Niabet v. Lofton

277 S.W. 828, 211 Ky. 487
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 27, 1925
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 277 S.W. 828 (Niabet v. Lofton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Niabet v. Lofton, 277 S.W. 828, 211 Ky. 487 (Ky. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner

Affirming.

The appellee was plaintiff below and we will refer to him as plaintiff, while appellant will be called defendant because he occupied that position in the trial court, and has appealed here, asking a reversal of a judgment for $900.00 recovered against him by plaintiff. The facts leading up to this litigation are these: On March 29,1899, J. W. Givens and wife, Henry Givens, and the executors of T. K. Givens, by deed of record in Webster county deed book 33 at page 202, conveyed to F. D. Ramsey and W. A. Nisbett, the coal underlying 330 acres of land near Providence, Kentucky. A part of the coal had even then been mined under a lease, and a larger part of it has since been mined. This deed contained the following:

'“It is understood that the said J. W. Givens and T. K. Givens have sold the surface to the 330 acres of land herein described to said Ross Givens since *489 the original lease was made and since the death of 'T. K. Givens, and he unites with J. W. Givens and the executors aforesaid in this deed to perfect the right and title to the property and privileges herein conveyed. ’ ’

On March 10,1924, plaintiff began this action against W. J. Nisbett, one of the heirs of W. A. Nisbett, alleging in his petition that W. J. Nisbett was the agent and party in charge of said property, that the plaintiff was the ■owner of a house and lot near Providence, which was underlaid with a seam of coal belonging to the heirs of W. A. Nisbett and P. D. Ramsey, and that the defendant had suffered and permitted parties to enter under the plaintiff’s property and to remove the coal therefrom without leaving sufficient support, as a result of which plaintiff’s property was caused to and did cave in, and his property was damaged in. the sum of $2,000.00. The ■defendant answered denying everything in the plaintiff’s petition except that the plaintiff was the owner of the house and lot. Upon the trial of the case the defendant insisted that by the deed supra it acquired “the whole and every part of the coal mining privileges and rights to mine the coal from, in and under, including all the coal in and to a tract of iand lying near the city of Providence, Webster county, Kentucky.” .Defendant insisted that the phrase, “including all the coal,” gave it the right to remove all the coal without responsibility for any subsidence of the surface that might result therefrom, and contended that it was for the express purpose of granting it that right that the surface owner, Ross Givens, joined in the deed. It is not necessary for ns to determine whether or not this expression gave to the grantees in that deed the right to remove all the coal without responsibility for subsidence of the surface, for the reason that it is not shown in this record that the surface premises now owned by the plaintiff were then owned by Ross Givens, and consequently, there is nothing to show that the defendant ‘had any right to remove all the coal from beneath the plaintiff’s property, without responsibility for resulting subsidence. It appears from the answer of defendant that at the time of the execution of this deed, the coal had even then been removed from the premises owned by the plaintiff, but that in its removal, sufficient pillars had been left to support the surface. Plaintiff testified that the defendant had told him on different oc *490 casions that he owned the coal beneath the plaintiff’s, property.

It appears from the evidence that about the year-1919, a man by the name of Sherman Curry, who owned the surface of a tract of land not far from the plaintiff’s-property, made an opening to this coal, and -without lee or leave of any one, began to mine coal by removing pillars that had been left by former mining operations. Defendant heard of it, and went to see about it,, but was unable to find Curry. He then wrote him a letter to stop, but heard nothing more about the matter until some months afterwards, when he learned that the mine-was being operated by Hill, Meidreicht & Brown. These men gave defendant a check and explained to him that there was a little block of unmined coal there, which. Curry had opened and they were mining, and that this check was for royalty. They ran the mine for a while,, then sold it to James Young, who ran it for a while. In some way, T. H. Heady became connected with the mine. All of these paid royalty to defendant for mining coal-There was testimony that during this time the pillars which had been left previous to 1899 to support plaintiff’s surface and which were 18 by 50 feet in size, something like 18 feet apart, were almost entirely removed, that they were reduced to small blocks about four by six feet in size, and that these blocks were insufficient to support the surface, as a result of which it sank, the foundation of plaintiff’s house sank, and it careened, the paper on the wall cracked, the doors would not open and close-properly, a shade tree which had stood erect previous to that time was caused to lean over, and the plaintiff’s-chimney settled.

Plaintiff testified that when Hill, Meidreicht & Brown began removing the pillars beneath his property in the-latter part of 1919 or first part of 1920, he went to defendant and told him they were removing -the pillars, from under his property and that he went to defendant on a number of other occasions about this matter. Defendant denies that plaintiff came to see him about this, and Hill, Meidreicht & Brown deny that they mined 'any coal under the plaintiff’s property or removed any pillars. _ No survey was made to determine whether or not-the pillars beneath plaintiff’s property had been removed. It is a difficult matter for a man in a coal mine to know exactly beneath just what surface property he is- working without a survey. Several witnesses were introduced for *491 the plaintiff who testified that they worked in this mine at this time, and that they did remove pillars from beneath plaintiff’s property. They gave a very reasonable ■explanation of just how they knew where they were working. Whether they did remove pillars from beneath plaintiff’s property or not, and whether plaintiff notified defendant that they were doing so or not, were questions for the jury and were submitted by proper instructions.

Defendant was one of the heirs of W. A. Nisbet. This coal belonged to the heirs of W. A. Nisbet and F. D. Ramsey, and the court by proper instruction, told the jury that if the defendant, as one of the heirs of W. A. Nisbet, deceased, and as agent of the other heirs of W. A. Nisbet and F. D. Ramsey, deceased, knowingly permitted any person or persons to remove these pillars, the defendant was responsible. Defendant complains of that instruction. In the case of Low v. Mumford, 14 Johns, 426, 7 Am. Dec. 469, the Supreme Court of New York drew a distinction between acts of nonfeasance and acts of malfeasance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
277 S.W. 828, 211 Ky. 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/niabet-v-lofton-kyctapphigh-1925.