Jackson v. Gunton

26 Pa. Super. 203, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 293
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 17, 1904
DocketAppeal, No. 16
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 Pa. Super. 203 (Jackson v. Gunton) 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
Jackson v. Gunton, 26 Pa. Super. 203, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 293 (Pa. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

In their first .statement the plaintiffs declared that the defendant broke and entered their close, “ that is to say, a certain coal mine or vein of coal,” described by metes and bounds, and mined and removed therefrom 3,500 tons of coal of the value of $1,750, and converted the same to his use, without the consent of the owners, the defendant then1 and there well knowing that the close and the coal therein were not his property, but that the coal was the exclusive property of the plaintiffs. The statement concluded as follows : “ And other wrongs to the said plaintiffs then and there did, contrary to the form [208]*208of the acts of assembly in such cases made and provided, etc., .... to the damage of the said plaintiffs in the sum of $5,250, therefore they bring this suit.”

After the cause had been arbitrated and an award made in the plaintiffs’ favor, from which the defendant had appealed, the plaintiffs by leave of court filed an amended statement of claim, and still later a second amended statement. As to the coal mined, removed and converted the latter statement concluded as follows : “ And the plaintiffs aver that this was done contrary to the act of assembly approved May 8,1876, P. L. 142, and that therefore it is to the damage of the plaintiffs treble the value of the coal so dug, mined and converted to the use of the said defendant, to wit: the sum of five thousand two hundred and fifty dollars.” The other averments of this statement, so far as they concern the locus in quo, the quantity and value of the coal mined, removed and converted, and the essentials to a recovery of treble damages under the act of 1876, do not differ substantially from those of the first statement, and they plainly relate to the same trespass. Nor was the cause of action charged by the above quoted clause in the second amended statement relative to treble damages; the purpose and effect of this change in the mode of stating the cause of action were simply to make clear what was manifestly intended, but, perhaps, was defectively stated, in the first statement, namely, that the plaintiffs claimed to recover, by virtue of the provisions of the act of 1876, three times the value of the coal mined, removed and converted to his use by the defendant. The case of Fairchild v. Dunbar Furnace Co., 128 Pa. 485, upon which the appellant’s counsel confidently rely, is plainly distinguishable from the case at bar upon two grounds: First, because the original declaration was for a trespass at common law, and that alone, and contained no claim, direct or inferential, of damages under the statute; secondly, because the amendment, whereby a right to recover treble damages under the statute was asserted, was not made within six years from the date when the right accrued. .

But in the second amended statement there is an additional allegation that the defendant “ did so mine the coal taken out as aforesaid as to injure and render less valuable the vein or veins of coal from which he mined, and to cause the plaintiffs [209]*209to lose great quantities of coal, thus causing the said plaintiffs great damage, to wit: the sum of six thousand dollars.” The cause of action is the particular matter for which the suit is brought, and when the object of an amendment is not to forsake this, but to adhere to it and effect a recovery upon it, it is .the duty of the court, when the merits of the case cannot otherwise be reached, to permit the amendment: Erie City Iron-Works v. Barber, 118 Pa. 6. This rule is not restricted to actions ex contractu. In actions ex delicto the rule is the same ; the foundation of the complaint laid in the declaration must be adhered to, although the mode of stating that complaint, or of setting out the circumstances and consequences of the injury, may be varied by amendment: Knapp v. Hartung, 73 Pa. 290. Here the cause of action was breaking the plaintiffs’ close and mining and removing therefrom coal. The amendment under consideration did not introduce a new cause of action. The trespass complained of was the same as that charged in the first statement; the amendment simply pointed out that the injury to the close was aggravated by the manner in which the mining was done. We therefore think that it was permissible under the rule above stated. See Fredericks v. Penna. Canal Co., 148 Pa. 317; Knabb v. Kaufman, 1 Woodward’s Decisions, 319; Adam v. Moll, 6 Pa. Superior Ct. 380.

As to the suggestion that a claim to recover three times the value of the coal removed and converted to the defendant’s use, and a claim to recover single damages for the injury to the mine caused by negligence in mining the coal so removed and converted, cannot be joined in one action, even though both grew out of the same trespass; we refer to Welsh v. Anthony, 16 Pa. 254, and Fairchild v. Dunbar Furnace Co., supra, where as we read the opinions, a contrary doctrine was held. True it was said in the latter case that “ whilst, perhaps, they may be joined in one action, there can be but one recovery.” But we are not now discussing the measure of damages applicable to the case under the evidence adduced on the trial. All that we decide in overruling the first three assignments is that no error was committed in permitting the second amended statement to be filed or in overruling the demurrer thereto.

In support of their allegation of ownership the plaintiffs of[210]*210fered in evidence a paper title, beginning with a warrant survey and patent in 1793, and including a deed to Michael Meylert dated September 6, 1849, for an undivided fourth of the larger tract of which the lot in question is a part, and a deed dated June 30, 1858, from. Thomas W. Clymer to the same grantee for the other three fourths. So far as the intermediate conveyances are concerned no specific objection is raised by the assignments of error, except as to the deed from Joseph M. Fox to Joseph P. Norris and Hugh Roberts, dated April 6, 1816, and quite fully described in the fifth assignment of error. It is to be noticed that the deed was made in trust for the use of George Fox, Joseph Parker Norris and th'e devisees under the will of George Roberts deceased (these being the owners of three undivided fourth parts of the land for whose use Samuel M. Fox held the title thereto as acknowledged by him in a declaration of trust executed in 1798), and that the deed purports to have been made “ in order the more easy to carry into effect the objects of said trust.” It was admissible in evidence under the doctrine of Lessee of Jenks v. Backhouse, 1 Binney, 91, if, as recited in the deed, Joseph M. Fox, the grantor, was “ the eldest son and heir at law of him and said Samuel M. Fox deceased,” the patentee of the tract, and the declarant in the declaration of trust above referred to. The general rule is, that a deed is not admissible in evidence unless some title or spark of title is shown in the grantor, also, that a recital of a fact in a deed is not evidence against a stranger, as the cases cited by the appellant’s counsel abundantly show. But there are cases which show that these general rules are not always to be strictly adhered to where recitals of pedigree in ancient deeds are concerned: Paxton v. Price, 1 Yeates, 500; Bowser v. Cravener, 56 Pa. 132; Scharff v. Keener, 64 Pa. 376; Carter v. Tinicum Fishing Co., 77 Pa. 310. The question is quite fully discussed in Fulkerson v. Homes, 117 U. S. 389 (6 Sup. Ct. Repr. 780). See also Garwood v. Dennis, 4 Binney, 314; James v. Letzler, 8 W. & S. 192, and Dorff v. Schmunk, 197 Pa. 298, which relate particularly to recitals of other deeds.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Pa. Super. 203, 1904 Pa. Super. LEXIS 293, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-gunton-pasuperct-1904.