Corona Coal Co. v. Thomas

101 So. 673, 212 Ala. 56, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 87
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedOctober 23, 1924
Docket6 Div. 215.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 101 So. 673 (Corona Coal Co. v. Thomas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Corona Coal Co. v. Thomas, 101 So. 673, 212 Ala. 56, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 87 (Ala. 1924).

Opinion

BOULDIN, J.

The suit is to recover damages to the owners of lands, resulting from underground coal mining operations by the owner or lessee of the mineral and mining privileges. The injury complained of is the causing of fissures or partings in the surface, and drying up a well of water used for family and farm purposes.

The chief controversy of fact was whether the mining operations causing the injury *58 were conducted by defendant' or another company. It is without dispute that prior to August, 1917, the mines were operated by Corona Coal & Iron Company, and thereafter by.Corona Coal Company, this defendant, a different corporation. The plaintiffs’ contention is that the coal was mined under their lands after August, 1917, and the defendant’s contention is that all the coal was mined out prior to that date. The injury developed in 1921.

John R. Pill, witness for defendant, testified he was employed and took charge of the mines as mining engineer of the former company March 1, 1912; that at that time the mining operations had reached the line of plaintiffs’ lands; and that the balance of the coal under their lands was mined prior to August, 1917. Witness identified a map of the mines, which was later introduced in evidence, and testified the map was made in March, 1912, to show where the workings were at the time he took charge, and that he checked up the map at the time and found it correct. The record then recites:

“Defendant’s attorney then propounded to the witness the following question:
“Q. Well you were there under the ground?
“Witness answered:
“A. Yes, sir; I had the references and record receipts we put on the record.
“Plaintiff objected to the foregoing question and answer on the ground that it was irrelevant, incompetent, and immaterial, and it was not shown that he made it and that shows that somebody else did make it, and, further, because the contents of the receipts would not be evidence. The court sustained the objections, to which action of the court the defendant then and there duly excepted.
“Witness continued:
“I checked up those surveys and found that it had been mined prior to August, 1917.”

This ruling. is urged as reversible error. There is presented a question of practice, involving the rights and .duties of the parties and the duty of the trial court, which should be clearly settled and defined. The question sought to show a personal inspection and knowledge on the part of the witness. It called for a direct answer, Yes, or No. The testimony called for was pertinent, and not subject to any of the objections made. The answer of the witness was in part direct and responsive, and in part irresponsive and subject to the objections made.

The objections were to the question and answer, a^ a whole, upon general grounds, and on special grounds directed to the bad portion of the answer. The bad portion was easily severable and subject to objection apart from the good. The ruling was general, resulting in excluding both the good and the bad.

The rule is'well known that an objection to evidence as a whole, part of which is good, may be overruled in toto. The court is under no duty to differentiate for the parties, and exclude the bad portion on such objection. What is the proper rule, in case the court excludes the good with the bad on such objection?

It appears that, if a party draws out testimony, good and bad, which is responsive to his question, an objection being made, it is proper for him to advise the court the bad portion is not insisted upon. Otherwise the court may assume that he wishes the testimony in as a whole, and invites a ruling on that assumption. A party has a right to such ruling, if he so elects. If the court holds the evidence not good as a whole, and he then wishes to get in the good, we think the court should be so advised, and a ruling invited thereon. This seems to make the rule operate mutually and fairly on both parties. Neither can expect the court to direct the conduct of the cause in that regard. It must be noted here that the bad portion of the answer was not responsive to the question. This could only be taken advantage of by the examining party. If not withdrawn or objected to by him, this is an election to treat it as pertinent. There was no intimation here that defendant desired the statement that the witness went underground to be severed from the objec-tionable portion of the answer, and remain before the jury. Rather the question following the court’s ruling indicated a desire to make the entire answer available. We do not find reversible error in these rulings.

Charge A, given at the request of plaintiffs, is as follows:

“If you are reasonably satisfied from the evidence in this case that the plaintiffs were the owner and in possession of the lands described in the complaint as last amended, and if you are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that the defendant mined or removed the coal from under áaid lands or from under a part of the same, and if you are reasonably satisfied from the evidence that within one year prior to the filing of this complaint the surface of said lands cracked or broke, damaging the same, and that said crack or break in said surface was proximately caused by the removing or mining of said coal, then your verdict should be for the plaintiff.”

The objection raised to this charge is that it fails to postulate that the defendant was.the owner or lessee of the minerals and mining privileges, one of the averments of the complaint.

In Sloss-Sheffield S. & I. Co. v. Sampson, 158 Ala. 590, 48 So. 493, it was held that a complaint for injuries to the soil by mines operated thereunder should state whether the mining was done by a trespasser or by one having a right. In that case the complaint merely averred the ownership of the lands in plaintiff. The averment was necessary to define the nature of the action the defendant was called upon to defend. In the case at bar it is averred in the complaint, *59 and the proof shows without conflict, that plaintiffs were not the owners of the mineral and mining rights. These were severed and reserved in the conveyance under which they hold. The averment that defendant was the owner or lessee of these rights, if material at all in the case at bar, operated merely as an admission of defendant’s right, rendering proof unnecessary on that point.

Moreover, the evidence was without dispute that defendant was in actual possession of the mines, operating them at the time complained of and for some years prior thereto. The only controversy was whether it mined under plaintiffs’ lands during that time. Possession is evidence of ownership.

It is not necessary for written instructions to postulate admitted facts, or facts shown without dispute in the cause. Charge B, given for plaintiffs, reads:

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Related

Nichols v. Woodward Iron Company
103 So. 2d 319 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1958)
H. W. Peerson Drilling Company v. Scoggins
74 So. 2d 450 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1954)
Tennessee Coal, Iron Railroad Co. v. Aycock
28 So. 2d 417 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1946)
Republic Steel Corporation v. Stracner
21 So. 2d 690 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1945)
Sloss-Sheffield Steel & Iron Co. v. Wilkes
165 So. 764 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1936)
Phillips v. Sipsey Coal Mining Co.
118 So. 513 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1928)
Leahy v. State
106 So. 599 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1925)
Earnest v. Corona Coal Co.
102 So. 445 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1924)

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Bluebook (online)
101 So. 673, 212 Ala. 56, 1924 Ala. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/corona-coal-co-v-thomas-ala-1924.