Interstate Trust & Banking Co. v. Picard & Geismar, Ltd.
Interstate Trust & Banking Co. v. Picard & Geismar, Ltd.
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit for the value of forest timber felled and taken by defendants from plaintiff’s land.
The timber was made into cross-ties by Charles Barber, under a contract with Picard & Geismar, Limited. The agreement was that Barber should make cross-ties from the timber on the land of Picard & Geismar, Limited, adjacent to the timber land belonging to plaintiff, and pay Picard & Geismar, Limited, at the rate of 9 cents per tie for the timber. A representative of Picard & Geismar, Limited, showed Barber the land on which he was to get the timber, but perhaps did not call his attention to the dividing line between the land of Picard & Geismar, Limited, and that of plaintiff. The consequence was that Barber cut and converted into cross-ties nearly 300 cypress trees on plaintiff’s land, and paid Picard & Geismar, Limited, at the rate of 9 cents per tie for the timber taken from plaintiff’s land.
Plaintiff alleged that both Picard & Geismar, Limited, and Charles Barber were trespassers, acting in bad faith; that they were therefore liable in solido for the value of the timber, to plaintiff, i. e., $15 per M feet for the cypress and $6 per M feet for the hardwood; and that the quantity of timber cut and removed from plaintiff’s land was 486,752 feet of cypress and 10,996 feet of hardwood. Plaihtiff therefore prayed for judgment against the defendants, in solido, for $7,367.26, as the value of the timber.
Charles Barber made no defense and allowed judgment to go against him by default.
The defenses urged by Picard & Geismar, Limited, were: (1) That plaintiff had no right or cause of action, not having been in actual possession of the land; (2) that Charles Barber was an independent contractor, and that Picard & Geismar, Limited, was not responsible for an act of trespass committed by him; and in the alternative (3) that Picard & Geismar, Limited, acted in good faith, and should not, in any event, be held liable for more than the value of the standing timber, or stumpage value.
The district judge found that the defendants had acted in good faith and were therefore liable only for the stumpage value of the timber; that the quantity of timber taken was 368,569 feet of cypress, and its value
Picard & Geismar, Limited, alone, has appealed, and plaintiff, answering the appeal, asks that the judgment he increased to the amount sued for.
Appellant has filed in this court- a plea of prescription of one year, based upon Act 33 of 1902, amending article 3537 of the Civil Code.
Opinion.
The ruling of the district judge overruling defendant’s exception of no cause or right of aetion is therefore affirmed.
Plaintiff did not sue for the value of the manufactured product in cross-ties, but claimed $15 per M as the value, to plaintiff, of-the standing timber. The evidence does not convince us that appellant acted in bad faith in having the timber felled on plaintiff’s land. And we agree with the district judge’s finding that $8 per M feet was a fair valuation of the cypress timber at the time Barber felled it.
It appears therefore that the quantity of cypress timber for which plaintiff is demanding payment, 486,752 feet, is less than the quantity actually taken by defendants, as proven by appellant’s witnesses.
Our calculations of the quantity of timber will be left in the record for inspection by the parties interested during the delay allowed for an application for rehearing.
There is no proof that any other than cypress timber was felled or destroyed. The timber left standing was probably rendered valueless because of the smallness of quantity on such a large area, but the petition does not contain a demand for that loss.
Our conclusion is that plaintiff is entitled to be paid for 486,752 feet of cypress timber, as claimed in the petition, at $8 per M feet, $3,894.02.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- INTERSTATE TRUST & BANKING CO. v. PICARD & GEISMAR, Limited
- Cited By
- 5 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- (Syllabus by Editorial Staff.) 1. Trespass An owner of land, although not in possession, may maintain an action for the value of timber felled and taken from his land by one who, though acting in good faith, had not a valid title. 2. Trespass Where P. entered into an agreement with. B. whereby B. should make cross-ties from timber on the land of P. adjacent to timberland belonging to plaintiff, and pay P. 9 cents per tie, and a representative of P. showed B. the land on which he was tó get the timber, but did not call his attention to the dividing line between the land of P. and plaintiff, resulting in converting some of plaintiff’s timber into ties for which P. received the compensation of 9 cents per tie, the taking of plaintiff’s timber was as much P.’s fault as B.’s, and P. was liable as well as B. for the value of the timber taken. 3. Logs and logging Long timber that is to be cut into saw logs is to be measured by using the mesne diameter. 4. Limitation of actions &wkey;>l79(2)— Plaintiff . suing for timber taken need plead and prove only that he had no knowledge of trespass a year before citation, in absence of plea of prescription. In the absence of a plea of prescription, under Act No. 33 of Acts 1902, a corporation suing for the value of timber taken was not required to do more than to allege and prove affirmatively by the testimony of an officer that knowledge of the trespass was not had a year before the citation was served, and with that allegation and testimony uncontradicted the filing of a plea of prescription on appeal was of no avail, although the proof was that the trespass began more than a year before the suit was filed. Monroe, O. J., dissenting.