Ames v. Hillside Coal & Iron Co.

171 A. 610, 314 Pa. 267, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 490
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 23, 1934
DocketAppeal, 106
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 171 A. 610 (Ames v. Hillside Coal & Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ames v. Hillside Coal & Iron Co., 171 A. 610, 314 Pa. 267, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 490 (Pa. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

This appeal is from a decree dismissing plaintiff’s bill on the ground of champerty. 1 It might also have *269 been dismissed for laches. On December 3, 1900, by a contract attached to the bill as Exhibit A, the owners of certain coal or culm banks “demised, leased and sold ......all the coal in and composing” the banks to defendant, which agreed to “screen, separate and ship” the coal “with due diligence” and to pay specified royalties per ton, varying for specified sizes and with annual mínimums, “until all the merchantable coal of the above sizes; available from the said culm banks has been screened and shipped or paid for.” It was also agreed that defendant “shall have the right to use, sell or otherwise dispose of all the refuse coal and all the coal smaller than the above sizes without any further payments whatsoever.” Defendant took possession and conducted operations. It paid royalties until July 1, 1906.

So far as appears, this bill, filed in 1923, is the first complaint that defendant had failed to perform its obligations under Exhibit A. Though not a party to that contract, plaintiff, by his bill, asserts rights under it. lie contends that the vendors’ rights, under Exhibit A, vested in him pursuant to a contract of December 30, 1921, attached to the bill as Exhibit B, made by him and the surviving vendor and the personal representatives of the deceased vendors, who, in 1900, by Exhibit A, had sold the coal to defendant.

Exhibit A is a contract of sale of all the mined coal and refuse in certain culm banks, payment for all to be made at rates applied to certain sizes (see New York and Pittston Coal Co. v. Hillside Coal & Iron Co., 225 Pa. 211, 74 A. 26), 2 with the right to erect and maintain *270 •washeries and necessary appliances to remove and market the coal. This mined coal was personal property.

By Exhibit B, his vendors purport to sell to plaintiff “all their right, title and interest in” the culm banks which had theretofore been sold to the defendant. An important inquiry, then, is what “right, title and interest” remained in them for sale to plaintiff after the sale to defendant? It is conceivable that defendant might have defaulted and that a forfeiture might have been declared, resulting in the re-vesting of title in the vendors, but both the bill and Exhibit B are silent on the subject; or, perhaps, Exhibit A was a sale on installments, title passing as the coal was paid for, but this is not the theory of plaintiff’s bill. As a bill for a declaration of forfeiture, it is defective in various respects. So far as we have been able to understand the transaction pleaded, the vendors had disposed of the culm bank to defendant, which was not in default in paying for any royalty-bearing coal when Exhibit B was executed; there is no averment that defendant was in default as to such coal. The vendors, too, are particular to state that they do not covenant for quiet title and that plaintiff “takes possession with the full knowledge that he is obliged to maintain title......” The ninth and tenth paragraphs of the agreement are as follows:

“Ninth : In view of the fact that on some of the culm piles and banks herein sold, demised and leased to the Lessee [plaintiff in this suit] certain quantities of coal, culm and other materials have been removed by other parties, the Lessors hereby give to the Lessee the right to sue for the royalties that have accrued and are now due and owing on said culm, coal and other materials on a quantum meruit basis, that is to say, on some fair royalty basis, and the Lessee covenants and agrees with the Lessors that he will assume and pay all the expenses, *271 such as attorneys’ fees, engineers’ fees, witness fees, and other incidental expenses, for all litigation that may be brought to maintain the rights of the Lessee as owner of said culm piles and the royalties due for the removal thereof from said culm piles prior to the date of this lease. In the event that there shall be a recovery for the culm, coal and other materials heretofore taken away from the banks herein demised, then it is agreed by and between the Lessors and Lessee that from the moneys thus realized by the activities and efforts of the Lessee there shall be first deducted the costs of the litigation, or the costs of the preparation for litigation, and the net amount remaining is to be divided equally between the Lessors and Lessee.
“Tenth: For the purpose of giving the Lessee full authority in regard to the coal, culm and other materials heretofore taken away from the culm banks herein sold and demised, the Lessors do specifically assign, transfer and set over unto the Lessee all their right, title and interest in and to all the coal, culm and other materials heretofore taken away by parties unknown to the Lessors, together with full authority to the Lessee to sue in his own name, or to compromise in his own name for such coal, culm and other materials taken away from the banks herein demised, subject to the provision herein contained in the foregoing paragraph.”

Pursuant to these paragraphs of the contract, plaintiff demands royalties and compensation for coal removed from the culm banks by defendant, and by others, said to be unknown to him, asserting that defendant is in possession and is not paying royalties; he prays, inter alia, for an account and full disclosure of defendant’s record, for payment, possession, and for cancellation of Exhibit A.

There is no direct averment that all the royalty-bearing coal had not been removed by July 1, 1906, when the last payment of royalty was made; if a fact, relied on as breach of contract, it should have been averred: *272 Thompson’s Appeal, 126 Pa. 367, 17 A. 643. The provision is that, on default in payment of royalties for 60 days, “the Lessors, at their option, may declare the terms of the lease at an end.” There is no averment that the defendant’s vendor's exercised the option and declared the lease ended; nothing to explain or account for the omission to demand royalties, if due, from July, 1906 to March, 1923, when suit began. Laches appears on the face of the bill: cf. Drake v. Lacoe, 157 Pa. 17, 27 A. 538. It is an objection that may be taken on general demurrer (Hayes’s Appeal, 113 Pa. 380, 386, 6 A. 144), and is sufficient to sustain the decree.

But this lapse of time without complaint is also an element for consideration in dealing with the champertous character of the agreement, on which the learned court below based its decree. While there has been some relaxation in the application of the common law doctrines of champerty and maintenance in this, 3 as well as in other jurisdictions, 4 champerty, repugnant to public policy, is still ground for denying the aid of the court: cf. Waychoff v. Waychoff, 309 Pa. 300, 163 A. 670; Gribbel v. Brown, 202 Pa. 10, 14, 51 A. 587, 588; Bedell v. Oliver H. Bair Co. Inc., 104 Pa. Superior Ct. 146, 150, 158 A. 651, 653.

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Bluebook (online)
171 A. 610, 314 Pa. 267, 1934 Pa. LEXIS 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ames-v-hillside-coal-iron-co-pa-1934.