President, Managers & Co. of the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. v. Hughes

38 A. 568, 183 Pa. 66, 1897 Pa. LEXIS 715
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 25, 1897
DocketAppeal, No. 263
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 38 A. 568 (President, Managers & Co. of the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. v. Hughes) 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
President, Managers & Co. of the Delaware & Hudson Canal Co. v. Hughes, 38 A. 568, 183 Pa. 66, 1897 Pa. LEXIS 715 (Pa. 1897).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Williams,

This case presents a question of considerable importance to the owners of mineral lands, which does not seem to have been decided by the courts or to have been discussed by text writers, so far as we have been able to discover. It will be readily understood from a brief statement of the facts out of which it arises. The plaintiff company is engaged in mining and selling anthracite coal. As early as 1825 it was the owner of a considerable body of contiguous lands which had been purchased by it because of the coal underlying it. A tract known as the “Porter Tract,” containing two hundred acres was part of this body of coal land. The coal upon it was opened by the company at some time between 1830 and 1835, and mining opera[69]*69tions begun under it. From that time to the present the company has been in the possession of its mineral deposit under the surface of the Porter tract by actual mining and by the use of the openings and gangways for purposes connected with the removal of coal from adjoining lands belonging to it. The defendant derives his title from one Alexander McDonald who was an employee of the plaintiffs, and who entered upon the surface of the Porter tract in 1836 or 1837 and began a residence upon, and the cultivation of, a small portion of it. It does not seem to admit of serious doubt that from 1850, and perhaps somewhat earlier, down for a period of more than twenty-one years, the possession of McDonald and Isis vendees of the land in controversy has been open, notorious, hostile and exclusive. As to the surface, therefore, the defendant has acquired a title under the statute of limitations. The question raised by this record is whether lie has also, under the circumstances just stated, acquired a title to the underlying coal. The general principles regulating the titles to upper and lower estates in the earth’s crust are pretty well settled by our own cases. The ownership of the surface carries with it, if there be no obstacle to the application of the general rule, title downwards to the center of the earth and upwards indefinitely. So long as mineral deposits remain in place they are part of the freehold, and pass with it by deed, gift or other form of conveyance; but when the minerals are removed from their position or bed by mining they become personal property, and are sold like other personal chattels. If the owner grants to another the right or privilege of taking coal from his lands this grant, if not an exclusive one, is not the grant of an interest in land, hut of an easement or incorporeal right which leaves the title to the coal in place remaining in the grantor. But a grant of all the coal, or of the exclusive right to mine the eoal, is a sale of the coal in place.

The conveyance of the coal creates in the vendee an interest in land. The deed or other conveyance is within the recording acts, and is subject to all the rules and regulations governing conveyances of the surface. It may convey an estate in fee simple in the coal or other mineral, or any lesser estate, in the same manner and by the same words of grant made use of in conveyances of the surface. When such a conveyance has been [70]*70made of the coal or other mineral it works a severance of the estate so conveyed from the surface, and if the deed be recorded it is constructive notice to all the world of the fact of severance. Thenceforward the owner of the soil may cultivate, inclose and reside upon his estate for any length of time, but his possession will not extend below it. It will not grasp' or affect in the slightest degree the estate below him which has been severed by the deed. In like manner the owner of the mineral estate may enter upon and operate it while the owner of the surface is leaving his estate unoccupied and wild, but the possession of the lower estate will not reach upward and attach to the surface. Each estate may be occupied, conveyed, incumbered, sold by the sheriff or allotted in partition, without any effect upon the other. If a trespasser enters either estate and maintains possession he can acquire title by the statute of limitations after twenty-one years to so much as he has actually held for that length of time; but his title will not extend above or below the estate on which he enters. If he would acquire any part of the mineral he must make his entry upon, and maintain his position within, the limits of the mineral estate, for the requisite period of time in an open, notorious, exclusive and continuous manner: Caldwell v. Copeland, 37 Pa. 427; Armstrong v. Caldwell, 53 Pa. 284; Kingsley et al. v. Hillside Coal and Iron Company, 144 Pa. 613. A covert or clandestine entry will not do. Such an entry will confer no right on the wrongdoer until his entry is, or by the exercise of due diligence might be, discovered by the owner. Until then the owner cannot know that his possession has been invaded. Until he has, or ought to have, such knowledge he is not called upon to act, for he does not know that action in the premises is necessary, and the law does not require absurd or impossible things of anyone: Lewey v. Fricke Coal Company, 166 Pa. 536; Scranton Gas and Water Company v. Lackawanna Iron and Coal Company, 167 Pa. 136. Possession to be adverse must be open as well as continuous. The intruder must keep his flag flying in a visible and hostile manner: Plummer v. Hillside Coal and Iron Company, 160 Pa. 483. So far on in our inquiry we have a well beaten path to travel, but from this point forward we are without any definite landmark to guide us. The real question presented is, may there be a severance of the mineral estate from the surface by the acts of [71]*71the owners of the original freehold? And, if so, may there be notice in fact of such severance to other persons that will affect them in the same manner as the constructive notice arising from the recording of a deed? It is very clear, as we have seen, that if the deed to the plaintiffs had been for the coal under the “ Porter Tract ” only, the entry of McDonald upon the surface and his enclosure of a part of it would have had no effect upon the lower estate. The rule is well settled by the cases cited above. The reason of the rule is tbat the sale of the coal severed it from the surface, and the recording of the deed gave constructive notice to McDonald of such severance, whether he had any knowledge of it or not. But the plaintiffs’ deed was for the whole of the land, including the soil and the minerals.

The company had the light, however, to develop and operate the mineral estate alone, if that was to its interest, and leave the surface unfilled and uncleared. It elected to do so. It erected its breaker, opened its mine, extended its gangways, arranged its tracks and sidings, and began the production of coal for the market from beneath the surface of the “ Porter Tract ” and its adjoining lands. In this manner it entered upon the actual possession of its mineral estate. For more than sixty years it has continued its possession without interruption in a manner that has been obvious to all persons in the neighborhood. No person could pass or enter upon the land without being confronted with the unmistakable proofs of the possession and active operations of the plaintiff company in this, its subterranean estate. These proofs, including the structures, the culm piles, the prepared coal, the movements of men and cars about the pit’s mouth, brought the knowledge of the plaintiffs’ operations to even the most casual observer, in a much more effective and satisfactory manner than it could have been done by the mere existence of a recorded deed.

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38 A. 568, 183 Pa. 66, 1897 Pa. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/president-managers-co-of-the-delaware-hudson-canal-co-v-hughes-pa-1897.