If, in consequence of a storm, flood, calamity or extraordinary event, the cane or coffee plantations, or other trees or shrubs, shall have disappeared in such a considerable number that it would not be possible or be too costly to replace them, the usufructuary may leave the dead, fallen or destroyed trunks at the disposal of the owner and may oblige him to remove them and clear the land.
History —Civil Code, 1930, § 413.