Court Opinion

ID: 3248726
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 16:20:18.178077+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T07:40:50.296126
License: Public Domain

In 1902 the Jasper Land Company, being then the owner in fee of a body of land in Walker and Winston counties, agreed to sell and convey to Charles J. Winton and Charles S. Gilbert all the timber growing, standing, lying, or being upon the land. At the same time the company agreed to convey an undivided interest (51/100) in the surface of said land, reserving the coal, iron, oil, and other minerals in and under said land, and "to grant and authorize the said parties of the second part (Winton and Gilbert) to construct and maintain dirt roads, logging roads, tramroads and railroads for the purpose of cutting, manufacturing and removing the timber from said lands." In 1905 a conveyance of the timber and an undivided interest in the land was executed according to agreement, and by subsequent mesne conveyances like title and interest in land and timber passed to Enos M. Barton, who, in 1912, gave to defendant, Manchester Sawmills, a written license to cut timber on the land and "the right to have access to said timber and the right of ingress and egress, and the right to build, construct, maintain, *Page 448 
operate and move logging railways and roadways over, upon and across" the land.
The main purpose of complainant's (appellant's) bill is to have defendant, Manchester Sawmills, a corporation, enjoined from cutting or removing any timber whatever from the land; complainant's theory being that, in the absence from the conveyances, under and through which defendant claims, of express limitation upon the right to enter upon the land and cut timber, defendant's right was limited to be exercised within a reasonable time from the date of the original deed operating to cause a severance between the titles to the land and the timber, viz. the deed from complainant to Winton and Gilbert — in no event to exceed 20 years, and has therefore been forfeited. Magnetic Ore Co. v. Marbury Lumber Co.,104 Ala. 465, 16 So. 632, 27 L.R.A. 434, 53 Am. St. Rep. 73; Ward v. Moore, 180 Ala. 403, 61 So. 303. The sufficient answer to this contention is that by the deed from complainant to Winton and Gilbert, and the other subsequent conveyances, not only was the absolute title to all the timber, separate from the land, vested in the grantees (Zimmerman Mfg. Co. v. Daffin, 149 Ala. 380, 42 So. 858, 9 L.R.A. [N. S.] 663, 123 Am. St. Rep. 58, and numerous later cases in the same line), but also an interest in the title to the land itself thereby, as to it, creating a tenancy in common between grantor and grantees. Said grantees, and their alienees of like title and interest in and to the land and timber, were thereby armed with the right to enter upon any part of the land and cut and remove the timber thereon, and we think it clear that so long as the rights and titles created by complainant's deed remain distributed in like quanta and relationships, though in different persons, the owner of all the timber will have the right to enter upon any and every part of the land in order to cut and remove the timber; such entry involving no invasion of the rights of his cotenant in the land. Defendant, by its license from Barton, is vested with no title in the land; but the law is that by lease or license a tenant in common may confer upon another person the right to use and occupy the property of the cotenancy as fully as the lessor or licensor may. Freeman on Cotenancy (2d Ed.) § 253; 38 Cyc. 105, and authorities cited in note 83. Our conclusion, therefore, is that so far as concerns the main purpose of complainant's bill it is devoid of equity.
But the bill avers that defendant in the exercise of its right to cut and remove the timber from the land defendant has used, and threatens to continue the use of, a skidder or other machinery which has the effect of totally destroying or doing irreparable injury to the timber growth on the land which was not large enough to be manufactured into merchantable lumber, thereby depriving complainant of the future growth of such timber, and makes great and unnecessary ditches, trenches, and gulches in the surface of the land, thereby causing great injury to the land, and these averments are sufficient to give the bill equity.
Complainant conveyed "all the timber growing, standing, lying or being upon the land." This must be construed as a conveyance of all the timber growing, standing, lying, or being upon the land at the date of the deed (Jacobs v. Roach, 161 Ala. 201,49 So. 576; Wright v. Bentley, 186 Ala. 616, 65 So. 353), and "timber" is such stuff as is suitable for building and allied purposes (Gulf Yellow Pine v. Monk, 159 Ala. 318,49 So. 248). That these conclusions — with modification to be noted presently — reflect the intention of the parties to the conveyance first mentioned above is evidenced, not only by the considerations already stated, but by special provisions contained in that conveyance, viz. provisions that no timber should be cut before final payment of the purchase money except that the grantees might cut timber from any section by first paying $1.50 per thousand feet "for all the merchantable timber on such section"; such payments to be credited on the purchase price, and the provision "that when the grantees herein shall cut and remove the timber from any legal subdivision of said land, they shall notify the Jasper Land Company in writing of such cutting and removal describing the land so cut, and thereafter their right to cut and remove timber from such subdivision shall cease." Other language of the conveyance — the modification mentioned above — reserves or excepts to the grantor "all coal, iron, oil and other minerals in, under and upon the same (lands) with the usual rights and privileges of mining the same. But the last reservation or exception shall not be construed to give the grantor the right to cut and use any trees on the lands to which such exception applies of greater diameter than six inches at the stump at the time they may be so cut and used; and the grantees may cut and take from the lands to which said last reservation or exception applies all trees exceeding in diameter six inches at the stump at the time of such cutting." "The usual rights and privileges of mining" is construed to mean, for one thing, the right or privilege of cutting timbers to be used in mining operations, and the stipulations quoted above operate to further define the timber granted as timber exceeding six inches in diameter at the stump at the time of cutting. In view of the careful, plain, and more elaborately expressed stipulations to a different effect in other parts of the deed, the clause "at the time of cutting," last quoted, seems to be a vagrant and meaningless expression. It cannot be construed as intending to confer the right in perpetuity to cut all timber as it reaches the designated dimension, for the *Page 449 
specific stipulation of one of the quoted provisions is to the effect that, the timber once cut and removed, grantees shall thereafter have no right to cut and remove, and this, it appears, so far as concerns the clauses under consideration, is the dominant purpose.
Proper deference must be shown to the judgment of a cotenant in the management of property partly his own (Walshe v. Dwight Mfg. Co., 178 Ala. 317, 59 So. 630), and here, as stated above, defendant has the right by contract "to construct and maintain dirt roads, logging roads, tramroads and railroads for the purpose of cutting, manufacturing and removing the timber from said lands." But, in general, where a tenant in common commits such waste or does any other acts that amount to a destruction of the common property or that will result in its permanent injury, a cotenant is entitled to injunctive relief. 7 R. C. L. p. 904, § 104. Upon fair construction of the averments of the bill defendant is proceeding in excess of its rights, under law or contract, to destroy in part at least the common property, and the destruction so caused is not necessary to the enjoyment of its rights as cotenant. Such waste by the cotenant should be restrained, and since the cotenant has no right to proceed as defendant, on the averments of the bill, is proceeding, he has no right to license a stranger to do so. Murray v. Haverty, 70 Ill. 318; Hoolihan v. Hoolihan, 193 N.Y. 197,85 N.E. 1103, 15 Ann. Cas. 269, note. And such wrongs the complaining cotenant may have the court to enjoin without regard to the solvency or insolvency of the tortfeasor. Tidwell v. Hitt Lumber Co., 198 Ala. 236, 73 So. 486, L.R.A. 1917C, 232.
In the last-stated aspect of the bill it contained equity. The demurrer is addressed to the bill as a whole, and as so addressed was sustained. It should have been overruled.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and GARDNER and MILLER, JJ., concur.