Sylvan Green Marble Co. v. Williams & Co.

85 Pa. Super. 515, 1925 Pa. Super. LEXIS 312
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 16, 1925
DocketAppeal, 94
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 85 Pa. Super. 515 (Sylvan Green Marble Co. v. Williams & 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
Sylvan Green Marble Co. v. Williams & Co., 85 Pa. Super. 515, 1925 Pa. Super. LEXIS 312 (Pa. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

The court below ruled, (in answer to the plaintiff’s second request for conclusions of law), that the agreement of August 23, 1904, between C. K. Williams and J. T. Williams, predecessors in title of the defendant *517 company, and Henry A. Schweyer, predecessor in title of the plaintiff company, was, in legal effect, a sale in place of all the serpentine, verdantiqne, green stone and granite in or upon the land described in said agreement; and the decree of the court enjoining defendant from entering upon the land, and from digging, taking out and carrying away any of said stone must rest upon the correctness of that ruling.

The agreement in its relevant parts provides that the “lessors,” (the Williams’s), “grant, demise and lease” to the “lessee,” (Schweyer), and his assigns, “the right, liberty and privilege of entering at all times for and during the term of twenty years from the date hereof, in, on and upon all that certain” described tract of fifteen acres. Then comes the following clause: “The lessee shall be permitted by himself and with his agents, laborers and teams to search for, dig, excavate, mine and carry away therefrom serpentine, verdantique,, green stone and granite found in, upon or under said described land, and of making all necessary roads for ingress, egress and transportation over and across the same to public road or place of deposit, also the right,'liberty and privilege to erect on said land such buildings, fixtures and machinery as may be required to mine said stone and to prepare same for market, and also to deposit on any part of said land earth, stone, gravel, water and refuse material from the said quarry, doing, however, no unnecessary damage to said land or property, while the right to use, possess and enjoy the said demised premises for all other purposes than herein named shall remain in said lessors, their heirs, executors and assigns.” The agreement further contained an option of renewal for an additional period of twenty years; and provided that the lessee should have six months to explore the premises and make excavations, during which time he should pay for only the stone mined and taken away, at the rates specified, after which period he was to mine and carry away not less than enough serpentine, *518 verdantique, green stone and granite to amount to fifty dollars per month in royalties, or pay for that quantity every month, but all payments -thus made were to be held as on account of stone mined and carried away, or to be mined and carried away, during the existence of the lease. The lessee was, however, authorized to terminate the lease at any time on six months’ notice. As consideration for the foregoing the lessee agreed to pay lessors a royalty for each ton of said stone mined and taken away from said premises by him, upon the following schedule: “For all serpentine, verdantique, green stone and granite, taken out as dimension stones for sawing purposes, one dollar per ton. For all small stone and offal used for other purposes, at the rate of three cents per ton. All quarrying under this lease to be done by the channeling process. By offal stone is meant to imply stone not suitable for sawing. For any soapstone that may be found in the veins of serpentine, verdantique, green stone or granite, sixty cents per ton if sold for grinding purposes, except when sold to the lessors, heirs or assigns, then and in that event, the lessors shall pay the lessee for stone at the quarry, a sum not exceeding seventy cents per ton; the lessee shall pay no royalty on such stone. Said soapstone to be put at some convenient place accessible to teams for carting them away. The said lessors, heirs or assigns are at all times to have the first privilege of taking any stone that are suitable for grinding. At price above mentioned.” Most of the land described in the agreement was located on the east side of the Bush-kill Creek; and on this part the lessee located his quarry. A small portion of the land lay on the west side of the creek, on which there was a quarry hole which had been opened over twenty years before and from which the lessors had mined small stone, soapstone and talc for grinding. They resumed this operation in 1907, without protest from the lessee, and again in 1917, and continued to take out small stone, for grinding, without any pro *519 test from the plaintiff, which succeeded to the lessee’s rights that year, until shortly before the filing of this bill in January, 1924; except during the year 1921, when operations were suspended.

The confusion of nomenclature with respect to conjveyances of the right to mine and remove minerals has been referred to by the Supreme Court in Denniston v. Haddock, 200 Pa. 426; Gallagher v. Hicks, 216 Pa. 243; and Hollenback Coal Co. v. Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., 219 Pa. 124; which distinguished between an absolute sale of the minerals, a conditional sale thereof, and a lease of the land without impeachment of waste. The language of the agreement in this case is peculiar, and is precisely like none which came before the appellate courts in any case called to our attention. It is not, in terms, a sale of the mineral, as in Montooth v. Gamble, 123 Pa. 240; Hosack v. Crill, 18 Pa. Superior Ct. 90 and 204 Pa. 97; Gardner’s Est., 199 Pa. 524; Lillibridge v. Coal Co., 143 Pa. 293; nor, strictly speaking, a lease of the land, with the privilege of mining the minerals thereunder, as in Timlin v. Brown, 158 Pa. 606; Plummer v. Hillside Coal & Iron Co., 160 Pa. 483; Kingsley v. Hillside Coal & Iron Co., 144 Pa. 614; Advance Industrial Supply Co. v. Eagle Metallic Copper Co., 267 Pa. 15; nor yet, in terms, a lease of all the stone in place with the right of removing the same, as in Miles v. N. Y. S. & W. Coal Co., 250 Pa. 147; Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. v. Wright, 177 Pa. 387; Sanderson v. Scranton, 105 Pa 469; Robinson v. Pierce, 278 Pa. 372. The subject of the demise or grant, in this case, is not the land itself, but “the right, liberty and privilege of entering” on the land, which thus remained, in so far as not actually entered upon by the “lessee” in the possession of the “lessors”; thus distinguishing it from Advance Ind. Supply Co. v. Eagle Metallic Copper Co., supra, see p. 20. Appurtenant to the grant of this right or privilege was the permission to mine and carry away serpentine, verdantique, green stone, and granite found in, upon or under the *520 land described in the agreement; and it will be noted, just as in Jennings Bros. & Co. v. Beale, 158 Pa. 283, “that in this clause is omitted the word ‘all,’ which is ordinarily used in conveyances of an absolute right..... it does not designate ‘all’ [serpentine, etc.] — it does not even define it by the use of the definite article ‘the,’ and there is not found anywhere in the deed words expressly excluding the grantor” (pp. 287, 288). On the other hand, except as to land occupied by the lessee for mining, or for roads to and from his quarry operation or for buildings and machinery necessary in connection therewith, or for the deposit of refuse, the agreement expressly reserves to the lessors full possession and enjoyment of the premises covered by the agreement, in such manner, of course, as not to interfere with the lessee’s rights under the agreement. Nor is the lessee’s privilege of mining serpentine, and the other rock named, unrestricted and absolute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 Pa. Super. 515, 1925 Pa. Super. LEXIS 312, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sylvan-green-marble-co-v-williams-co-pasuperct-1925.