Court Opinion

ID: 3551864
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:04:16.013378+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:23:43.047738
License: Public Domain

Whether under an absolute deed of standing trees, with a right to enter and remove them within a time limited, the grantor has any property in the trees or lumber not cut and removed before the expiration of the limitation, or whether title acquired by the deed is forfeited by the failure to enter and remove, are questions not presented by the case. From the language of the deed, it is clear that the parties did not intend to vest in the grantee title to the growing trees on the land, because the property conveyed is described as "all the standing wood and timber which shall *Page 80 
have been cut and removed on or before March 1, 1911." To establish the defendant's title to any wood or timber coming from the lot, it must be brought within the description of the property conveyed to him. It must have come from trees standing on the lot at or after the date of the deed and cut and removed before the date specified.
The deed, so far as it is reported in the case, does not in terms provide by whom the wood and timber which was to become the defendant's upon its removal from the lot should be cut and removed. But no question is made as to the defendant's right to enter, cut, and remove before March 1, 1911. Assuming that the defendant had such right under a correct interpretation of the purpose of the parties as expressed in the deed, there is nothing evidencing a purpose to permit his entry after that date. As there was no present conveyance of the title to the standing trees, there was no severance in law which made the trees while standing the personal property of the defendant. The cases cited (Kingsley v. Holbrook, 45 N.H. 313; Peirce v. Finerty, 76 N.H. 38) are not in point. If the entry and cutting before March 1, 1911, was rightful, and the severance in fact of the trees so cut made them personal property (Plummer v. Prescott, 43 N.H. 277), the wood and timber which was not removed before that date does not answer the description of the property conveyed, and the defendant acquired no title by the severance. The time limited during which the grantee could, under the construction most favorable to him, acquire title to any of the wood and lumber on the tract was on or before March 1, 1911. Since the deed "conveyed such trees only as should be removed within that time, then the trees not removed within that time did not pass by the deed, but remained the property of the landowner." Hoit v. Stratton Mills, 54 N.H. 109, 111.
The exception is overruled. Upon the facts found, the plaintiff is entitled to $151 damages and the injunction prayed for.
Case discharged.
All concurred. *Page 81