Mt. Savage George's Creek Coal Co. v. Monahan

104 A. 480, 132 Md. 654, 1918 Md. LEXIS 86
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 3, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 104 A. 480 (Mt. Savage George's Creek Coal Co. v. Monahan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mt. Savage George's Creek Coal Co. v. Monahan, 104 A. 480, 132 Md. 654, 1918 Md. LEXIS 86 (Md. 1918).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case was filed by Andrew Monahan and others, the appellees, against the Mount Savage George’s Oreesk Coal Company, and certain of its officers, to enjoin the *656 defendants (1) from trespassing upon the plaintiffs’ land and mining and carrying away their coal; (2) from removing supports, etc., necessary to keep open the passages through the defendant company’s mines leading to the plaintiffs’ coal, and (3) from preventing the plaintiffs, their surveyor and helpers from g'oing into the company’s mines and thence into plaintiffs’ coal, and the places from which said company had carried it away, and from interfering with the surveyor from measuring and ascertaining how much of plaintiffs’ coal had been taken and carried away by said company. There are also prayers to require the defendants to disclose how much of said coal the company had taken, when and to whom sold, to account for that taken, as well as for the damages to* the plaintiffs’ remaining coal, and for general relief.

The defendants filed an answer in which they denied that they had trespassed upon the plaintiffs’ property or removed any coal therefrom, but subsequently they filed an amended answer in which they admitted that the company had sold and marketed coal estimated at 3,250 tons taken from the land of the plaintiffs, admitted that the company had been paid for said coal, and stated that it was ready to compensate the plaintiffs for it. They denied that “the said coal was worked or removed from the plaintiffs’ land fraudulently, negligently or wilfully, but say that the said coal was taken purely by accident, without fraud, and without negligence on the part of the said defendants, and also with the utmost good faith, and with the belief on the part of the said defendants that they were taking and removing coal which belonged only to the Mt. Savage George’s Greek Goal Company; and these defendants further say that the defendants ought not to* be required to pay for the said minerals more than its value in its native state before severance, to the said plaintiffs.”

The defendants in open Court waived “any objection to the jurisdiction of the Court in this case as to the determination of- the question as to* the quantity of coal removed and the value of the coal, all of which will be determined, and the Court can pass upon the issues in this ease the same as if it *657 were a trial at law and the same as if the ease were tried by the Court, sitting as a jury.” The attorneys for the plaintiffs assented to that agreement, and it was made a matter of record.

The lower Court adopted the defendants’ evidence in regard to the amount of coal taken out of the land of the appellees hy the company, the cost of severing, loading and transporting it to the mouth of the mine, and there seemed to be no controversy as to its market value. The principal questions, therefore, to be determined are whether the Court was right in finding that 4,508 tons of the coal were negligently mined, and, if so, what measure of damages should he allowed. The can not agree1 with the appellees that as it was a question of fact whether the coal was negligently mined, the decision of the lower Court as to that is conclusive and can not he reviewed. In equity cases findings of the lower Court as to questions of fact are reviewable on appeals, and if tbe agreement referred to above be construed as changing that rule in some respects, it could not have been intended to have such an effect as that contended for. The agreement sugr gested some uncertainty as to the mode of procedure, and the plan of offering instructions was adopted—Junan IIkxdkb,sox remarking that that could be done so as to secure the right of appeal. Some of the prayers clearly presented the question of negligence, and while bills of exception were not filed, the Judge in his opinion rejected all of the prayers offered by the defendants, except the first which does not refer to that subject. Tbe prayers in the record, together with the endorsement on them of the disposition made of them hy the Judge, and the statement in the opinion that “all the’prayers submitted by the defendant, except the first, are rejected,” must under the circumstances be regarded as sufficiently presenting the right to have his finding reviewed.

1. There is no real controversy about the division line: between tbe properties. That could have been ascertained before the defendant company commenced mining in November, 1916, as well as in March, 1917. Mr. Stem, the presi *658 dent of the company, testified that they commenced mining sometime from the 10th to the 15th of November. The Maryland coal and Iron Company formerly operated this mine, and Mr. Stem was treasurer of that company, and Mr. Avery, one of the defendants, was president. Both before and after the defendant company commenced operations Mr. Stern and Mr. Farrell, a director of the defendant company, tried to get a lease of the Monahan coal, but the owners declined to lease it, and warned Messrs. Stern and Farrell not to- get over the line. The defendants either knew, or were grossly negligent in not knowing that the workings were at least close to the line, yet, although the -line could have been easily and promptly established, it is now said that it was not fixed in the mine until after the injunction was issued. Anthony Monahan testified that on the 5th of November, 1916, Mr. Avery, of the defendant company, told him, “We are up to your line, your property line, and he says, ‘We can’t go noi further if we don’t get your coal.’ ” He told him they would not lease the property—that the heirs were opposed to a lease, and “I told him all we wanted him to do was to keep- off our line.” Francis Monahan testified that he heard that conversation. Mr. Avery denied it, but said that he understood they were from 75 to 100 feet from the line. Mr. Stem said the reason they were anxious to get the Monahan coal was “because it was very close to our property,” and in reply to the question, “You knew it was very close to your workings in there?,” he said, “Yes, sir.” On cross-examination of Mr. Farrell, in reference to the lease, this appears: “Q. The reason was that you were close to their coal, or on their coal ? A. I didn’t know it. Q. In a general way, isn’t that the reason you tried to get this lease? A. The reason we tried to get a lease was because we wanted their coal. Q. Isn’t that the reason—because you were up- to it? A. Might have been it. Q. It was it? A. Well, yes.” Mr. Spear testified that he went with the defendant company about February 1, 1917,—first as mine foreman and then as superintendent—and “just as soon as I got there I said to Mr, Stem *659 that we should make some inquiry about the lines,” and Mr. Stern employed Mr. Haverstick as engineer. This also appears in his evidence: “Q. Did Mr. Stem tell you it was all right? A. Ho, sir; he didn’t. He didn’t say anything abont it. He didn’t know. I didn’t know anything about it until the surveyors told us. Q. Did Mr. Haverstick ever tell you it was all right?' A. As soon as Mr. Haverstick made his survey he told me we would have to stop the left. Q. When was that? A. I couldn’t tell just when; I couldn’t remember the dates.” Mr. Matthias, a mining engineer, testified as to the distances the various headings were run beyond the line before the injunction was served.

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Bluebook (online)
104 A. 480, 132 Md. 654, 1918 Md. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mt-savage-georges-creek-coal-co-v-monahan-md-1918.