Whiles v. Grand Junction Mining & Fuel Co.

282 P. 200, 86 Colo. 418, 1929 Colo. LEXIS 323
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 12, 1929
DocketNo. 12,203.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 282 P. 200 (Whiles v. Grand Junction Mining & Fuel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Whiles v. Grand Junction Mining & Fuel Co., 282 P. 200, 86 Colo. 418, 1929 Colo. LEXIS 323 (Colo. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justce Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff Whiles is the owner of an undivided eight-ninths interest in certain irrigated lands in Weld county by virtue of divers mesne conveyances from the Union Pacific Eailroad Company. The railroad company in its deed of conveyance reserved unto itself and its grantees the minerals and coal underlying the surface of these-lands and the right to enter upon the lands and to mine and remove the same. The defendant Grand Junction Mining and Fuel Company owns and operates the' Sterling mine adjoining these lands on the north, from-which it has been mining coal for several years, and-is the lessee of -the railroad company of the coal measures.underlying the plaintiff’s land. This action by *420 the plaintiff has for its object a writ of injunction to restrain the defendant from entering upon or mining coal from his lands and to enjoin the threatened continuance of such mining by the methods, as the complaint alleges, defendant has employed and will continue to use, whereby sufficient or ample support will not be left to prevent the superincumbent soil from subsiding, or prevent injury to the surface of plaintiff’s land, and that the defendant intends to remove all of the coal beneath the surface of plaintiff’s land without leaving or providing any surface support therefor, and unless a natural or artificial support be left plaintiff’s lands will subside, causing him great and irreparable injury. The defendant fuel company admits that the reservations and exceptions are in the deed of the railroad company, and that it proposes to remove coal from under the surface of plaintiff’s land, and that in the grant of the railroad company to plaintiff’s grantors the railroad company reserved these rights for itself and its grantees to enter upon the land and to mine coal underlying plaintiff’s lands and to remove the same therefrom. There are further allegations in the answer to the effect that defendant intends to mine the coal in a workmanlike manner with due regard to the safety and preservation of the surface.

Upon the issues joined the trial court found that it was impossible or impracticable to mine coal under plaintiff’s land in such a way as to afford reasonable and profitable extraction, and at the same time leave sufficient permanent natural or artificial support for the surface. A further finding is that the result of such operations by the defendant will cause subsidence of the surface of approximately 126 acres of plaintiff’s land, varying from a maximum of 6 feet at certain points to a minimum of 1 inch at others, but the exact amount of subsidence it is impossible accurately with any degree of certainty to determine at the present time. The court further found that legal relief could be had by the plaintiff only by *421 successive suits at law for damages, as damages accrue, which would result in the likelihood of a multiplicity of suits, and therefore the only ample and complete relief to be had by plaintiff is in an equitable action. Apparently all material questions of fact in issue were found in favor of the plaintiff.

In the final decree the trial court declined to enjoin the defendant from further mining operations, as permanent relief. Having found that the defendant has the right to mine and remove coal, if it leaves or provides sufficient permanent natural or artificial support for the surface thereof to prevent subsidence of, or injury to, the surface; and as that method is impracticable, as the court found, then the defendant may not mine or remove any coal until or unless it furnishes and gives to plaintiff a statutory indemnifying bond with good and sufficient sureties to be approved by the court in a penal sum of $7,500, which the court found to be the value of the plaintiff’s surface rights. The decree which the court entered was that the defendant be restrained and enjoined from mining, extracting or removing coal, -unless it shall give and furnish a bond, as just indicated, to provide security to the plaintiff for the payment from time to time of' all damages which may accrue to the sur-' face of his lands and crops and improvements which are or may thereafter be thereon, resulting from the subsidence or injury to the surface of the lands by reason of the mining and removal of coal therefrom. The court made the restraining order binding and effective from the date of the decree, but suspended its operation for about two months, and provided that if on or before the expiration of this limited time the defendant does not present to the court the prescribed bond for approval, the restraining order shall remain in full force and effect unless and until such bond be furnished. In other words, the court rendered a decree restraining the defendant from mining and removing coal unless it furnished the prescribed bond, and when such bond was *422 furnished the defendant would be at liberty to proceed with its mining operations. The case as made, therefore, is whether the plaintiff, as he claims, is absolutely entitled to a decree of injunction under the facts as found by the court, or whether the court has the power to deny injunctive relief, if the defendant will give, as is the case here, a statutory bond to save the plaintiff harmless from any damage caused by the subsidence of the surface of his land.

This court has had occasion to consider similar questions in the cases of Campbell v. Louisville C. M. Co., 39 Colo. 379, 89 Pac. 767, 10 L. R. A. (N. S.) 822; Burt v. Fuel Co., 71 Colo. 205, 205 Pac. 741; Barker v. Mintz, 73 Colo. 262, 215 Pac. 534; Evans Fuel Co. v. Leyda, 77 Colo. 356, 236 Pac. 1023. Counsel for the plaintiff in error, who was plaintiff below, contends that there is an inconsistency between the Barker case and the Evans Fuel Company case as to some of the questions which are involved in the one now under consideration, and that rightly construed these cases are not authority for the position taken by the defendant. They say that the Barker case held merely, as did the Burt case, where the ownership of the surface and the mineral is severed, the owner of the mineral may take it out but must support the surface; and that the Evans case held that the right of the surface support was absolute; that it was an incident to the ownership of the surface, and that the surface owner might demand this support even if it becomes necessary to leave every foot of coal untouched under the surface estate. We'do not think that, so far as any question that is involved here is concerned, we should enter upon a discussion as to whether there is any inconsistency between the Evans and the Barker cases. There ■will be time enough for that when the exigencies of some case require it.

When the plaintiff acquired his title to the land he took it with knowledge of the fact that his right thereto did not extend downward beyond the seams of *423 underlying coal. The deed to his remote grantor contained the reservation to mine and remove coal therefrom by the railroad company or its grantee or lessee.

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Bluebook (online)
282 P. 200, 86 Colo. 418, 1929 Colo. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whiles-v-grand-junction-mining-fuel-co-colo-1929.