Consolidated Coal Co. v. Schmisseur

25 N.E. 795, 135 Ill. 371
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 5, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 25 N.E. 795 (Consolidated Coal Co. v. Schmisseur) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consolidated Coal Co. v. Schmisseur, 25 N.E. 795, 135 Ill. 371 (Ill. 1890).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Shops

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The principal question presented by this record is, whether a case is made by appellee that will give a court of equity jurisdiction to interfere, by injunction, to prevent appellant from using the entries, shaft and leased ground upon her land to transport and hoist coal taken from the adjoining lands owned by appellant. Four separate grounds of equitable jurisdiction are relied upon, viz: First, that the acts of appellant in driving entries through the coal on appellee’s land to coal upon the adjoining tracts, and taking coal therefrom through such entries and out at such shaft, is a fraud upon appellee, in that it extends the lease and postpones the enjoyment of the reversion of the eleven acres of land included in the lease for a longer time than would occur if appellant mined all coal hoisted at the shaft, or sold at or shipped from said mines, from the coal underlying appellee’s land; second, that such acts of appellant are in violation of the contract under which it holds, and in breach of its covenants, being a use of the land of appellee for a purpose other and different than that provided for in said contract; third, that" said acts of appellant, if permitted, will result in irreparable injury; and fourth, that the interposition of equity is justified to prevent a multiplicity of suits.

In respect of the first ground urged, it must be said that there are no facts or circumstances alleged or proved which are sufficient to charge appellant with fraud in fact. By the contract, appellee sold, absolutely, the coal under her land for a gross sum, reserving no royalty or other interest therein. That part of the clause of the contract relating to a lease of the surface of the land of appellee involved here is as follows: “And for the purpose of enabling said Schuremans to sink pits or shafts and successfully mine and remove said coal, said Schmisseur hereby leases unto them, and to their legal representatives, for the term of thirty-five years, (unless the said coal shall be sooner exhausted, in which event said lease and the right to mine said coal shall cease and expire,) the following,” etc. Then follows a description, by metes and bounds, of the tract comprising the eleven acres.

In our judgment the contract is susceptible of no other construction than that the grantees and their assigns have the whole term of thirty-five years in which to mine and remove the coal underlying appellee’s land, without limitation or restriction. The condition is, simply, that if they shall, before the expiration of the term, exhaust the coal, possession is to be surrendered. Appellee might have imposed terms requiring exhaustion of the coal as rapidly as it could be mined, or that a stipulated amount should be taken out per month or per year, or some like provision; but she did not do so. The contract is wholly silent upon that subject, and contains no provision requiring the removal of the coal before the end of the term. It can not justly be said that appellant, in availing itself of its right under the contract to mine the coal under her land at any time within the term limited, is guilty of fraud, or that its conduct in that respect is in fraud of any right of appellee. It might well be that a very important element of the value of the purchase of the Schuremans consisted in the right they thereby acquired of controlling the mine and holding the coal for future use. Appellee, for a sum'in gross, parted with all her right to the coal, and granted a fixed term in which it might be removed, and can not now complain that her grantees or their, assigns are exercising the right which was purchased and paid for.

It is insisted, and with much force, that a court of equity-should interfere, by way of injunction, to prevent appellant from using its entries and the pit and shaft upon the leased premises for the purpose of removing and delivering coal mined upon its adjacent lands, for the reason, as is alleged, that it is in violation of the contract, and a breach of its conditions. Where a contract of leasing is certain, and the use of the demised premises for a specified purpose is clearly fixed by the agreement of parties, the appropriation of the premises to a use inconsistent with that for which they were demised will frequently afford ground for the interposition of a court of equity by way of injunction; and it is well settled, that whenever the use to which premises are sought to be appropriated is inconsistent with the purposes for which they were let, and the change.will operate to the injury of the lessor, the aid of such court may properly be invoked. In respect of purely negative covenants annexed to or contained in contracts or leases, courts of equity will frequently interpose by injunction, and indirectly enforce specific performance of such negative covenants by prohibiting their breach; and it seems to be well settled, that where there is an express negative covenant,' courts of equity will entertain bills for injunction to prevent their breach, although the same will occasion no substantial injury, or though the damages, if any, be recoverable at law. This is upon the principle that the owner of land "selling or leasing it may insert in his deed or contract just such conditions and covenants as he pleases touching the mode of enjoyment and use of the land. As said in Steward v. Winters, 4 Sandf. Ch. 587: “He is not to be defeated, when the covenant is broken, by the opinion of any number of persons that the breach occasions him no substantial injury. He has a right to define the injury for himself, and the party contracting with him must abide by the definition.” (Hill v. Miller, 3 Paige, 254; Macher v. Foundling Hospital, 1 Ver. & B. 188; High on Injunctions, 1142.) In this latter class of cases the court proceeds upon the ground that the grantor or lessor having expressly stipulated that the grantee or lessee shall not do the particular thing complained of, the latter is bound- to refrain, and the former is not required to submit to the opinions of others as to whether he will or will not suffer "substantial injury.

Cases are much more rare, perhaps, where a court of equity lias interfered to prevent the breach of a negative covenant which is implied from a positive stipulation. It is said by Wood, Vice-Chancellor, in Petto et al. v. B. N. & T. Ry. Co. L. J. (N. S.) Eq. 32: “But in a case where the special contract is relied upon, and the negative is inferred from the positive contract, I think the case is weaker than where there is a distinctly negative contract, standing by itself; and the cases of DeMatto v. Gibson, 3 DeGex & J. 276, (28 L. J. R. Ch. 165,) and Lumley v. Wagner, 1 DeGex & G. 604, are, so fár as I am aware, the only instances in which the court has exercised such a jurisdiction.” The question in Lumley v. Wagner was, as we understand the case, not so much whether a negative covenant should be implied from Wagner’s contract to sing, etc., for Lumley, and she be restrained from the breach of such implied negative covenant, but whether the court- would restrain her from singing elsewhere, when it could not compel her to perform her covenants with Lumley by singing under his management.

We have been referred to no case holding that a court of equity would exercise its jurisdiction to prevent a breach of a negative covenant unless it was express, or could fairly be implied from the stipulation of the parties, and injury would result to the complainant by its breach.

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Bluebook (online)
25 N.E. 795, 135 Ill. 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consolidated-coal-co-v-schmisseur-ill-1890.