Graff Furnace Co. v. Scranton Coal Co.

91 A. 508, 244 Pa. 592, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 812
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 30, 1914
DocketAppeal, No. 56
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 91 A. 508 (Graff Furnace Co. v. Scranton Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Graff Furnace Co. v. Scranton Coal Co., 91 A. 508, 244 Pa. 592, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 812 (Pa. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Mesteezat,

This is a bill in equity filed by the owner of the surface to restrain the owner of the underlying mineral estate from mining and removing the mineral without leaving or erecting sufficient pillars and artificial supports to protect the surface of the land.

The Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company was the owner in fee of all the coal and surface of certain large tracts of land located on the west side of the City of Scranton, and on February 3, 1891, by warranty deed in fee simple, conveyed all the coal and minerals beneath the surface of the land to the Lackawanna Iron and Steel Company, “together with also all the rights of the said party of the first part to mine and remove the said coal herein conveyed by any subterranean process [595]*595incident to the business of mining, with the right to open mine and air shafts in any portion of the surface not sold and-conveyed, but not the right to. open any mine or air shaft upon any part of the surface which may be hereafter conveyed by the said party of, the first part before said mine or air shaft is opened.” On February 1, 1899, the Steel Company conveyed to the defendant, the Scranton Coal Company, in fee simple all the coal and minerals beneath the surface of the lands together with the mining rights described in the deed of February, 1891.

After disposing of its mineral estate in the tracts of land to the steel company in 1891, the coal company sold from time to time certain parcels of the surface. About four acres of the surface, now owned by the plaintiff in this case, were sold to John Timmes and Herbert Hecht by deed dated November 23, 1900, which contains the following exception and reservation: “Excepting and reserving......all the coal and minerals beneath the surface......of said lot, with the sole right to mine and remove the same by any subterranean process incident to the business of mining,......without thereby incurring in any event whatever any liability for injury caused or damage done to the surface of said lot or to the buildings or improvements which now are or hereafter may be put thereon; and the party of the second part, for themselves, their heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, does hereby expressly release and discharge forever the said party of the first part, its successors and assigns, and all persons who may have derived title to said coal or other minerals from said party of the first part of and from any liability for any injury that may result to the surface of said premises, or anything erected or placed thereon, from the mining or removal of said coal or other minerals,” etc. The conveyance to the plaintiff recites the deed to Timmes and Hecht and contains the following clause: “This convey[596]*596anee is made subject to all exceptions, reservations and conditions in said deeds mentioned.”

The plaintiff company has a manufacturing plant or foundry on its premises, and the defendant has mined and removed coal from underneath the plaintiff’s land without providing absolute support which has resulted in injury to the surface. The defendant proposes to continue its mining operations under the plaintiff’s land which will result in further injury to the surface. The learned court below refused the injunction and dismissed the bill, holding that the plaintiff took title to the surface subject to the exception, reservation and condition contained in the deed to Timmes and Hecht, waiving the right to surface support. The plaintiff company has appealed.

It has long been settled in this State that where there is a separation of the minerals from the surface the owner of the mineral estate owes a servitude of sufficient support to the superincumbent estate. That principle was announced in Jones v. Wagner, 66 Pa. 429, nearly a half century ago, and it has since been uniformly recognized and enforced. Equally true, however, is it that the owner in fee of the entire estate may grant the mineral estate and by apt words in the deed of conveyance may part with or release his right to surface support, and where he does so his grantee or those claiming through him may mine all the coal even though it should result in the surface falling in. The owner of the entire estate may likewise grant the surface of the land and reserve the mineral estate with the right to mine and remove it without liability for any injury or damage done to the surface, and in such case the grantor or those claiming through him may mine and remove all the coal without being compelled to support the surface. These rights of the owners of the servient and superincumbent estates in land are settled by numerous and some very recent decisions of this court.

We do not deem it necessary to determine whether the [597]*597grant to the steel company released or waived the right of surface support, as we agree with the learned court below that this controversy turns upon the clause in the Timmes and Hecht deed subject to which the plaintiff took its title. It is conceded that if this clause had been contained in the deed from the coal company to the steel company the present owner of the coal would have the right to mine and remove it all regardless of the effect of the mining operations on the surface. This, we understand, is not denied. The clause not only excepts all the coal and minerals beneath the surface but also the right to remove the coal without incurring any liability for injury done to the surface, and also contains a release and discharge from any liability for any injury that may result to the premises or anything thereon from the mining and removal of the coal. Under all our authorities this clause would exempt the coal operator from liability for any injury done to the surface and any buildings thereon in mining and removing the coal.

It is contended by the plaintiff, however, that the clause in the deed of the coal company to Timmes and Hecht is illegal and void because (1) it is as broad as the grant and destructive of it, (2) it is within the statute of frauds, (3) it would have the effect of causing a valuable right to be lost. We are not convinced, however, that either of these reasons can be successfully invoked here against the grantor or those holding the mineral estate under it to prevent injury to the surface by mining operations. The effect of holding with the plaintiff would be to ignore not only the rights in the surface specifically excepted and retained by the grantor in the conveyance of the surface but would give to the plaintiff company what neither it nor its predecessors in title obtained by their deeds. There is no doubt, and the plaintiff company could have had none when it took its title, that the deed did not convey the right to surface support. It is wholly immaterial whether the common grantor of the parties holding re[598]*598spectively the surface and the coal still retained the right of surface support or whether it had passed to the owner of the coal. The important fact is that it never passed to the plaintiff nor its predecessors, in title. The deed of the coal company to Timmes and Hecht excepted from the grant in apt words all the coal and minerals with the right to the support of the surface, and in equally appropriate language released the grantor company and those claiming under it from any liability for injury to the surface by reason of the removal of all the coal.

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Bluebook (online)
91 A. 508, 244 Pa. 592, 1914 Pa. LEXIS 812, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graff-furnace-co-v-scranton-coal-co-pa-1914.