I fully concur in the conclusion and in the decree rendered in this case. I also concur' in most all that is said in the opinion of Mr. Justice McClellan; but as there seems to be some difference, of opinion, among the Justices, as to the effect of the *331decision and opinion in this case, as well as touching the effect of our former decisions on similar questions, I deem it proper to state the reasons, and to limit it to what I concede to be necessary to a decision of this cause.
The question as to what right or title the appellant OAvner of the land has to the timber sold but not remoAred Avithin the time limit fixed by the contract, deed, or grant by which the title to the timber passed, is not, as I understand the case, raised on this appeal, and is not decided. Whether the OAvner of the land is bound to let the timber sold remain standing on her land indefinitely, or whether she can remove it for the purpose of cultivating and improving her land, and, if she did remove it after the time limit had expired, to what extent, if any, she would be liable to the owner of the timber, appellee here, as I read the record, are questions likewise not raised or decided.
Whatever might be the relative rights of the parties to the land and the timber, they are not tenants in common, as the opinion points out, and the complainant could not maintain the bill in this case.
While this court has, in previous decisions cited in the opinion of Mr. Justice McClellan, decided that conveyances of timber like the one in question did convey the fee-simple title thereto, and that this did constitute an interest in land, and in the land on Avhich the timber Avas standing, this court has never decided, and, I apprehend, will never decide, that such a contract, deed, or grant as the one in question passes such an interest in the land as that the grantor, the owner of the land, can never use or cultivate the land so long as the grantee allows the timber to remain standing thereon. If this be the law, then the grantee of the timber, by failing to remove it as he contracted and cov*332enants to do, can wholly deprive the owner of the land for all time to come, of the proper nse and enjoyment of his land. He cannot clear nor cultivate it, because to do so would be to remove or destroy the timber. The very consideration, or a part thereof, at least, of this grant, .was to have the timber cut and removed within the time limit fixed by the contract, deed, or grant, so that she could the more easily clear and cultivate her land. If, however, she cannot clear her land or remove the timber, should the grantee fail to remove it within the time contracted, or even should the grantee absolutely fail and refuse to remove it at all, then the value of both the land and the timber is absolutely destroyed by the sole fault of the grantee of the timber in breaching his contract to remove. Can or will any court ever say that such would be the legal and practical effect of a contract, deed, or grant like the one in question? I think not. Is there any logic or reason in holding that the parties to a contract like this, whether they be learned lawyers or ignorant laymen, intended to make such a contract, or that the language used was susceptible of such a construction? I think not. Such a construction of the contract, deed, or grant, allows the fault, breach, or wrong of one party to the contract to render the contract wholly useless and of no value to' both.
It has been uniformly held by this and all other courts that, after the expiration of the time limit in which the timber shall be removed, the owner of the timber cannot lawfully cut or remove the timber, though it may belong to him, because he contracted or covenanted to remove it within the time specified; but it has never been held, so far as I know, that the owner of the land, after such a breach by the vendee of the timber, could not use, cultivate, or clear his land be*333cause to so do would destroy the timber or trees of the grantee who Avas solely at fault. To so construe such contract Avonld render them void as against public policy. Would it not be against public policy to allow lands to be thus tied up forever, so that the owner of the land cannot laAvfully use his own land, and so that the owner of the timber could not lawfully cut and remove it? We have no case holding that the owner of land, after the expiration of the time in Avhich the grantee has covenanted to remove it, may not remove the timber from his land and cultivate it if he desires. It is expressly intimated in Zimmerman's Case, 149 Ala. 380, 42 South. 858, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 663, 123 Am. St. Rep. 58, that he can remove it, but not use it. It is there said: “It may be that the vendor would be entitled to remove the timber after the time limit himself, but not to appropriate it to his own use.”
I submit that it would be unreasonable, if not Intolerable, to hold that the owner of the land could not remove the timber and use the land, after the vendee of the timber had failed and refused to perform his contract to remove. While, of course, if the contract, deed, or grant does not fix a time limit for the removal of the timber, the law Avill read into it a reasonable time limit, yet there is a difference, and a material difference, betAveen contracts for the sale of timber and the right to remove, Avhere no time is fixed, and those in which a time limit is fixed. The cases of Magnetic Ore Co. v. Marbury Lumber Co., 104 Ala. 465, 16 South. 632, 2 7L. R. A. 434, 53 Am. St. Rep. 73; Butterfield v. Guy, 92 Miss. 361, 46 South. 78, 15 L. R. A. (N. S.) 1123, 131 Am. St. Rep. 540; Forest Co. v. Buckley (Miss.) 66 South. 279 — illustrate the difference. In those the grant of the right to use the land for the growing of the timber, and the right to remove it, Avas *334without limitations; and the contracts provided, some by implication and some by express provision, that the right to remove should be at the pleasure of the grantee, with a perpetual right of way for railroad purposes. Those cases, of course, are different from cases like the one under consideration, and the one in Zimmerman's Case, where it was expressly covenanted that the right should be renewed within a given time. This difference is well pointed out by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, in the case of Perkins v. Stockwell, 131 Mass. 529, 532. It is there said: “Where there is a reservation of wood and timber with the right to remove the same, it is implied that the removal shall be made within a reasonable time. — Hill v. Hill, 113 Mass. 103 [18 Am. Rep. 455]. If the reservation had been of wood and timber which was to> be permitted to stand and groAV indefinitely, it might be argued that it should be allowed to stand and grow so long at least as to make it merchantable; but when a definite time is fixed within which its groAvth is permitted without payment, and longer only by payment of rent, the plaintiffs could not expect to hold the defendant bound by the reservation, if they delayed their election beyond the year after the expiration of the original term.”
The distinction is well pointed out by the Supreme Court of South Carolina in Wilson Co. v. Alderman & Sons Co., 80 S. C. 106, 109, 61 S. E. 217, 218, 128 Am. St. Rep. 865, 867. It is there said: “The deed Avas an absolute conveyance in fee simple of the trees and timber suitable at that time for milling purposes, and under the authorities of this state, particularly Knotts v. Hydrick, 12 Rich. 314, the estate in the trees and timber was a fee-simple estate; the only limitation being that plaintiff’s right was restricted to trees suitable for milling purposes in 1893. Plaintiff Avas not *335required to remove said timber Avithin a reasonable time, but could at any time enter upon the land and remove all timber suitable for milling purposes at date of deed.”
A copious note to the above case as reported in 128 Am. St. Rep. appearing on page 868 et seq., cites scores of cases pointing out this difference. A few of them are as follows: “If conveyance of timber requires it to be cut and removed Avithin specified time, it must be cut and removed Avithin that time. — Bryant Lumber Co. v. Crist, 87 Ark. 434, 112 S. W. 965. A grant to cut trees Avithin a certain time is not executed if the trees are not cut Avithin the time stipulated. — Noyes v. Gooding, 104 Me. 453 [72 Atl. 181]. A deed to cut and'remove timber Avithin a certain time is binding on the vendee or his assignee. — Walker v. Johnson, 116 Ill. App. 145. If a deed requires timber to be removed Avithin a specified time, it must be removed Avithin that time. —Hollensteiner v. Missouri Lumber Co., 37 Mont. 278, 96 Pac. 420. If a time is set Avithin Avhich timber must be removed, it must be cut and removed within that time. — Hurst v. Taylor, 32 Ky. Law Rep. 1051, 107 S. W. 743; St. Louis Cypress Co. v. Thibodaux, 120 La. 834, 45 South. 742. Or, if there is a deed to trees to be cut and removed within ten years, they must be removed Avithin that time. — Webber v. Proctor, 89 Me. 404, 36 Atl. 631. If the grantee agrees to remove trees from the land Avithin two years from the date of the grant and fails to remove them Avithin a reasonable time after the expiration of that period, his right to the timber is forfeited. — Bell County Land & Coal Co. v. Moss, 30 Ky. Law Rep 6, 97 S. W. 354.”
The case of Adkins v. Huff, reported in 58 W. Va. 645, 52 S. E. 773, 3 L. R. A. (N. S.) 649, 6 Ann. Cas. 246, revieAvs the authorities on the subject, and the re*336port contains a valuable note collecting many cases. The annotator there has to say: “The conclusion reached in Adkins v. Huff, that the right of a grantor of land who reserves timber standing thereon, to be removed within a specified time, terminates at the expiration of such time is supported almost unanimously by the cases which pass upon the question.”
It is true that there are cases, among them cases of our own court, holding that the trees or timber left standing on the land after the expiration of the time limit for removal are yet the property of the vendee and do not revert to the vendor; but there are, so far as I know, none holding that the grantee still owns an interest in the land upon which the trees are growing, which will prevent the vendor from removing them in order to use or cultivate his land if he desires so to do. If A. should sell B. a home, with a covenant on the part of the latter to remove it, surely A. would not thereby be forever prevented from using the land on which the house was situated. After the failure of a vendee to remove timber, trees, or a house from the land on which they are located, within the time agreed upon, and certainly upon a refusal so to do, the timber, trees, or house cease to be a part of the land and become personalty, as to. the respective rights of the owner of the land and the personalty, and such personalty becomes an obstruction to the use of the land, and of course the owner of the land then has the right to remove it from his land, as he would a horse, cattle or even the person of the owner of such personalty, if it was occupying the land in violation of law, and even, as in the case at bar, in violation of express covenants.
I do not think this or any other court has heretofore held, or will ever hold, to the contrary. I concede, as I have before stated, that there is a difference among *337the courts as to the construction of contracts like the one in question. This difference was pointed out in our Zimmerman Case, 149 Ala. 380, 42 South. 858, 9 L. R. A. (N. S.) 663, 123 Am. St. Rep. 58; but the difference only goes to the title of the timber, and not to the title or rights to the land after the expiration of the time limit for removal. It is true, as above stated, that this court in Zimmerman's Case followed the line of decisions holding that the trees or timber remain the property of the vendee after the expiration of the time limit, and do not revert to the vendor, and that the contract is more than the mere right to take timber during the time, that it is a sale of the trees, with a covenant to remove; but it has never been held that the interest in the land shall extend beyond the time limit fixed in the contract or grant. Both parties are held to the contract, and were so held, even in Zimmerman’s Case and the line of cases which it follows.
The true rule, and the correct interpretation of such contracts, was stated by the Supreme Court of Wisconsin, which has been followed by most of the leading courts. The logic and reasoning of this court is unanswerable, as is pointed out by the Supreme Court of Michigan in the case of Macomber v. Detroit, etc., R. Co., 108 Mich. 491, 66 N. W. 376, 32 L. R. A. 102, 62 Am. St. Rep. 713. In these cases the question was made acute, by reason of the fact that at the expiration of the time limit some of the trees sold were still standing, and others had been cut but not r-emoved from the land. So the question was presented: Was there any difference as to the rights of the vendor between the trees cut and those not cut; that is, was there a difference as to the rights and title of the contracting parties as to the timber and the land after the expiration of the time limit? And the Michigan court says: “In *338Golden v. Glock, 57 Wis. 118 [15 N. W. 12], 46 Am. Rep. 32, a contract similar to that in question was held to convey title to only such timber as was removed within the time limited, but considered all such timber as was manufactured into stave bolts as removed. In Hicks v. Smith, 77 Wis. 146 [46 N. W. 133], the same doctrine was reaffirmed by the same court. A. contract not distinguishable from the one herein involved was considered, and it was held that, as to trees cut into logs, the severance from the realty had become complete. The property had become personalty, and its character so essentially changed by such manufacture that it was, in effect, removed from the premises, within the meaning of the deed.
“In Williams v. Flood, 63 Mich. 493 [30 N. W. 931], Mr. Justice Campbell, speaking of such contract as the present, said: ‘It is not very important to discuss the exact nature of plaintiff’s rights under the written contract. Whatever they were, they included an absolute, sale of all the timber described, subject only to such qualifications of the right of removal as the contract mentions. At most, this condition would only operate by way of forfeiture. The timber had all been paid for, and all belonged to the plaintiff, unless lost by forfeiture for non-removal.’ The same can be said of the present case, and, if we apply the rule that forfeitures are not favored (Miller v. Havens, 51 Mich. 485 [16 N. W. 865]), the rule of the Wisconsin court seems consistent with reason and justice. It is no stretch to treat the severance of the timber from the soil, and its manufacture into logs, as a removal, within the terms of the provision for forfeiture.”
I concede, of course, that this court has not gone to the full extent of the above holding, as to the title *339to the standing trees, but has as to the rights or title of the grantee as to the land.
Our earliest case on the subject under discussion is Heflin v. Bingham, 56 Ala. 566, 28 Am. Rep. 776, and that case expressly followed the New Hampshire court, and chiefly based the holding on the case of Holt v. Stratton Mills, 54 N. H. 109, 20 Am. Rep. 119. Both of these cases are fully in accord with what I conceive to be the law, as to the rights of the owner of the land, after the expiration of the time limit for removal. In the New Hampshire case it was said: “When the time for the defendant’s keeping his trees or other chattels on the plaintiff’s land has expired, the defendant cannot keep them there as long as he pleases. He cannot rightfully keep them there after that time. He can wrongfully leave them there after that time, as he can wrongfully do, or wrongfully neglect to do, a great variety of other things. He is liable, as for any tort or breach of contract, to the extent of the legal rule of damages for injuries caused by his wrongful omission to remove them within the time expressly or impliedly fixed. Not only has the plaintiff a remedy by legal process for the injuries which he suffers from the defendant’s property being on his land after the time of removal; he also has the ‘natural, essential, and inherent’ right of ‘protecting property.’ He can, without legal process protect his property against the wrongful presence and injurious action and effect of the defendant’s property. And this right is the right to do whatever, under the circumstances of each case, apparently is reasonably necessary to be done in defense. — Aldrich v. Wright, 53 N. H. 398 [16 Am. Rep. 339]. In that case, some authorities are cited showing that it may be reasonably necessary, in the defense of one’s own property, to destroy the property of another. If in de*340fense it is reasonably necessary for A. to remove B.’s property from A.’s land, he may remove it. If it is reasonably necessary for him to destroy it, he may destroy it: If it is' reasonably necessary for him to sell it, he may sell it. If it is reasonably necessary for him, in defense, to do anything after reasonable notice. * * * If it is reasonably necessary for him to have a lien on the offending property or it proceeds for the expenses of the exercise of his natural right of defense, he has a lien. When B. is liable for the damage caused to A. by his property wrongfully remaining on A.’s land, he must also be liable for the reasonable expense to Avhich his fault puts A. in ridding his land of the incumbrance. And, if indemnity by lien is a part of the reasonable necessity of A.’s defense, it is a part of his natural right of defense. His remedy by the exercise of his natural right of defense is as broad as the reasonable necessity of the case. That right is a plenary one, whether the thing against Avhich it may be exercised is wrongfully allowed to remain, or is Avrongfully put on his land, by B. He may resist a wrongful occupation of his land, as well as a wrongful invasion of it. A wrongful occupation is a wrongful invasion of his right of property.”
I submit that there are no decisions contrary to the above; that it is fully in accord with natural and moral law, as well as Avith municipal: and to hold otherwise would be contrary to all precedents. While there is a conflict among the authorities as to whether timber belongs to the vendor or to the vendee after the expiration of the time limit for removing, there is no conflict or dissent to the proposition that the vendee has no title, interest, claim, or demand as to the land on which the trees are standing. While growing trees and timber are considered realty, and not personalty, yet *341when they are severed from the land they become chattels, and a conveyance of them, by a legal fiction, operates as a severance, so far as the rights of the parties to the conveyance are concerned. In legal effect, it is just as if the timber had been severed by the axe. As has been said, the severance in law may be made with the pen as well as with the axe.