner of the land frorh insisting that they must cease taking such timber after the time permitted by the exception and reservation' had expired, and even though such acquiescence had endured for twenty years, it would not operate as such a bar so long as neither Oonro nor the Peckhams claimed any light to take such timber, except through the exception and reservation which More' made when he conveyed to Powell. Either one of the owners of such westerly farm • might consent if he chose to let Peckham take more time than the exception gave, but in case he granted to another such farm without reservation that grantee might insist that Peck-ham had acquired no rights by such permission other than he took by the paper title through which he claimed. Under such paper title, as shown above, he acquired no rights, and, therefore, in my opinion the .plaintiffs judgment was right and should be affirmed.
Judgment unanimously affirmed, with costs.