Stanton v. T. L. Herbert & Sons

141 Tenn. 440
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 141 Tenn. 440 (Stanton v. T. L. Herbert & Sons) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanton v. T. L. Herbert & Sons, 141 Tenn. 440 (Tenn. 1918).

Opinion

Mr. Justice .Green

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The bill in this case was filed by the complainants to enjoin the defendants from removing sand and gravel from Hill’s Island in the Cumberland river, about twenty miles above Nashville, and to recover damages. [442]*442This island is the property of the complainants, and the defendants are building contractors at Nashville and were removing sand and gravel from said island and the water adjacent thereto for use in contracts which they- had for the erection of buildings at the powder plant.

A demurrer coupled with an answer was filed hv the defendants. The chancellor sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill, and the complainants have appealed to this court.

Hill’s Island was formerly the property of Mrs. Mary Nolan and William E. Jordan. On June 12, 1911, they conveyed to complainants, Mrs. Elizabeth Stanton and Rush Hawes. Said deed described the property and was in the usual form of a warranty deed, except that in the habendum clause there were these words:

“Subject, however, to an easement, right, or privilege, to remove sand from said property for a period of ten years from the date of this conveyance, and such rights, privileges, and easements as may be necessary and proper for such use which easements, privileges, and rights are hereby retained by the grantors herein.”

It was averred in the bill that the grantors had attempted to assign their right to remove sand from said island to their codefendants, W. T. Hardison & Son, T. L. Herbert & Sons, and the Nashville Builders’ Supply Company, and that the said codefendants, along with Jordan, were removing tremendous quantities of sand and gravel from said island and the water adjacent thereto, for use in their powder plant contracts as aforesaid, and that they were very seriously damaging the complainant’s property. It was alleged that these [443]*443codefendants were acting illegally in the premises, since the complainants were advised that the reservation or exception of the right to remove sand contained in said deed was void for uncertainty, and for that it was contradictory to and destructive of the grant, and that, at any rate, the right of the original grantor to remove sand was personal and not assignable nor divisible.

All these propositions of law were challenged by the demurrer, and the allegations of fact contained in the bill were rather generally denied by the answer.

As is apparent from the foregoing statement, numerous questions are raised in this case, and they have been debated with much learning and ability. It will not be necessary to consider them all. A determination of the nature of the right or interest reserved in this property by the original grantors simplifies the solution of the ease.

Although it is perhaps not a matter of great importance, we may observe that we think the right of the grantors to remove sand from this island arose under their deed by way of reservation and not by way of exception.

“A. reservation is a clause in a deed, whereby the grantor reserves some new thing to himself, issuing out of the thing granted, and not in esse before; but an exception is always of a part of the thing granted, or out of the general words and description in the grant.” 4 Kent. Com., star page 468.

The rule that a reservation must be something not in esse is not to be understood as preventing the reservation of some right which the grantor previously [444]*444enjoyed. The right reserved may have previously existed as an incident of the title to the land. To he the subject of a reservation, such a right need only be separated from the ownership of the land. Thus separated, as an independent right, it is new. It did not formerly exist separately, but was called into being by the reservation in the deed. 8. R. C. L., p. 1091.

We think the right to remove sand reserved to the grantors under this deed was not exclusive. There is nothing in the language used in the deed to indicate that such right was intended to be exclusive. The right was described “as an easement, right, or privilege.” The indefinite article “an” was used, not “the.” In addition to the right to remove sand, only such other rights and privileges were reserved as were necessary to effectuate the principal right. There is nothing to show an intention to deprive Stanton and Hawes of the right to remove sand themselves. Under the authorities, the presumption is against an exclusive grant or reservation of this nature.

The first case dealing with the question involved here was that of Earl of Huntington v. Lord Mountjoy, 4 Leo., 147; 1 And., 307; and Godb., 18.

This case has been variously reported, and not always to the same effect; but the case has always been understood to have declared that a mere grant of liberty to dig coals did not confer on the grantees an exclusive right to dig them.

In Chetham v. Williams, 4 East., 469, Lord Ellenborough said: “No case can be named where one who has only a liberty of digging for coals in another’s soil has an exclusive right to the coals, so as to enable [445]*445him to maintain trover against the owner of the estate for coals raised by him.”

In Doe v. Wood, 2 Barn. & Aid., 724, it was held that the grant by deed of liberty to search for, work, and dispose of minerals was in effect a license and did not operate as a grant of the minerals, nor did it entitle the licensees who were working certain mines to bring ejectment against persons working another mine within the area covered by the license. The right of the grantee in this case was described as a mere “incorporeal privilege.”

In Duke of Sutherland v. Heath cote (1892), 1 Ch. 475, there was a reservation of a right to dig and carry away coal quite similar to the reservation of the right to dig sand, in the deed before us. Lord LiNdlev said of the grantors:

“They reserved a profit a prendre, an incorporeal hereditament, not a mere personal license. . . . A profit a prendre is a right to take something off another person’s land; such a right does not prevent the owner from taking the same sort of thing from off his own land; the first right may limit, but does not exclude the second. An exclusive right to all the profit of a particular kind can no doubt be granted; but such a right cannot he inferred from the language when it is not clear and explicit.”

In Gloninger v. Franklin Coal Co., 55 Pa., 9, 93 Am. Dec., 720, there was a deed granting “the free right to dig coal at the coal bed under the foot of the mountain on my lot. No. 22, in third division of lands in Wilkes-Barre, with the privilege freely to carry the coal . . . to and from said coal bed through my land at all times [446]*446hereafter, doing as little damage as may be, in the uses aforesaid.” It was held that the language used created an incorporeal hereditament and not an exclusive right to all the coal.

In Johnstown Iron Co. v. Cambria Iron Co., 32 Pa, 241, 72 Am.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

AAA Valley Gravel, Inc. v. Totaro
325 P.3d 529 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2014)
Eastern Minerals International, Inc. v. United States
36 Fed. Cl. 541 (Federal Claims, 1996)
Hinds v. Phillips Petroleum Co.
591 P.2d 697 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1979)
Wiltbank v. Lyman Water Company
477 P.2d 771 (Court of Appeals of Arizona, 1971)
Elkins v. Townsend
182 F. Supp. 861 (W.D. Louisiana, 1960)
Radke v. Union Pacific Railroad Company
334 P.2d 1077 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1959)
United States v. 12.75 Acres of Land in Sullivan
95 F. Supp. 998 (E.D. Tennessee, 1951)
Miller v. Lutheran Conference and Camp Ass'n
200 A. 646 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1938)
Tallassee Power Co. v. Clark
77 F.2d 601 (Sixth Circuit, 1935)
United Gas Public Service Co. v. Roy
147 So. 705 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1933)
Parmelee v. Herbert Sons
13 Tenn. App. 101 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1930)
Goodall v. Herbert & Sons
8 Tenn. App. 265 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1928)
Bates v. Georgia Fertilizer Co.
144 Tenn. 32 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 Tenn. 440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanton-v-t-l-herbert-sons-tenn-1918.