Brady v. . Smith

73 N.E. 963, 181 N.Y. 178, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 723
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 11, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 73 N.E. 963 (Brady v. . Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brady v. . Smith, 73 N.E. 963, 181 N.Y. 178, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 723 (N.Y. 1905).

Opinion

Babtlett, J.

This action, in form, is a partition suit, but by consent was tried for the purpose of settling the rights of all the parties claiming a title or interest in the land or the limestone bed located thereon and the right to work the bed by open quarrying. This action was tried by Justice William S. Andbews, who wrote an opinion which was adopted by the Appellate Division. The long and complicated chain of title involved in this case is set forth in the opinion of the learned trial judge, and need not be stated here in detail.

On or about February 18th, 1852, one John La Farge, who was the owner of a hundred acres of land in Diana, Lewis county, conveyed the same by warranty deed to Margaret Lewis, with the following reservation: “ Excepting and reserv *180 ing therefrom unto the parties of the first part, their heirs and assigns forever, .all mines and minerals which maybe found on the above piece of land, with the right of entering at any time with workmen and others to dig and carry the same away.”

The will’of John La Farge was admitted to probate in 1858, and by it he gave and devised to his wife, who has since died, during the term of her natural life, a onedliird part of his real estate, and bequeathed all the rest and residue of his property to his children. By a deed recorded August 6th, 1898, certain of the descendants of La Farge, who obtained title under this will, conveyed to the defendant Louise J. Smith their right, title and interest in an undivided fourtliirty-fifths share of the mineral rights upon twenty acres of said premises; and she in turn later made an agreement with the defendant John J. Sullivan, permitting the latter to enter upon the property and dig for and carry away the minerals found thereon.

The trial judge states in his opinion as follows: “ The twenty acres in question are largely covered with limestone or granite ledges rising above the natural surface of" the ground. There is, it is true, some timber and some tillable land, but' probably the chief value of the property consists in this stone. To obtain this material a quarry has been opened.

“ The plaintiff claims that she and her sisters, subject to their mother’s right of dower, are the owners of this limestone or gi'anite bed, and that she and her mother each own an undivided half of the remainder of the premises, and that she is entitled to a decree of partition in this action. She also states that the other defendants claim some interest in the property, and she now asks to have the rights of all the parties fixed and determined. With this end in view, and upon the consent of all the 2iarties, an order was made bringing in certain defendants not originally sued.
“ The defendants Sullivan and Smith in their answer claim that the rights to the granite or limestone quarry were reserved in the deed from La Farge to Lewis; that Smith is a tenant *181 iu common with the heirs of La Barge not parties to this action, and that, as such tenant in common, she had a right to give to Sullivan the authority to remove the material.
“ Bebecca Phelps claims that under the infancy proceedings and the contract she is the equitable owner and is entitled to receive a conveyance of the entire property, subject to the Phelps and Carpenter lease, upon paying the balance of the purchase price.
“The defendants Carpenter and Phelps, the Oswegatcliie Quarry Company and the Metropolitan Marble Company claim that under the lease made by Mary Brady they are rightfully entitled to possession of the land and the quarry for a period of fifty years from the date of the lease. As a matter of fact the defendant Sullivan seems to be in actual possession of the quarry.”

The trial judge thereupon states at length certain conclusions which he had reached by reason of the facts as stated. Among other conclusions the trial court held and the judgment appealed from adjudges, that the defendant Louise J. Smith is the owner of four-thirty-fifths of the limestone bed on the 20.04 acres and that the defendant John J. Sullivan, by virtue of the agreement made by him with the defendant Smith, has the right to take and remove the limestone in question by means known as open quarrying; that the land may be sold subject to such rights. It is from this portion of the judgment that the appeal was taken tó the Appellate Division, which resulted in an affirmance of the judgment of the Trial Term.

We are of opinion that the construction placed upon the exception and reservation in question cannot be sustained.

The case of Armstrong v. Lake Champlain Granite Co. (147 N. Y. 495) is relied upon by both parties, to some extent, on this appeal. The case cited involved the construction of a deed which conveyed “ All the mineral and ores (on the same premises), with the right to mine and remove the same; also the right to sink shafts and sufficient surface to erect suitable buildings for machinery and other buildings necessary and *182 usual in mining and raising ores; also the right of ingress and egress for mining purposes, and to make explorations for minerals and ores, saving reservations to the State of New York.”

The question involved in-that case was whether a bed of granite, overlaid by soil from four to six feet deep on land that was thickly wooded, could be removed by open quarrying. Ahdbews, Oh. J., reviewing the English and American cases, reached the conclusion that under the form of conveyance already quoted open quarrying was not permissible. The learned judge said: “ Upon the authorities we think we should not be justified in holding that granite was not embraced in the reservation or grant of ‘ mineral’ in the absence of qualification. * * * But the words do not stand alone, but are connected with the context which clearly indicates, in our judgment, that the parties had in view only such minerals as are to be got by mining in the ordinary sense of that term ; that is, by underground and not by open workings.”

The only question decided was that the provisions of the deed in question read together contemplated only underground mining and not open workings. The suggestion as to the possible construction of a reservation or grant of “ minerals,” in the absence of qualifying words so as to embrace granite, was purely obiter.

The question presented in the case at bar is whether the exception and reservation in question is broad enough to include a bed of limestone and the open quarrying of the same. So far as we are advised the question presented is open in this court. It may be well enough to quote once more the reservation to be construed: “ Excepting and reserving, therefrom unto the parties of the first part, their heirs and assigns forever, all mines and minerals which may be found on the above piece of land, with the right of entering at any time with workmen and others to dig and carry the same away.”

The first point to be observed is that the word “ minerals,” as used in this reservation, is coupled with “mines” by the *183

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
73 N.E. 963, 181 N.Y. 178, 1905 N.Y. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brady-v-smith-ny-1905.