Titus v. Bindley

59 A. 694, 210 Pa. 121, 1904 Pa. LEXIS 857
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 31, 1904
DocketAppeal, No. 152
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 59 A. 694 (Titus v. Bindley) 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
Titus v. Bindley, 59 A. 694, 210 Pa. 121, 1904 Pa. LEXIS 857 (Pa. 1904).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Mestrezat,

This is a proceeding under the Act of June 10, 1893, P. L. 415 entitled “ An act to provide for the quieting of titles to land ” in which the petitioner requested the court below to frame an issue between him and the respondents “ to settle and determine their respective rights and title in and to ” the coal and other minerals in and underlying a tract of land in Dunkard township, Greene county, of which the petitioner alleges he is the owner in fee. The petitioner avers that he and those under whom he claims title have been in possession of said coal and other minerals and have been mining the coal every year since 1864 without being interrupted in their rights of possession and ownership of the same by anyone; that in 1864 Solomon Elliott, then owner of the premises, demised and leased to Charles S. Seaton and G. W. K. Minor, respondents’ predecessors in title, the right of prospecting and searching for coal and other minerals and for salt, oil, carbon and other substances in and upon a tract of land, a part of which is the land above referred to and now owned by the petitioner, but that the search for oil and gas and other minerals under said lease was abandoned in 1878 ; that since that date the petitioner’s right to the coal and other minerals in and underlying said land has not been interrupted or interfered [124]*124with by the lessees in said lease or their successors in title or by any other person, “ but on the contrary your petitioner has been in the exclusive possession of the said coal and other minerals from that date to the present time. ” A rule was granted on the respondents to show cause why an issue should not be framed to settle and determine the rights of the parties to the coal and other minerals in dispute. The respondents filed an answer in which they aver that under the terms of the lease of 1864 they are the owners and in possession of the coal, oil, minerals and other substances in and under the petitioner’s land and “ are advised and believe that they, and those under whom they claim, have been in the peaceable, notorious and public possession of said leasehold estate from the 4th day of June 1864, down to the present time, with deeds on record; and they deny the petitioner’s claim of possession, and aver that petitioner has no possession, or right of possession to the aforesaid leasehold estate by their deed or adverse possession. ” The answer further avers that the petitioner “ never owned, and was never in possession of the coal, minerals, oil and other mineral substances, nor of the rights and privileges set out in the deed from Solomon Elliott to - Charles S. Seaton and G. W. K. Minor, ” and denies that the petitioner and those under whom he claims have been mining the coal since 1864 without interruption or objection as alleged in the petition. The respondents, therefore, deny the jurisdiction of the court to frame an issue under the provisions of the act of 1893.

The petitioner took testimony to support the averments of the petition, and the case was heard on the testimony, the petition and the answer. The learned trial judge was of opinion that “ upon the facts before us we are obliged to hold that the constructive possession of the coal is in the respondents under the title they have shown here, ” and for this reason discharged the rule for an issue.

The case was thus determined by the trial judge on the merits of the titles of the respective parties and it has been argued here by counsel of both parties as though an issue had been framed and tried in the court below and this was an appeal from the judgment entered on the verdict. The title and rights of the parties to the minerals in dispute are not involved in this controversy and cannot be determined by an [125]*125interlocutory decree on the rule issued in this proceeding. The only question presented for consideration here is the right of the petitioner to have an issue framed under the statute “to settle and determine their (the parties) respective rights and titles in and to said land. ” Wo are clearly of opinion that under the facts presented to the trial court, the petitioner’s application for an issue should have been granted.

The act of June 10, 1898, provides substantially that when any person shall be in possession of lands, claiming to hold or own possession of the same by any right or title whatsoever, which right or title of possession shall be disputed or denied by any person “and such claim of title and right of possession and the denial thereof ” shall be made to appear to the court, an issue shall be framed in such form as the court shall deem proper between the parties “ to settle and determine the right and title of the respective parties to said land.”

The deed from Elliott to Levi Titus placed in the latter the fee in the tract of land which included the minerals, “subject to such restrictions and leases as are now held on said premises.” The title thus vested in Titus gave him, subject to those restrictions, the right of possession which, as we understand, was followed by actual possession in 1870, when lie received his deed. This possession was held by Titus until his death and was thereafter continued until the present time in his son, the petitioner, his successor in title to the premises. The respondents do not deny these facts but aver that by virtue of the grant or lease of June 4, 1864, by Elliott to Seaton and Minor, the legal title to the minerals in the land became vested in them and through them in the respondents, which gives the latter the constructive possession of the minerals. For this reason the court held that it had no jurisdiction to award an issue under the act of 1893. But to arrive at this conclusion, the learned judge was compelled to assume the functions of the court and jury on the trial of an issue. Whether the respondents have constructive possession of the minerals necessarily depends upon whether they have title and that is the very question which the statute directs shall be determined by the court and jury on an issue framed for the purpose. The court cannot summarily determine the title to the property on the application for the issue, whether the dispute is over facts [126]*126or the law arising upon the construction of a written instrument: Del. & Hudson Canal Co. v. Genet, 169 Pa. 343. If the court is clothed with the authority to determine the validity of the adverse title on the preliminary question as to whether a rule shall be granted or not, there would be no occasion for an issue in any case. Whenever the adverse- claimant relies upon possession, actual or constructive, to oust the jurisdiction of the court under this act, he must establish it without requiring the court on the application for the. issue to first adjudge and sustain the validity of his title.

The petition in this case sufficiently avers, as required by the statute, the petitioner’s claim of title and right of possession and the respondents’ denial thereof. Under the pleadings and facts presented, the court should, and doubtless would, have found these jurisdictional averments to be true. The decision of the case, however, turned on the question of petitioner’s possession which, as we have seen, the trial judge held to be constructively in the respondents under the lease of 1864, and for that reason denied the jurisdiction of the court to award an issue. This ruling ignored the parol testimony on the subject of the actual possession of the minerals in dispute.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 A. 694, 210 Pa. 121, 1904 Pa. LEXIS 857, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/titus-v-bindley-pa-1904.