Saltsburg Colliery Co. v. Trucks Coal Mining Co.

81 Pa. Super. 542, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 129
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 10, 1923
DocketAppeal, 129
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 81 Pa. Super. 542 (Saltsburg Colliery Co. v. Trucks Coal Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Saltsburg Colliery Co. v. Trucks Coal Mining Co., 81 Pa. Super. 542, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 129 (Pa. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion by

Linn, J.,

Plaintiff sued for treble damages under the Act of May 8, 1876, P. L. 142, for coal mined from its land. Defendant admitted the mining, and claimed ownership of the coal in place. At the trial, the court directed a verdict for plaintiff, but subsequently granted defendant’s motion for judgment n. o. v. Plaintiff appeals. The disposition of the appeal depends on the interpretation of a deed.

In May, 1844, Richardson and Company agreed with B. Trucks, George Trucks and Thomas Trucks to sell to them “salt wells, with all the buildings, improvements and land thereunto belonging,” [described] “for the sum of 2,500 barrels of good merchantable salt, payable in five years” [at 500 barrels per year]; “said Richardson and Company agrees to give to said widow Trucks, George Trucks and Thomas Trucks, a good and sufficient deed for said property so soon as the above payments are made or sooner if good security is given for above payments. Said widow Trucks, George Trucks and Thomas Trucks, their heirs and assigns, are to have the privilege of mining and taking coal out of the hill opposite their land under the land of said Richardson and Company so long as they may think proper. And it is further agreed that if said widow Trucks, George Trucks and Thomas Trucks fails, in any one year of the said year of the said term of five years to deliver the salt as above stated, they shall pay cash in lieu of salt.” On June 24, 1851, a deed (duly recorded) was made by Shorb et al. [Richardson] to Bridget Trucks and her two sons, granting and conveying the land, 61 acres and 30 perches, “with the privilege of mining and talcing coal out of the hill opposite the land hereby sold to the said Trucks under the land of *545 said Richardson and Company as long as they may thinh proper, according to the stipulation contained in article of agreement with William H. Richardson and Company-dated May 16, 1848 (1844?). To have and to hold the said hereditaments and premises hereby granted or mentioned or intended so to be, with the appurtenances unto the said parties of the second part, their heirs and assigns forever.” The consideration — 2,500 barrels of salt —was recited — “fully paid and delivered.” We have italicized the part of the deed giving rise to the dispute.

Defendant offered deeds purporting to convey to it the Trucks’ title to the 61 acres together with the coal under the Richardson land conveyed by the grant just quoted. The evidence shows the mining complained of was out of the “hill opposite their land [the Trucks’ land] under the land of said Richardson and Company” which surrounds the Trucks 61-acre tract on three sides. Plaintiff claims the fee to 194 acres (so bounding the 61-acre tract on three sides), by conveyances going back to the Richardson title, at least one of which, offered in evidence, contained the following pertinent reservation: “also reserving out of tract No. 3 [the 194-acre tract] ......the right to Bridget Trucks and Sons and their heirs and assigns, to take coal out of said tract as assured and conveyed to them by Lyons-Shorb and Co., [Richardson] and granted by their deed of release to them upon the conditions and terms therein expressed”; concerning such reservation, see Lillibridge v. Coal Co., 143 Pa. 293, at 307.

There is evidence that the Truckses mined some coal out of the 194-acre tract, though neither how much, nor when, save that it was long ago, but loss of right by adverse possession is not suggested: Armstrong v. Caldwell, 53 Pa. 284, 287.

Appellant contends that the Truckses took an incorporeal hereditament in the 194-acre tract, and that defendant had no right to it for several reasons: 1. that *546 it was a revocable license which has been revoked; 2. that it was indivisible and was divided by the Truckses; 3. that it was an easement which has not been conveyed by deeds under which appellee claims and could not pass as appurtenant to the 61 acres; 4. that it has been abandoned or lost by nonuser.

Appellee contends that the deed of 1851 vested in the Truckses a fee in all the coal in the hill opposite their 61-acre tract.

The decision of this appeal, therefore, depends on the meaning of the deed of 1851 granting and conveying to the Truckses the tract of 61 acres and 30 perches “with the privilege of mining and taking coal out of the hill ......under the land of said Richardson and Company as long as they may think proper, according to the stipulation.”

The decisions to which we shall refer require us to hold that the grantees took a fee to all the coal described. In Caldwell v. Fulton, 31 Pa. 475, the interpretation of a grant of coal was twice considered (pp. 476 and 482), and twice thereafter it was adhered to: Caldwell v. Copeland, 37 Pa. 427, 430; Armstrong v. Caldwell, supra. Caldwell sued Fulton for mining on land which plaintiff claimed by descent from his father, who had conveyed to Fulton’s predecessor Greer, a 16-aere tract, with “Also, the full right, title and privilege of digging and taking away stone coal, to any extent the said George Greer may think proper to do, or cause to be done, under any of the land now owned and occupied by said James Caldwell; provided, nevertheless, the entrance thereto, and the discharge therefrom, be on the foregoing described premises,” [16-acre tract]. Caldwell contended an incorporeal hereditaments was granted, but the court held it was a sale of the coal. The following quotations from the opinions of the court are particularly applicable to the contentions made by the parties to the present 'appeal and make it unnecessary for us to add anything to the discussion: “But was this the grant of no more *547 than an incorporeal hereditament? Caldwell reserved no interest himself. He sold for a valuable consideration, all he had in the sixteen acres, and all the coal in his other land. I say all, because the grant is limited to no time, or quantity, or purpose, or person. The full right to take stone coal to any extent the grantee, his heirs or assigns, may think proper to do, or cause to be done, are not, perhaps, the best chosen words for describing the corpus; but what less than the whole of the coal can they be construed to mean? If not the whole, how much coal is granted? Can a reservation to the grantor be implied, in the face of terms so large? That were to reverse the maxim that deeds are to be taken most strongly against the grantor. The will of the grantee was the measure of the grant. Not only he, his heirs and assigns, were to take ad libitum, but might cause to be taken, without stint. The grantee might plant a miner on every available foot of the coal, under that deed. There was one only condition, that the entrance to the coal, and the discharge therefrom, should be on the sixteen acres, and because this was expressed, no other was intended. Expressio unius exclusio alterius. Subject to that condition alone, the grantee was invested with complete dominion over the coal. What room was left for the grantor? Might he too mine coal? Assuredly not, against the consent of his alienee, for he had sold all the coal that alienee might think proper to take, or cause to be taken. And if the grantor might not mine of right, then the grant was total; he might not take a part, because he had conveyed the whole.

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Bluebook (online)
81 Pa. Super. 542, 1923 Pa. Super. LEXIS 129, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saltsburg-colliery-co-v-trucks-coal-mining-co-pasuperct-1923.