Cahoon v. Bellinger

16 N.Y. St. Rep. 488
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1888
StatusPublished

This text of 16 N.Y. St. Rep. 488 (Cahoon v. Bellinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cahoon v. Bellinger, 16 N.Y. St. Rep. 488 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1888).

Opinion

By the Court.

We are entirely satisfied with the result reached by the learned referee in this action, and in the main with the reasoning of the able opinion submitted by him in deciding the same.

We however, prefer to place our decision in affirming the judgment upon the ground, that the plaintiff was bound to assert, within a reasonable time whatever right he claimed to have" acquired under the agreement of June 13, 1864. And having practically failed to make any such assertion, by acts contemplated by such agreement, within a period of twenty years, he should be held to have abandoned all such right, and to have ceased to have any claim to the possession of the premises, or any interest therein. Especially so as the premises have been conveyed to other parties, and Erastus Spaulding with whom he contracted, is dead. The judgment and the order granting an additional allowance should be affirmed with costs.

McNaughton,Referee.

The pivotal question in this case is ■ Did the agreement of June 13. 1864, vest in the plaintiff the ores and minerals in that part of Spaulding’s farm called the sixteen acre lot?

If it did, then the defendant Bellinger and those claiming under and through him and operating the mine of pyrites there are trespassers, and accountable to plaintiff for damages he has sustained thereby. If not, the minerals went by conveyance and inheritance through intermediate parties and owners to Charles H. Austin, and his lease conveyed to Bellinger the right he, Bellinger, claims to have exercised under it, he and his lessees and their assigns.

To vest in one an unlimited right to the use and profit of a thing, is to vest the thing itself This is by operation of law, which annexes absolute ownership to usufruct, as affecting the intention of parties The intention is the crucial test

What was intended by that agreement? The parties to it stood in independent relations. The plaintiff had discovered iron pyrites on Spaulding’s farm, and sought to avail himself of profit from its development and the sale of the product of the ores there This he might do in several ways. He might purchase the mines and minerals outright, and so divest Spaulding and wife of every interest therein and of all concern as to results of attempted development. or he might acquire a right to go on the premises, to take out the ores there to be found, to work them, to market their products and to have a share of the proceeds of their sale

I am of opinion the agreement between plaintiff and Spaulding was intended to effectuate only the latter purpose; and this only on condition—a condition precedent

The agreement, for a consideration (the seal imports one) gives the plainliff right to enter upon the premises and “search for, excavate and carry away and test” portions of the minerals there found, and upon becoming convinced, after such test, that the mineral substances so tested are worth working, “then" the right accrues to him to excavate and take them away and cause them to be worked, etc. The language is clear and express—after making such examinations and tests, only “then” was he authorized “to dig, carry away, and cause to be worked such of the.substances there found.”

[491]*491Significance is attached, to this precedent condition by the fact that, notwithstanding the plaintiff had already prospected on the premises, had discovered iron pyrites and traced a vein of it there, the parties interpose it as something still to be done by the plaintiff, before the vesting of any rights connected with the premises or the ores or minerals there; and from the further fact that, from the fulfillment of this condition results the only security to Spaulding against damaging results to follow abortive and fruitless occupation of and excavations on his premises. Further significance is attached to it, too, by the fact that at the time of the agreement, the parties believed that ultimate rights of entry and excavation might extend to Spaulding’s entire farm. A personal trust is reposed in plaintiff, with the expectation of gain as an incentive to its faithful execution.

Sulphur is the valuable ingredient in iron pyri'es, and assay or analysis is necessary to determine its presence in remunerative quantities.

It is not pretended that plaintiff ever made this test. He expressly says he never removed any ore, and did nothing more than to look at such specimens as he found on the premises. As a consequence he was never qualified to exercise the option, the election, the agreement gave him—to go on after testing and finding pyrites in paying quantities, excavate, remove and cause it to be worked, etc. Further, he never, either by word or deed, exercised or assumed to exercise his election. And until election he had no rights incident to the development of the ores, removing them, working them, or in an manner handling them or disposing of their products. It is to keep in view that the agreement imposes no obligation whatever to exercise any rights it confers. The plaintiff might do, or refrain from doing, either as to testing, or, alter having successfully tested, might abandon all further action or purpose. His election would determine all.

It is true, as the evidence in the case discloses, that, at the time the agreement was made, a valuable mine of pyrites existed on the premises. It might be predicated, perhaps, with entire plausibility, that had the fact been known to, or believed by the parties, they would have dispensed with the preliminary “test” intended to develop the fact. Are we at liberty now to disregard it? I think not. By a course of reasoning, which in the nature of things must be necessarily speculative, to divine results as comprehensive as parties had in view, and disregard in their attainment, specific precedent conditions clearly expressed, would be beyond the province of judicature and violative of fundamental principles. The distinction is kept in view between investiture and forfeiture of rights. And even conceding that substantial performance satisfies c -nditions precedent, yet the plaintiff made no attempt at fulfillment

The plaintiff cites cases in our own and in the Pennsylvania courts to show the divisibility of estates as they relate to lands or minerals respectively, and in illustration of conveyances of absolute title and property as incident to the usufruct. Though his positions in these respects are indisputable, the cases may be referred to as valuable elucidation of the rules of construction.

In Caldwell v. Copeland, (37 Penn., 427), the grantee, in a conveyance under seal, claimed the fee in a coal mine under these words in a conveyance, “ also the full right, title and privilege of digging and taking away stone coal to any extent the said grantee may think proper to do or cause to be done," etc.

This was held to convey a fee in the mine, as being the intention of parties, and not merely an incorporeal hereditament or license to enter and take the coal. The ruling was approved by the same court in Caldwell v. Fulton (31 Penn., 478).

The language here which the court construed as expressing an intention to convey, is clear cut and as expressive as any terms that could be used, short of “ do sell or do convey ” They give absolute dominion over the property.

In Funk v. Huldeman

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Vandenburgh v. Van Bergen
13 Johns. 212 (New York Supreme Court, 1816)
Jackson ex dem. Valkenburgh v. Van Buren
13 Johns. 525 (New York Supreme Court, 1816)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 N.Y. St. Rep. 488, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cahoon-v-bellinger-nysupct-1888.