Perkins Lumber Co. v. Wilkinson
Perkins Lumber Co. v. Wilkinson
Opinion of the Court
The petition of the plaintiff in the court below alleged that he was the owner of a tract of land in Bulloch county, containing two thousand and forty-six acres, more or less, which was described by its boundaries; that on a named day he “ sold the sawmill timber on said land to, the Perkins Lumber Company, at the rate of two dollars per acre, the number of acres of timber land on said tract to be ascertained by actual survey before the last payment fell due; ” that at the time of the sale all this timber was in use for turpentine purposes, except about thirty acres, immediately in front of and around his residence, and “that he did not sell the said thirty acres to, nor point out the same to, the said Perkins Lumber Company, nor their agent, but reserved the same.” It was alleged that, “ at the time said title was made, . . by mistake and inadvertence the small tract of round timber above set out and described was not expressly excepted in said writing,” but that in his negotiations with the agents of the defendant for the sale of the timber, he “ pointed out to said agents the land included in said contract,” and “ never at any time pointed out said tract of round timber to said agents as being included therein; and petitioner says that he never sold, nor did he ever undertake to sell, said tract of round timber to said defendants, nor would he have sold same at any price.” The petition set up that the tract of timber in question was valuable to him, not alone as timber, but as furnishing shade and as adding to the healthfulness and enhancing the beauty of his premises; that the defendant was about to enter upon it and cut it, and that irreparable injury would thereby result to him. He prayed for process and for general equitable re
With the exception of one sentence, there is nothing in the petition to indicate that the plaintiff below claimed that the instrument by which he conveyed the timber to the Perkins Lumber Company was ambiguous. The sentence referred to is as follows: “Petitioner further shows that under the description in the deed made to said defendant the boundaries of said land are indefinite, and your petitioner holds that, under a fair and proper interpretation of the same, this body of round timber would not and could not be included in said deed.” It is worthy of remark, however, ■that the alleged indefinite description contained in the deed is identical with the description given in the petition. It affirmatively appears, from the plaintiff’s own allegations, that the thirty acres now in dispute was a part of the tract conveyed by the deed and described in the petition. The case made by the plaintiff is, not that the deed was susceptible of more than one construction, but that, owing to mistake and inadvertence, the scrivener failed to •except from the timber conveyed by the deed that contained on this thirty-acre tract, thereby causing the instrument to speak other than the real intention of the parties. Whatever ambiguity there may have been in the deed which was introduced in evidence was entirely cleared away by the allegations of the petition; and we will, therefore, disregard the argument of counsel that the relief prayed for was properly granted under the power of the court to
Reference
- Full Case Name
- PERKINS LUMBER COMPANY v. WILKINSON
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published