Sheker v. Jensen

41 N.W.2d 679, 241 Iowa 583, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 432
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 7, 1950
Docket47580
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 41 N.W.2d 679 (Sheker v. Jensen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheker v. Jensen, 41 N.W.2d 679, 241 Iowa 583, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 432 (iowa 1950).

Opinion

Hats, J.

This is á law action for damages to plaintiff’s land on account of the subsiding of the surface due to the removal of coal thereunder. The petition is in two counts. Count, one *585 alleges that the defendants appropriated to their use approximately fifty acres of the surface (being the extent of the subsiding), for which damages are asked in accordance with a certain contractual agreement. Count two alleges negligence in the operation of the mine, thereby causing damage to plaintiff’s land, crops, tiling, etc. Defendants’ answer denies negligence and further alleges'that under the agreement in question, damages to the land due to the removal of the coal had been waived. The ease was submitted to the jury on the question of negligence, with a verdict in favor of plaintiff. Defendants’ motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict was overruled, while their motion for a new trial was sustained and a new trial ordered. Both parties have appealed, prior permission having been obtained from this court.

I. "We will first consider defendants’ appeal. But one proposition is urged. It is: “The reservation contained in the contract and deed made by the Litchfields to Wesley Sheker constituted a valid contract and was an absolute [waiver and] bar to any recovery of damages for surface subsidence, and the court was in error in failing ® ® i:= to render judgment in favor of the defendants notwithstanding the verdict.”

The issue thus raised is a legal one, based upon the construction to be placed upon the following agreement and conveyances.

In 1890, Edward H. Litchfield conveyed four hundred eighty acres of land in Webster County, Iowa, to Wesley Sheker. The deed contained the following reservation:

“Reserving to the said Edward H. Litchfield, his heirs and assigns, all coal, coal mines * * * with full and sole right to * * * remove the same by such means as he may deem proper, without hereby incurring in any event whatever any liability for injury caused or damage done to the surface of said land except that the said Edward H. Litchfield his heirs or assigns shall pay the owners of said premises at the rate of $25 per acre for any surface land necessary to be used aside from said right of way in working such coal * * * and removing the same.”

*586 In 1894, Wesley Sheker conveyed one hundred twenty acres of said land to plaintiff Anthony Sheker, who had full knowledge of the exception in the deed from Litchfield.

By various conveyances the interest of Edward H. Litch-field, under said reservation, was, in 1924, lodged in the Litch-field Realty Company. Thereafter, by a series of transfers, the defendants became the owner of a coal lease on said land. The lease stated: “* *'# lessor hereby leases to lessee all and every right to mine and remove merchantable coal that is in or may underlie the surface of the premises * * * reserved by and set forth in certain mineral reservations now held by lessor * * By a later agreement it was stated that “* * * this assignment [lease] does not constitute a conveyance of the coal embraced in this lease by lessor.” Defendants have removed coal from this land, thereby causing the surface to subside, and this action is for damages on account thereof.

The defendants contend that under the reservation, above set forth, they were free to remove coal irrespective of the effect on the surface without being answerable in damages therefor. The trial court in passing on this question found “* * ® that the wording of the reservation was not such as to operate as a waiver or release of liability by the surface owner for loss of subjacent support due to negligence”, citing Livingston v. Moingona Coal Co., 49 Iowa 369,.31 Am. Rep. 150, Collins v. Gleason Coal Co., 140 Iowa 114, 115 N.W. 497, 18 L. R. A., N. S., 736, and Jensen v. Sheker, 231 Iowa 240, 1 N.W.2d 262.

In Jensen v. Sheker, supra, this court had before it the conveyance and reservation now under examination. In that action Jensen, defendant herein, sought and obtained an injunction against Sheker, plaintiff herein, enjoining him from interfering with Jensen’s entering upon the land for the purpose of prospecting for, or the removal of, coal underlying the Sheker premises. The defendant contended that before the plaintiff was entitled to enter .upon-the premises and in any manner supersede the possession of the defendant, payment must be made in accordance with the reservation agreement of so much per acre. We there held that while the reservation constituted a waiver of an absolute right of the surface owner to subjacent support, it did not waive the right to damages for injury to the surface estate *587 but that such injury must occur before the liability attaches. While, as contended by defendant herein, this construction of the reservation as to damages may be somewhat dictum, we believe that it is a correct construction to place thereon.

The purpose of construing the reservation is to determine the intent of the. parties. Litchfield had sold to Shekel’ something of value, the surface to four hundred eighty aeres óf land, for a substantial consideration. If we adopt the construction claimed by the defendants herein we must hold that it was the intention of the.parties that while Shekel* had paid for an absolute estate in the surface, Litchfield might at any time nullify the same by removal of the coal thereunder. This reservation grants or, rather, reserves the right to remove the coal by whatever means desired. It might well have been by the strip mine method instead of the method adopted and in which case there would have been a necessary destruction of the surface. We are satisfied that under such a situation the only fair construction to be placed on this reservation would be that such destruction would be termed a use, for which compensation would be paid. We are likewise convinced that where the surface is destroyed by the removal of coal thereunder by any other method than strip mining, such surface destruction must be held to be “surface land necessary to be used aside from said right of way, in working such coal * * * and removing the same.” We find no merit in defendants’ contention that all right to damáge to the surface of the land was waived in the reservation, and hold that the trial court did not err in overruling the motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict.

II. Turning now to plaintiffs’ appeal which is from the order granting a new trial on the grounds that there was a quotient verdict. A quotient verdict results when there is an agreement among the jurors to accept as their verdict whatever amount may be' reached by adding together ' the respective amounts allowed by each juror, dividing this total by twelve and returning the amount thus reached. The pivotal factor is the agreement to he hound hy the figure thus obtained, made prior to the ballot. All parties concede that such a verdict is illegal and must be set aside. See, however, Carter v. Marshall Oil Co., 185 Iowa 416, 170 N.W. 798; Bailey v. Fredericksburg *588 Produce Assn., 229 Iowa 677, 295 N.W. 122. Whether or not a verdict is “quotient” depends upon the facts in each ease.

All twelve jurors were before the court.

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Bluebook (online)
41 N.W.2d 679, 241 Iowa 583, 1950 Iowa Sup. LEXIS 432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheker-v-jensen-iowa-1950.