DAYTON, District Judge.
Sifted out of the mass of evidence taken, the facts involved in this controversy are substantially these:
Some time before January, 1887, A. H. Winchester had been engaged as agent for W. S. Dewing & Sons, in purchasing titles to large bodies of lands, situate on Shavers fork of Cheat river, in Randolph and Pocahontas counties, this state. These purchases had by that time reached an aggregate of about 50,000 acres. The nearest railroad station to these lands was then at Philippi, 54 miles away. They comprised many miles of unbroken forest. Winchester met Wm. Seymour Edwards at Beverly, attending to some legal business, and induced him to ride homeward with him through these lands. They discussed the fine opportunities for fishing and hunting presented by this almost trackless wilderness. The result was the organization and incorporation of the “Sportsman’s Association of Cheat Mountain,” in which Edwards interested a large number of prominent men at Pitts-burg, Pa.j and elsewhere, and the execution, acknowledgment, and recordation of tire contract set forth in full in the margin,1 [197]*197between Winchester and the association, subsequently ratified by Dewing, and subject to which these lands are held to-day by the West Virginia Pulp & Paper Company, a Delaware corporation. The “Sportsman’s Association of Cheat Mountain” was succeeded through purchase by the “Cheat Mountain Club,” a corporation under the laws of this state. This contract was not without very valuable consideration to its grantors. Land titles in that section were in an unsettled condition, and to have a large boundary like this held under one lease, by a tenant who, at its own expense, would erect buildings. thereon and make such clearing and improvements as would meet the law’s requirements in establishing adverse possession, was very desirable. This Sportsman’s Association, incorporated, did make improvements to the extent of probably $25,000. They built roads, paths, camps, a fish hatchery, outbuildings and a clubhouse, with a superintendent’s dwelling house attached thereto. Winchester was present and insisted upon his selection of the site for this clubhouse, and his suggestion in regard thereto was adopted. He substantially indicated and marked out the ground that should be occupied. This ground embraced about 10 or 12 acres, and was sufficient for the clubhouse, outbuildings, and fish hatchery to stand upon, and also to furnish an acre garden and pasture for a couple of cows and a couple of horses. The necessity for keeping this stock was apparent.
The original association, at least partially, cleared out this 10 acres of ground, and it and its successor were allowed full and peaceable enjoyment thereof and of the buildings thereon until the‘27th of March, 1912, some 25 years after the execution of the lease, when Slaymaker, defendant’s manager, by letter notified the latter that:
“We expect, from now on, to use our property on wliicli the clubhouse Is located, including the meadow lands south of where the clubhouse stands, and we therefore beg to inclose you a copy of the original lease made by A. H. Winchester, * * * and especially call your attention to the fact that [198]*198this lease only gives to the association the right to hunt, protect, and propagate game and game fish on the lands. * * * You will notice in this lease that the association has the-right and privilege of building private roads into, out of, over, and across the lands covered by that lease, together with the right to use water, the right to cut timber upon said lands and use the same for the purpose of building one or more camps or lodges, and to use the same, rent free, when built, together with the right to take coal and wood from the lands for domestic use for said camps and lodges. We call your special attention to the fact that this lease reserves to the owners of the land the right to prevent unnecessary injury or waste to the property over which the lease was given, and the rights and privileges conveyed by that lease were in no way to interfere with, limit, or hinder the owners in their operations as lumbermen, farmers, or grazers. AVe would therefore notify you that we expect to take charge of all of the improved land around and near the clubhouse, and to clear additional lands in that section, and we cannot allow any timber to be taken from our property for the purpose of repairing or rebuilding the clubhouse.”
In addition to this Shaffer, defendant’s superintendent, informed Degler, the club’s superintendent, that there was no use going ahead with the fish hatchery or with improvements, as the company expected to utilize all that land. Then the defendant built its railroad for lumbering purposes along the stream on which the fish hatchery was located, built its lumber camps, wherein some 75 men lived, its stables, and hog lot on its banks, and took possession of something over 2 acres of the 10 or 12 that had been used in connection with the clubhouse, plowed them up, and planted them in potatoes. From all which and other evidence in the cause, it is very manifest that this defendant had become tired of this tenant of 25 years standing, holding this large boundary of 50,000 acres in open, notorious, and adverse possession for it and its predecessors in title at an expense of many thousands of dollars, and wanted to get rid of it as speedily as possible, and to this end, after 25 years of liberal treatment, it became the strictest of strict constructionists and stands on what its manager conceives to be the very letter of its bond.
The plaintiff thereupon filed its bill in the circuit court'of Randolph county, seeking an injunction against the defendant’s pollution of the stream upon which its fish hatchery was situate, against the destruction of its roads and paths into, out of, and over the property, and from interference with the 10 or 12 acres used by it for so many years in connection with its -clubhouse. That court announced its purpose to grant a temporary injunction as prayed for, but before doing so the defendant filed its petition and bond and the cause was removed to this court. Here application was made for a temporary injunction, but, the defendant having promptly filed its answer, denying most of the allegations of the bill and insisting upon its manager’s construction of the lease, I declined to grant such temporary injunction, reserving all action until final hearing’upon the merits.
[1] There can be no reasonable doubt from the evidence that the defendant polluted the stream upon which the fish hatchery was situated and from which it drew its water supply. Horse, hog, and human excrement, as well as tin cans, ashes, and kitchen refuse, were deposited in it. The personal examination of the state fish and game warden and his evidence in the case' seems to me clearly to establish [199]*199that such matter was destructive of the trout which the plaintiff was seeking to propagate in its hatchery. While such pollution, by express statute in this state, is prohibited and made subject to criminal prose.cution (State v. Southern Coal & Transportation Co. [W. Va.] 76 S. E. 970), yet it being clearly shown by the evidence that the plaintiff is specially damaged in the destruction of its fish and in the operation of its private hatchery, admittedly authorized to be maintained under the terms of the lease, I do not think the remedy by indictment is exclusive, but that injunction will and must be maintained at the instance of plaintiff to stay further pollution and destruction.
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DAYTON, District Judge.
Sifted out of the mass of evidence taken, the facts involved in this controversy are substantially these:
Some time before January, 1887, A. H. Winchester had been engaged as agent for W. S. Dewing & Sons, in purchasing titles to large bodies of lands, situate on Shavers fork of Cheat river, in Randolph and Pocahontas counties, this state. These purchases had by that time reached an aggregate of about 50,000 acres. The nearest railroad station to these lands was then at Philippi, 54 miles away. They comprised many miles of unbroken forest. Winchester met Wm. Seymour Edwards at Beverly, attending to some legal business, and induced him to ride homeward with him through these lands. They discussed the fine opportunities for fishing and hunting presented by this almost trackless wilderness. The result was the organization and incorporation of the “Sportsman’s Association of Cheat Mountain,” in which Edwards interested a large number of prominent men at Pitts-burg, Pa.j and elsewhere, and the execution, acknowledgment, and recordation of tire contract set forth in full in the margin,1 [197]*197between Winchester and the association, subsequently ratified by Dewing, and subject to which these lands are held to-day by the West Virginia Pulp & Paper Company, a Delaware corporation. The “Sportsman’s Association of Cheat Mountain” was succeeded through purchase by the “Cheat Mountain Club,” a corporation under the laws of this state. This contract was not without very valuable consideration to its grantors. Land titles in that section were in an unsettled condition, and to have a large boundary like this held under one lease, by a tenant who, at its own expense, would erect buildings. thereon and make such clearing and improvements as would meet the law’s requirements in establishing adverse possession, was very desirable. This Sportsman’s Association, incorporated, did make improvements to the extent of probably $25,000. They built roads, paths, camps, a fish hatchery, outbuildings and a clubhouse, with a superintendent’s dwelling house attached thereto. Winchester was present and insisted upon his selection of the site for this clubhouse, and his suggestion in regard thereto was adopted. He substantially indicated and marked out the ground that should be occupied. This ground embraced about 10 or 12 acres, and was sufficient for the clubhouse, outbuildings, and fish hatchery to stand upon, and also to furnish an acre garden and pasture for a couple of cows and a couple of horses. The necessity for keeping this stock was apparent.
The original association, at least partially, cleared out this 10 acres of ground, and it and its successor were allowed full and peaceable enjoyment thereof and of the buildings thereon until the‘27th of March, 1912, some 25 years after the execution of the lease, when Slaymaker, defendant’s manager, by letter notified the latter that:
“We expect, from now on, to use our property on wliicli the clubhouse Is located, including the meadow lands south of where the clubhouse stands, and we therefore beg to inclose you a copy of the original lease made by A. H. Winchester, * * * and especially call your attention to the fact that [198]*198this lease only gives to the association the right to hunt, protect, and propagate game and game fish on the lands. * * * You will notice in this lease that the association has the-right and privilege of building private roads into, out of, over, and across the lands covered by that lease, together with the right to use water, the right to cut timber upon said lands and use the same for the purpose of building one or more camps or lodges, and to use the same, rent free, when built, together with the right to take coal and wood from the lands for domestic use for said camps and lodges. We call your special attention to the fact that this lease reserves to the owners of the land the right to prevent unnecessary injury or waste to the property over which the lease was given, and the rights and privileges conveyed by that lease were in no way to interfere with, limit, or hinder the owners in their operations as lumbermen, farmers, or grazers. AVe would therefore notify you that we expect to take charge of all of the improved land around and near the clubhouse, and to clear additional lands in that section, and we cannot allow any timber to be taken from our property for the purpose of repairing or rebuilding the clubhouse.”
In addition to this Shaffer, defendant’s superintendent, informed Degler, the club’s superintendent, that there was no use going ahead with the fish hatchery or with improvements, as the company expected to utilize all that land. Then the defendant built its railroad for lumbering purposes along the stream on which the fish hatchery was located, built its lumber camps, wherein some 75 men lived, its stables, and hog lot on its banks, and took possession of something over 2 acres of the 10 or 12 that had been used in connection with the clubhouse, plowed them up, and planted them in potatoes. From all which and other evidence in the cause, it is very manifest that this defendant had become tired of this tenant of 25 years standing, holding this large boundary of 50,000 acres in open, notorious, and adverse possession for it and its predecessors in title at an expense of many thousands of dollars, and wanted to get rid of it as speedily as possible, and to this end, after 25 years of liberal treatment, it became the strictest of strict constructionists and stands on what its manager conceives to be the very letter of its bond.
The plaintiff thereupon filed its bill in the circuit court'of Randolph county, seeking an injunction against the defendant’s pollution of the stream upon which its fish hatchery was situate, against the destruction of its roads and paths into, out of, and over the property, and from interference with the 10 or 12 acres used by it for so many years in connection with its -clubhouse. That court announced its purpose to grant a temporary injunction as prayed for, but before doing so the defendant filed its petition and bond and the cause was removed to this court. Here application was made for a temporary injunction, but, the defendant having promptly filed its answer, denying most of the allegations of the bill and insisting upon its manager’s construction of the lease, I declined to grant such temporary injunction, reserving all action until final hearing’upon the merits.
[1] There can be no reasonable doubt from the evidence that the defendant polluted the stream upon which the fish hatchery was situated and from which it drew its water supply. Horse, hog, and human excrement, as well as tin cans, ashes, and kitchen refuse, were deposited in it. The personal examination of the state fish and game warden and his evidence in the case' seems to me clearly to establish [199]*199that such matter was destructive of the trout which the plaintiff was seeking to propagate in its hatchery. While such pollution, by express statute in this state, is prohibited and made subject to criminal prose.cution (State v. Southern Coal & Transportation Co. [W. Va.] 76 S. E. 970), yet it being clearly shown by the evidence that the plaintiff is specially damaged in the destruction of its fish and in the operation of its private hatchery, admittedly authorized to be maintained under the terms of the lease, I do not think the remedy by indictment is exclusive, but that injunction will and must be maintained at the instance of plaintiff to stay further pollution and destruction.
[2] Touching the question of the obstruction and destruction of the roads built by plaintiff, for which injunction is sought, I do not think it can be granted, for the reason that such obstruction or destruction is clearly shown not to have been done maliciously, but in the defendant’s legitimate lumbering operations, expressly reserved to it under the terms of the lease.
[3] The chief bone of contention in the case is touching the 30 or 12 acres of land surrounding the clubhouse and hatchery, which the plaintiff and its predecessor had been using for so many years, and which had been substantially marked out and assigned for such use by Winchester when the clubhouse site was originally selected. In view of the fact that counsel so radically disagree as to what this lease means in this particular, I think it well to recall some of the hornbook rules applicable to its construction: (a) An agreement should receive ihat construction which will best effectuate the intention of the parties; and (b) such intention of the parties is to be collected from the whole agreement, (c) A contract will, if possible, be construed so as to render it reasonable rather than unreasonable, (d) Greater regard is to be had to the clear intent of the parties than to any particular words which they may have used in the expression of their intent; and (e) if such meaning and intent is not clear, the court will cotisider the circumstances under which the contract was made, the subject-matter, the relation of the parties, and the object of the agreement, in order to ascertain their intention, and for this purpose parol evidence is admissible, (f) Contracts of lease will generally be construed most strongly against the lessor; and (g) in case of doubt, weight will be given the construction placed upon the contract by the parties. Clark on Contracts (1st Ed.) 599 et seq.
Applying these rules to the construction of this lease, will any one reasonably contend that a number of intelligent men would organize a corporation, subject themselves to an expense of near $25,000, build a clubhouse and other buildings in an unbroken forest, miles away from any other habitation and from market, with no right to use a foot of ground except that alone upon which the buildings stood? Is it to be presumed that a lessor having 50,000 acres of land, securing such a tenant, was so jealous of the use of the land as to consider and design such a restriction? The keeping of a couple of cows there, so far away from where milk and butter could be obtained, and the keeping of a couple of horses to get in and out of this wilderness, to build the roads, camps, and lodges provided for by the lease, were [200]*200necessities, and the ground to maintain them upon was likewise. In short, this 10 acres of ground was the necessary curtilage to the clubhouse, hatchery, and other buildings, and the purpose for which the lease was given, and that it was so understood by the parties is clearly shown by two facts: First, that the original lessor, Winchester, marked it out and assigned it as such; and, second, that the owners of the land for 25 years, without objections, allowed it to be used as such. It therefore follows that the taking possession thereof, or any part thereof, against plaintiff’s protest, by the defendant, was and will be unwarranted until this lease is either surrendered or terminated.
Finally, the contention of defendant that no timber can be used for the purpose of repairing the clubhouse is in my judgment untenable. The lease was for 50 years. It expressly provides that timber can be taken for the purpose of building camps and lodges upon the land and to enjoy the same. The term “lodge,” used in this lease, is broad enough to include the building called the “clubhouse,” and defendant’s construction of the lease would therefore involve the absurdity that the plaintiff could take timber to build a new house, but not the lesser quantity required to repair and maintain the old.
The plaintiff is entitled to the relief prayed for in its bill in the particulars herein set out, and decree will be entered accordingly.