Goss v. Woodland Fire Brick Co.

4 Pa. Super. 167, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 103
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 17, 1897
DocketAppeal, No. 36
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 4 Pa. Super. 167 (Goss v. Woodland Fire Brick Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goss v. Woodland Fire Brick Co., 4 Pa. Super. 167, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 103 (Pa. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinion

Opinion by

Orlady, J.,

On June 30, 1888, Jesse Goss leased, demised and granted unto Zeigler & Martyn, their executors, administrators and assigns, by a written agreement, duly executed and recorded, all the stone and mineral generally known as fire clay, including all its different kinds and varieties, together with all the stone, clay and other mineral underlying the entire surface of a tract of land containing fifty-one acres, described by courses and disstanees, for and during the term of twenty years then next ensuing. The manner of operation, payment of royalty, rights of the lessees to purchase during the term, or renew at its expiration, provisions for ownership of improvements made on the property, and forfeiture under violations, were fully set out in the agreement, which was without limitation of the lessees’ right to sell, transfer and assign their interest in it.

On September 6, 1888, Martjm assigned all his interest in the lease to J. M. Troxell. On October 26, 1888, Zeigler assigned all his interest in the lease to the same person, both of which assignments were acknowledged and placed on record.

[170]*170The interest in the leasehold estate, the improvements and the personal property necessary for its operation as a fire clay works, then owned hy Troxell, were taken in execution by the sheriff of Clearfield county and sold to the Woodland Fire Brick Company, Limited, on March 4, 1891.

This purchaser took possession of the premises after the sale, mined clay, paid the royalty .thereon and performed all the conditions mentioned in the lease until October, 1894. On October 27, 1894, the Woodland Fire Brick Company, Limited, sold, assigned^ transferred and set over to Aaron Peters all its rights, title, and interest in and to the lease and messuage therein described aiid term yet to go, for the consideration of 125.00 which was paid, and possession of the property surrendered by the appellee and delivered to Peters; after which date the mines were not operated. This action of assumpsit was brought by Jesse Goss to recover the royalties due for the months following October, 1894.

■ On the trial, when the secretary for the limited partnership was on the stand, being called by the defendant, the plaintiff proposed to ask on cross-examination, “whether the-company did not consult counsel how it or they could get rid of the liability to pay the royalty under this lease to the plaintiff, and that they were advised to transfer it to someone; and to show further by the cross-examination of this witness that the real purpose of the transfer was to avoid payment of the royalty and to prevent Mr. Goss, the plaintiff, from collecting the same from the defendant company.” (First assignment of error.)

“And whether or not he did not know at that time, and whether the company did not know that Aaron Peters was insolvent, and whether the purpose of assigning this lease to him was to prevent Jesse Goss from collecting his royalty from the defendant company, and also to ask him the further question whether the defendant company did not assign the lease to Aaron Peters for the reason that they wanted to avoid further payment of royalty to Jesse Goss, the plaintiff, under the lease, this for the purpose of showing that the assignment or transfer to Aaron Peters is fraudulent and void as against Jesse Goss.” (Second assignment of error.)

By other witnesses plaintiff offered to prove “ that on the 27th of October, 1894, when the defendant transferred this lease to Aaron Peters, the leasehold interest was worth a much [171]*171larger amount of money, and that L. A. Ross, a stockholder of the defendant company, and its mine superintendent, tried to sell the leasehold interest to witness on more than one occasion at a large price, this for the purpose of showing, in connection with the proof already in the case, .that there was a large amount of clay in sight, that the transfer on the 27th of October, 1894, was in fraud of Jesse Goss, the plaintiff, and intended only to defeat and hinder him from collecting further royalty from defendant, and to avoid any further liability under the lease under which they had taken possession and enjoyed the property from March 4,1891, to the 27th of October, 1894.” (Third assignment of error.)

And by same witness “ that a short time prior to the transfer of the lease to Aaron Peters, the defendant company tried to sell it, with the improvements, etc., to witness at the sum of $8,000, and subsequently for $5,500, and in fact the interest was worth much more than $25.00, the amount for which it was ostensibly transferred to Peters; that at the time of the transfer to Peters he did not own any real estate, and was largely in debt, and in fact was insolvent, and also to prove, if it has not already been proven, that Peters was an employee of the defendant company at the time of the transfer to him, and is now an employee. This with the other testimony already in the case is offered to prove that the assignment by the defendant company was intended to avoid the further payment of royalties to Goss, the plaintiff, and prevent him from collecting the same from them, and to show that the transaction is fraudulent in law and void.” (Fourth assignment of error.)

The several offers were met by the defendant, first, as incompetent and irrelevant; second, as not competent or material for the purpose stated, and were excluded on the following ruling by the court: “ I am of the opinion that under the authority of Borland’s Appeal, 66 Pa., 470, Washington Natural Gas Company v. Johnson, 123 Pa. 576, and Fennell v. Guffey, 139 Pa. 341, the proposed evidence is not admissible. The defendant’s liability is not by virtue of any privity of contract between them, but is one based solely upon the privity of estate which arises upon their acquisition of title to the leasehold estate in-question by purchase at sheriff’s sale and possession taken in pursuance thereof. The liability continued only during defend[172]*172ant’s ownership and possession, and ceased when they parted with the title. Such being the law the purpose of parting with the title is immaterial. There is no allegation of actual fraud being perpetrated upon the plaintiff by defendant. The proposed evidence does not in my opinion constitute fraud. The claim in suit being for rent or royalty accruing after defendants had parted with their title, the proposed evidence is immaterial.”

The royalty named in the lease was 25 cents for each and every ton of 2240 pounds weight merchantable fire clay, and by one of the covenants it was provided that the parties of the second part “shall pay the aforesaid royalty during the first year of the operation of this indenture on at least 3,000 tons of fire clay and thereafter each year on at least 6,000 tons.”

The sole question under the offers was as to the character of evidence suggested by them to make the appellee liable for the royalty on the minimum mentioned after the lease had been transferred and possession delivered.

• The purpose, as disclosed, was to show that the transfer was for the purpose of hindering and delaying Goss in the collection of royalty, and that it was fraudulent in law and void.

The lease when executed was left open for transfer without notice to or assent of the lessor, and the assignment to Troxell or the sale of his interest by the sheriff to the appellee did not change in any way the extent of any covenant under the lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Pa. Super. 167, 1897 Pa. Super. LEXIS 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goss-v-woodland-fire-brick-co-pasuperct-1897.