This action is brought to recover the purchase price of timber standing on a certain 5,000 acre tract in the town of Long Lake, Hamilton county, being the same land which the plaintiff sold to the People of the State of New York by deed dated December 11, 1900, and recorded in the clerk’s office of the county of Hamilton.* By writ-ten agreement, dated April 20, 1906, this plaintiff sold to the defendants, “All the spruce, balsam and hemlock timber standing and lying on about 5,000 acres -of land heretofore sold by the party of the second part to the state of New York of the size of eight inches at the stump and upwards, which is suitable for pulp or lumber at the following prices: $1.50 per cord for the spruce and balsam and 25^ per standard, Dimick' 19" rule, for the hemlock. Said timber to he -cut and skidded on or before December 11th 1907.” The payments were to he made by check or note, with interest, in half yearly payments, the last of which was to he made May 1, 1908. The defendants agreed to take and purchase said timber upon the terms specified and pay therefor as provided for in the contract.
A copy of the contract is attached to the complaint. The defendants have taken and paid for a part of the said timber. This action is brought to recover the purchase price of that part of thp timber which was sold, hut not cut and removed
The agreement or contract of sale has given rise to some differences of opinion between the parties and is subject to construction. One important matter as to which they differ is whether or not the minimum diameter is to be determined a<s of the date of the deed to the State or when the timber is cut at any time within the seven years’ limit. The contract refers to the deed to the State of December 11, 1900, and a copy of that deed was furnished by the plaintiff to the defendants. It contains this: “ Reserving, however, from the operation of this conveyance all the soft wood now standing, being or lying "Upon said lands and premises (with all the rights and privileges necessary for the removal of the same) down to and including the diameter of eight inches at the stump, same to be all cut within seven years from the date hereof; and, in case any of such soft wood shall remain uncut at the expiration of said period of seven years, then the same shall pass to and become the property of the party of the second part.” The parties evidently understood that the timber purchased by the defendants was that, or a part of that, reserved to the plaintiff in said deed to the State. Said deed is important in determining the intention of the parties to the contract. We are not called upon directly to construe the deed, and the parties to the deed are not before the court, but we do use the deed in construing the contract. The deed is susceptible of the construction that Turner reserved all of the spruce and balsam which at the time of cutting within the seven years was eight inches or more in diameter at the stump. The acts of the parties under it show this to be their intent. The contract was not made until .after five years of the time for cutting, limited in the deed, had expired; yet no mention is made of trees measured and marked in 1900, nor of trees eight inches in diameter in 1900; and, unless the trees had been measured and
The second point of dispute is as to the place of measurement, or what is meant by the words, “ at the stump.” The plaintiff contends that the expression means at the top of the swell of the root. The defendants contend that, under the statute (as it existed when the deed was made, Laws of 1897, chap. 220, § 7), the measurement must be made three feet above the ground, and refer to this law, which provided that, “ The owner of land to be taken under this article may at his option, within the limitations hereinafter prescribed, reserve the spruce timber thereon ten inches or more in diameter at a height of three feet from the ground.” Later in the same paragraph it was provided, “ If laird is acquired by purchase, the spruce timber and no other may be reserved by agreement between -the board and owner subject to all the provisions of this act in relation to timber reserved after an appropriation of land by the forest preserve board.” The reservation in the deed of December 11,
There is another question of construction of the contract,namely: What timber was purchased and to be paid for? It is conceded that all the timber was not purchased, for there is the limitation, “ suitable for pulp and lumber;” so that cull timber, though of sufficient size, is not counted by either party. But, did the parties intend to include in the contract all the sound soft timber of sufficient size, whether marketable from the premises or not? When plaintiff reserved the timber in the deed to the State, so much of it was valuable to him as he could get to market. Such only was valuable to the defendants also. Both parties to the contract were experienced lumbermen; the lot was in the wilderness, away from any market; the means of transportation was by water, driving the logs out from the timber. That this was in the mind of the parties is evidenced by the contract. It provides that if consent is not procured to put the logs into Moose pond or Big brook, then the defendants should take only such as could be piit into Long lake and Olear pond. That is, the defendants were not to take timber which could not be cut into logs and driven to market along one of the water courses. The contract further discloses that the plaintiff insured to the defendants the right to remove the timber “ so cut and skidded as aforesaid at any time prior to April 1st, 1908.” The parties, therefore, contemplated a purchase and sale of such timber only as could be
The question remaining is, what amount is the plaintiff entitled to recover from the defendants. The defendants do not dispute'that something is due. Each party has offered evidence intended to show the .amount due. Each party has counted the trees and they have used a similar method in making the count, as follows: Three men went upon the lot, one to keep the tally, two to measure the trees. As a tree was measured, the diameter was called out to the one keeping tally, he repeated it back for .accuracy aud set down the diameter of the tree. Where there was no actual boundary to the strip being counted, as a road or otherwise, the outside lines of the strip were marked by blazing the trees. Having crossed the lot, they turned and counted the next strip through, and so on until the whole lot was covered. In this way the number of trees suitable for pulp wood aud for standards was recorded and tbe size of each. The plaintiff counted 28,578 spruce and balsam trees and 2,132 hemlock, and defendants counted 17,609 spruce aud balsam and 1,349 hemlock. The plaintiff measured just above tbe swell of the root; the defendants three feet above the ground.
To determine the number of standards and of cords of pulp wood, different methods were used by the two parties. Eor plaintiff, witnesses were called who had gone through the lot and looked over the timber generally. They testified that such a proportion of the trees would cut one log, such a proportion two logs, such a proportion three logs. Erom this
blot only is there a difference in the estimate of the number of logs, hut there is a difference in the method of 'calculating the number of cords of pulp wood on the lot. While the plaintiff’s witnesses have scheduled the trees and estimated them as one log, two log and three log trees, they state that, in calculating the amount of pulp wood, they have calculated not only that which could be put into twelve-foot logs, hut have calculated all of the tops making short logs down to four inches in diameter at the small end. The defendants in their calculations have calculated the cords of pulp wood only upon the number of logs fourteen feet in length that could he cut from the trees; and the short pieces, although of sufficient diameter, have been discarded. Under the construction which has been adopted of the contract, the method of computation pursued by the defendants’ witnesses is the correct one. Under the plaintiff’s method of calculation, short logs, although only two or three feet in length, have been computed, while the parties as above held did not contemplate the inclusion of those short logs. It is not very important that one party has used a twelve-foot log and the other a fourteen-foot log. While some trees would cut two twelve-foot logs wffiich would not cut two fourteen-foot logs; on the other hand, if a tree would cut under the length of two twelve-foot logs, then the party who measures for fourteen-foot logs would account for the more plup wood. The defendants’ method of computing the number of cords
It appears from the above that the plaintiff has not measured the diameter of the trees at the place specified in the contract, he has not made those measurements within the time limited in the deed or the contract, and h-c has included short logs in his calculation of cords of pulp wood. These errors have resulted in the count of too many trees and of too much pulp 'wood. Eo allowance is made for those errors, nor is evidence furnished on which the court can more than guess at an allowance which should be made. The burden of proving the amount of pulp wood and standards to be paid for by the defendants is upon plaintiff and he had failed to meet this burden. But the defendants have counted the trees upon this lot and computed the- amount of pulp wood ,and lumber left to he paid for; and, although they have not measured at the right place upon the tree, their evidence stands as ar. admission that there is at least the number of -trees counted by them on the lot to he accounted for by them, and, defendants’ method of computing the number of cords of pulp wood and standards being correct, the plaintiff is entitled -to recover therefor.
Defendants .ask that the amount of the recovery be reduced by reason of the provisions of the statute placing restrictions upon the reservations of timber in deeds to the State, and forbidding that a lot, the deed of which contains reservations, should be cut over more than once. A curious circumstance is disclosed by the deed-, the contract and the statutes. The deed evidences a purchase by the State from plaintiff December 11, 1900. At that time the statute (Laws of 1897, chap. 220, § 7) permitted “ the spruce timber and no other ” to he reserved, “ subject to the provisions of this act in relation to timber reserved after an appropriation of land by the forest preserve board;” that is, subject-to the restriction that the spruce must- he ten inches or more in diameter, three feet or more above the ground and the land could not he cut over twice. This was the statute in 1900, when the d-eo.d was drawn. The deed does not conform to this statute, however, but does conform to an act passed in
The plaintiff is, therefore, entitled to judgment for $2,728.23, with interest from May 1, 19,08.
Findings and a decision may be prepared accordingly.
Judgment for plaintiff.