Rochez Bros., Inc. v. Duricka

97 A.2d 825, 374 Pa. 262, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 392
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 26, 1953
DocketAppeal, 74
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 97 A.2d 825 (Rochez Bros., Inc. v. Duricka) 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
Rochez Bros., Inc. v. Duricka, 97 A.2d 825, 374 Pa. 262, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 392 (Pa. 1953).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Musmanno,

On July 28, 1927, the defendants, Stephen Duricka and his wife Veronica, by deed from S. W. Miller and Charles Moore, became the owners of a tract of farmland located in Derry Township, Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, comprising 251.881 acres. The conveyance was subject to a former owner’s reservation (by deed dated February 17, 1919) of all the coal in and underlying said tract (excepting 2.5 acres) as follows: “TOGETHER with the right to mine and carry away all of said coal, and with all the mining rights and privileges necessary or convenient to such mining and removal, draining and ventilating of the same, and without being required to provide for the support of the overlying strata, and without liability for injury to the said surface or to anything therein or thereon by reason of the mining and removal of all of said coal or the manufacture of the same or other coal into coke, or other products, at such places as may be selected by said second party, its successors or assigns together with the right of mining and removing under said described premises other coal or matter belonging to or that may hereafter belong to the said second party, its successors oí* assigns.”

In addition, the grantors also expressly reserved from their conveyance to the Durickas the coal underlying the 2.5 acres (which had been excepted from the original reservation) together with the following mining rights: “The full, free, and exclusive right to enter in, upon, and under, the lands hereby conveyed for the purpose of exploring, drilling for, testing, and digging, mining, draining, storing, shipping, transporting and operating said reserved coal, either as a custom coal mining proposition or otherwise, without liability for damages to the surface, or anything therein or thereon, by reason of said operations or the failure to provide *265 support for the overlying strata. Said mining right to be perpetual until all of said coal has been fully removed.”

The plaintiff, Rochez Bros., Inc., has now become the owner of the rights contained in the two cited reservations and seeks to extract, through the process known as strip mining, the coal to which it has title. The defendants having refused the plaintiff access to the premises for the purpose indicated, the latter filed a bill in equity to enjoin the defendants from interfering with its surface removal of the coal. The defendants filed preliminary objections setting forth that the plaintiff’s mining rights did not include strip mining. The objections were sustained and the bill was dismissed. This appeal followed.

The specific question presented is whether the reservations quoted above allow the plaintiff company to remove coal through strip mining methods or whether it is restricted to shaft mining. Strip mining, as the term indicates, is the stripping away of the earth surface and the horizontal withdrawal of the mineral deposits at hand. Shaft mining involves the sinking of a vertical shaft into the ground and the developing from that point of tunnels and galleries which serve as vantage points from which to withdraw and lift the coal deposits through the shaft. Shaft mining does a minimum of damage to the outer crust of the earth; strip mining does a maximum of damage. Strip mining is effected through steam shovels and bull dozers which turn up the top layer of the earth as easily as a can opener lays bare the contents of a box of sardines.

It is obvious, in view of the surface violence, destruction and disfiguration which inevitably attend strip or open mining, that no land owner would lightly or casually grant strip mining rights, nor would any purchaser of land treat lightly any reservation of mining rights *266 which would permit the grantor or his .assignee to come upon his land and turn it into a battleground with strip mining.

There is nothing in the two quoted reservations which would cause the defendants to assume that they had contracted to allow steam shovels and bulldozers to invade their farm. In.the 2.5 acres tract, all that is conveyed is the “.. . . right to enter in, upon and under 1 the lands . . . for the purpose of . . . mining.” This phraseology contains no right to remove the overlying surface. If the grant was intended to include strip mining privileges, the immunity from responsibility for “damages to the surface ... or the failure to provide support for the overlying strata” would be meaningless because strip mining encompasses the very tearing away of. the overlying strata.

. It is urged by the appellant’s counsel that with respect to the mining rights appurtenant to .the 249. acres of land, the plaintiff has the right “to mine and carry away all said coal,” together with “all mining rights and privileges, necessary or convenient to such mining and removal.” But these words are followed with the further phrase “draining and ventilating of. the same.” Ventilating is a feature of underground or shaft mining. In strip or open mining artificial ventilation is no more needed than it is needed for a.house from which the roof has been removed, ■

■The further statement in the reservation' that the grantor or his assignee shall not be liable for “injury to the surface” again presupposes underground -mining because strip mining directly intends injury to the surface. Also, the clause “without being required to provide for the support of the overlying strata”' definitely refers to shaft mining because-in- st-rip•mining- the-exca *267 vation is precisely of the “overlying strata.” Finally, the assurance “together with the right of mining and removing under said described premises other coal” clearly demonstrates that deep mining was intended.

The plaintiff advances the case of Commonwealth v. Fisher, 364 Pa. 422, to bolster its position here, but there is little similarity between the facts in that case and those before us. There the grantors reserved the rights to all mineral deposits “in or upon any part of the premises.” They reserved the right also to “enter into and upon and pass over any part or parts of the above described premises and to explore search for and excavate any and every kind of ore mineral metal or coal and to dig excavate or penetrate any part of the said premises and at all times to have free ingress and egress.” To excavate means to make a hole or cavity in, hollow out, scoop, dig or cut a hollow in, which is precisely what strip mining does. Shaft or underground mining does not embrace the concept of excavating.

In the Fisher case, the grantors also reserved the right “to dig mine raise and take remove and carry away any and every kind of ore mineral metal or coal which may be found or discovered in or upon

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Bluebook (online)
97 A.2d 825, 374 Pa. 262, 1953 Pa. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rochez-bros-inc-v-duricka-pa-1953.