White v. Sayers

45 S.E. 747, 101 Va. 821, 1903 Va. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 19, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 45 S.E. 747 (White v. Sayers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
White v. Sayers, 45 S.E. 747, 101 Va. 821, 1903 Va. LEXIS 93 (Va. 1903).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This controversy arises out of the following contract in writing, signed by the parties named therein:

“This deed, tripartite, made and entered into this 3rd day of August, 1854, between Edah Harman and Haney H, his wife, of the first part; Elias V. Harman and Sarah, his wife, of the second part, and Daniel H. Harman and Susan, his.wife, of the [823]*823third part, all of the county of Tazewell and State of Virginia, Witnesseth:
“That, whereas, the said parties own and claim upon the Dry Fork of Sandy, and its tributaries, in the county of Tazewell, certain parcels of land, some of which are owned by the said Kiah Harman, individually, some by the said Elias V. Harman, individually, and some by the said Daniel H. Harman, individually, some by Elias V. and Daniel H. Harman, jointly, and some by TCia.h and Daniel H. Harman, jointly, and there is reason to suppose that upon some or all the said lands there are valuable minerals; and, whereas, it is the wish and intention of the parties to explore said lands to ascertain the presence of such minerals, if they exist, and to work them if found in sufficient quantities and of sufficient richness.
“How, therefore, in consideration of the premises and the mutual covenants in this deed, the parties hereto do mutually convey each to the other such interests to all such mineral as may be found upon any or all of such lands lying as aforesaid upon the waters of the Dry Fork of Sandy river, together with all such privileges of access to and from said land, the use of wood, water and other material and privileges necessary to the proper working of materials, should any be found, as will make each of the parties hereto own in fee simple one undivided third of all the minerals and privileges above mentioned upon all said lands.
■ “And the parties further covenant to proceed at their joint and equal expense to explore for minerals upon said lands and to work said minerals, also upon their joint and equal expenses should valuable minerals be found in quantities sufficient to work; and all the clear profits arising therefrom are to be equally divided and all the losses equally borne. It is also further covenanted that neither party to this deed is to sell, lease or otherwise dispose of his interest to said minerals without the consent in writing of both the others, and-that in the event of [824]*824the death of either the work is not to he suspended, hut is to he prosecuted by the survivors for their benefit and for the benefit of the estate of the decedent.”

The question to be considered is, What is the true construction and effect of this instrument?

Kiah Harman, Elias V. Harman and Daniel Harman, at the time the instrument was executed, owned contiguous lands, some individually and some jointly, lying then in the county of Tazewell, but a portion of which, by reason of the formation of McDowell county, partly from Tazewell, are now within the limits of McDowell county, West Virginia. This contract was admitted to record in the clerk’s office of the County Court of Tazewell, as to the male parties thereto, on the 3rd day of August, 1854, and was acknowledged by the wives on the 6th day of August, 1855, their acknowledgments being spread upon the record on the last-mentioned date. Two of the parties to the contract, Kiah and Elias V. Harman, died many years before the institution of this suit, the first named in 1867, and the latter in 1877, and their respective rights under the contract, if any, are held or claimed by numerous parties.

The bill filed in December, 1901, by the appellees, the present claimants of the land, which Daniel H. Harman had title to when the contract in question was entered into, seeks to set aside and annul the contract, as a cloud upon their title, on the ground that the word “minerals” therein was not intended to embrace coal measures on thei lands; that the mineral (gold),which was contemplated and sought, not being found in sufficient quantities to work, nothing passed by. the contract, and that the contract, creating but a “project and partnership,” was mutually abandoned and wholly given up by the párties in a year or two after it was executed.

On the other hand, appellants, defendants below, contend that by the contract each of the parties became the owner “in fee simple” of one undivided third of all the minerals and [825]*825privileges mentioned in the contract, and the word “minerals” is to be construed as including coal, and not gold alone.

The contract, upon its face, sets out no other consideration than the mutual covenants therein stated, and none other is suggested, except the contemplated profits to arise from working the minerals on the lands, which profits were to be equally divided between the parties, and all losses equally borne by them. After setting out that the parties have reason to suppose that upon some or all of their lands, just before mentioned, there are valuable minerals, which it is their wish and intention to explore for and work, if found to exist in sufficient quantities and of sufficient richness, they mutually convey to each other, not “a one undivided third of all the minerals” on said lands, but an interest in “all such min erais as may be found” upon the lands mentioned, together with “such privileges of access to and from the lands, the use of wood, water and other material and privileges necessary to the proper working of minerals, should any he found, as will make each of the parties hereto own in fee simple one undivided third of all the minerals and privileges above mentioned upon all said lands.” To what minerals does the contract there refer to % Clearly to the minerals that might he found as the result of the explorations then contemplated by the parties. Can the instrument be construed as meaning that the parties intended to convey to each other an undivided one-third of all minerals that might at any indefinite period be found upon the lands ? We think not. The language they employ is too plain to admit of doubt that the parties merely intended to enter into a partnership agreement, by which they were at their joint and equal expense to explore for minerals on their lands, and if, as the result of their investigations, any should be found of sufficient quantity and richness to justify their doing so, to work such minerals, the profits arising therefrom to be equally shared by the parties, and the losses, if any, to be equally borne by them.

[826]*826It needs no citation of authority to show that such an agreement does nothing -more nor less than create a partnership between the parties thereto, and that it was entirely competent for the parties to abandon the contract and terminate the partnership whenever they mutually agreed to do so. It was, as the instrument discloses, purely a matter of conjecture as to whether there were minerals of value on the lands of the respective parties, or either of them, but, believing such to be the fact, it was manifestly their purpose to put in each the minerals that might be found on their respective lands, and hear an equal portion of the costs of exploring for them, and the costs of working such as might be found of sufficient value to justify it, looking alone, as a consideration for their in-put, to a share of the profits that it was hoped would arise out of the undertaking.

It was said by Lacy J., in Cowan v. Radford Iron Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
45 S.E. 747, 101 Va. 821, 1903 Va. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/white-v-sayers-va-1903.