Jackson v. Aripeka Saw Mills
Jackson v. Aripeka Saw Mills
Opinion of the Court
In June, 1901, L. B. Yarn & Co. contracted to convey certain timber rights on lands in Hernando county to one John J. McDonough, his heirs and assigns, upon the payment of the agreed consideration,
The declaration sets out in full the whole contract, including execution and acknowledgment, and alleges the sale of the lands or part of them: in December, 1901, by Yarn & Company to certain parties who took possession thereof, the sale in 1903 by those parties of the lands and all rights under 'the contract to the plaintiffs and one Black, and the purchase by the plaintiffs of Black’s inter
We shall not set out at length the declaration with its various counts covering twenty-odd typewritten pages. Demurrers thereto were sustained and the plaintiffs declining to amend, final judgment for the defendant was entered.
There is no allegation anywhere in the declaration that the Aripeka Saw Mills promised to pay any money to anybody, and yet the action is purely a personal one. Stress is laid in the argument here that the contracts provided that all the provisions therein should be covenants running with the land and be embodied in any deed, mortgage or other conveyance made by either party, their heirs or assigns respectively.
Waiving the failure to allege that the original deed from Yarn & Company contained any provision conveying rights under the contracts to the grantee therein, and also a doubt as to whether the plaintiffs own the lands in fee or are invested only with the turpentine privilege, it
There is no privity of contract shown here to base a a personal action upon; nor is there a question of rent involved, a theory upon which it is sought here to sustain the declaration.
The authorities cited by the plaintiffs in error in so far as they are in point show that the declaration is fatally defective.
The judgment is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- J. W. Jackson and E. H. McNeill, Co-partners Under the Firm Name of Jackson & McNeill, in Error v. Aripeka Saw Mills, a Corporation Under the Laws of Georgia, in Error
- Cited By
- 1 case
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- 1. A personal action will not lie in. favor of a purchaser of a portion of lands against one who has acquired timber rights thereon theretofore conveyed, merely because the conveyance recites that all covenants and agreements shall “run with the land” and enure to the benefit of the assigns, wherein the plaintiff seeks to recover the deferred payments and shows such payments were evidenced by negotiable notes that are in the hands of third parties. 2. Deferred payments for timber rights in the form of negotiable notes in the hands of third parties do not constitute a renting and require a payment of a specific sum to the purchaser of the land whereon the timber stands.