Mahon v. Pennsylvania Coal Co.

118 A. 491, 274 Pa. 489, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 723
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 24, 1922
DocketAppeal, No. 290
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 118 A. 491 (Mahon v. Pennsylvania 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
Mahon v. Pennsylvania Coal Co., 118 A. 491, 274 Pa. 489, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 723 (Pa. 1922).

Opinions

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

This is an appeal from a decree dismissing a bill in equity; plaintiffs, man and wife, asked that defendant, a [494]*494Pennsylvania corporation, be restrained from mining any coal underlying the former’s property in tbe City of Pittston, “tbe removal of which will cause the caving-in, collapse or subsidence of their dwelling house,” contrary to the Act of May 27, 1921, P. L. 1198, commonly known as the Kohler Act.

At the outset, it may be stated that, so far as the contractual rights of the respective parties are concerned, as shown by the paper title to the properties involved, defendant is expressly authorized to mine the subjacent strata owned by it without any obligation to support the surface owned by plaintiffs.

The court below found that, “if not restrained, defendant .....will.....cause the caving-in, collapse and subsidence of the surface, together with the dwelling, entailing injury upon plaintiffs”; but refused an injunction, on the ground that “the owner of the coal has an absolute right to remove the whole of the same, free from all liability for injury thereby inflicted,” and “no interest is involved......except the private interests of the plaintiffs in the prevention of a private injury.”

The position assumed by the learned court below raises, as the sole question for consideration, the applicability of the Kohler Act to the facts of this particular case; but the discussion of counsel, representing the parties to the cause and those who were allowed to intervene at argument, including the city solicitor and the attorney general of the State, has taken a much wider range, and calls for consideration, first of all, of the constitutionality of the act itself, as a reasonable and valid exercise of the police power.

The statute is entitled: “An act regulating the mining of anthracite coal; prescribing duties for certain municipal officers; and imposing penalties.” This title is sufficient to cover the contents of the enactment.

Section 1 provides that it shall be unlawful “so to conduct the operation .of mining anthracite coal as to cause [495]*495the caving-in, collapse, or subsidence of (a) Any public building or any structure customarily used by the public as a place of resort, assemblage, or amusement, including, but not being limited to, churches, schools, hospitals, theatres, hotels, and railroad stations; (b) Any street, road, bridge, or other public passageway, dedicated to public use or habitually used by the public; (c) Any track, roadbed, right-of-way, pipe, conduit, wire, or other facility, used in the service of the public by any municipal corporation or public service company as defined by the Public Service Company Law; (d) Any dwelling or other structure used as a human habitation, or any factory, store, or other industrial or mercantile establishment in which human labor is employed; (e) Any cemetery or public burial ground.”

Sections 2 to 5, inclusive, place certain duties on public officials and persons in charge of mining operations, to facilitate carrying out the purposes of the act.

Section 6 provides the act “shall not apply to [mines in] townships of the second class [i. e., townships having a population of less than 300 persons to a square mile], nor shall it apply to any area wherein the surface overlying the mine or mining operation is wild or unseated land, nor where, such surface is owned by the owner or operator of the underlying coal and is distant more than one hundred and fifty feet from any improved property belonging to any other person.”

Section 7 sets forth penalties; and section 8 reads: “The courts of common pleas shall have power to award injunctions to restrain violations of this act.”

The remaining sections state: when the statute takes effect; that inconsistent legislation is repealed; that “This act is intended as remedial legislation, designed to cure existing evils and abuses, and each and every provision is intended to receive a liberal construction such as will best effectuate that purpose”; and that all provisions “are severable one from another.”

[496]*496In determining whether the act is reasonable legislation within the police power, we may “call to our aid all those external or historical facts which are necessary for this purpose and which led to the enactment” : Endlich, Interp. of Stats., s. 29.'

The anthracite coal field of Pennsylvania comprises a large area, on the surface of which have grown up, and now exist, many cities, boroughs and villages, containing a population of approximately a million persons. When this district was sparsely peopled, the caving-in of the surface was not of public moment; but, within the past fifteen or twenty years, it has become a matter of widespread notoriety that these disturbances menace the safety and material welfare of the inhabitants of communities in that part of the State. During the period mentioned, the facts have been put before the public, not only by news of the collapse of streets and the fall of buildings, but also through the reports of commissions created by joint resolutions of the legislature and by means of numerous proposed statutes, antedating the present law, introduced into that body, some of which passed and others did not; likewise, by messages from the governor of the Commonwealth addressed to the general assembly.

The conditions that gave rise to the act are summarized in a preamble thus: “Whereas, the anthracite coal industry in this. Commonwealth has been and is being carried on in populous communities in such a manner as to remove the entire support of the surface of the soil to such an extent as to result in wrecked and dangerous streets and highways,, collapsed public buildings, churches, schools, factories,' streets, and private dwellings, broken gas, water and sewer systems, the loss of human life, and in general so as to threaten and seriously endanger the lives and safety of large numbers of the people of the Commonwealth; therefore be it enacted,” etc.

[497]*497In signing the bill, the governor stated of record that “lives have been lost, homes, churches and schools destroyed, and an ever-present peril has threatened the morale of the entire community”; adding, “for a generation, the appeal..... .to save the situation has been heard at the capital.”

It is not denied on the present record' that the conditions above described exist; and the legislature having. declared in terms what, in a general way, had become a; matter of public notoriety, we must accept such declaration as a correct statement of facts: People ex rel. Durham Realty Corp. v. La Fetra, 230 N. Y. 429, 440; Lower Vein Coal Co. v. Industrial Bd., 255 U. S. 144, 148; Block v. Hirsh, 256 U. S. 135, 154; Marcus Brown Holding Co. v. Feldman, 256 U. S. 170, 198.

That the conditions portrayed in the legislative declaration are such as to create an emergency, properly warranting the exercise of the police power, is sufficiently obvious not to call for extended discussion. It is primarily for the legislature to consider and decide on the fact of a danger, then meet it by a proper remedy: Stafford v. Wallace, 42 U. S. Supreme Ct. Rep. (issue of June 9,1922), 397, 401.

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Bluebook (online)
118 A. 491, 274 Pa. 489, 1922 Pa. LEXIS 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahon-v-pennsylvania-coal-co-pa-1922.