Wilmer v. Phil. & Reading Coal & Iron Co.

101 A. 538, 130 Md. 666, 1917 Md. LEXIS 170
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJune 26, 1917
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 101 A. 538 (Wilmer v. Phil. & Reading Coal & Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilmer v. Phil. & Reading Coal & Iron Co., 101 A. 538, 130 Md. 666, 1917 Md. LEXIS 170 (Md. 1917).

Opinion

Boyd, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a decree sustaining a demurrer to and dismissing an amended bill of complaint, filed by the appellant against the appellee. The plaintiff alleges that he is the duly substituted trustee under the will of Jane IT. Nicholas for the purposes of the trust therein created, by an order of Circuit Court No. 2 of Baltimore City, passed the 12th day of July, 1913, and that the defendant (appellee) is a foreign corporation “engaged in the business of mining, transporting and selling coal and other mine products with offices located in the City of Baltimore, and transacting business in said city”; that by the terms of the will of Jane H. Nicholas, who was the owner of a one-sixth fee simple interest in certain land situated in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, described in an indenture, a copy of which is filed, her estate was divided into six equal parts, one of which devolved *668 upon the plaintiff as such substituted, trustee for the benefit of Philip N. Nicholas, for the term of his natural life, he being still living; that the signature of George 0. Nicholas, the alleged committee of Philip N. Nicholas to said indenture by his alleged attorney, was unauthorized and that it was incompetent for said alleged committee so to lease said land, without leave of the Court first had and obtained.

It is then' alleged that by the terms of the will an undivided fee simple interest in said land had devolved upon the plaintiff, as tenant in common with certain other co-tenants therein, the defendant being one of them, that the defendant had occupied said land from the first of January, 1890, the time of the death of said Jane H. Nicholas or prior thereto, to the present time, mining the same and since said date opened new mines thereon without the leave of the plaintiff or any predecessor of his in title, and received the rents, issues and profits thereof, which amounted to a great sum of money after the deduction of all necessary expenses in the operation of the mines, and used the same for the purposes of its mining business, and for the erection and occupation of works and houses thereon, and has encroached upon the rights of the plaintiff, its co-tenant- in the premises, as herein more particularly set -forth, without leave, license or warrant in law and without any contract or lease with or on behalf of the plaintiff or any predecessor of him in said trust; that the defendant has been and still is mining large quantities of coal and other products of said land from mines already opened prior to the first of January, 1890, and prior to the date of the alleged indenture, and from mines opened subsequent to said dates, etc.

It is further alleged that defendant is still using and otherwise disposing of the coal and products of mining taken from said land, as well as the land itself, and has erected buildings, tracks and machinery thereon, and has otherwise wrongfully used said land continuously, year after year, to the present time, “to the exclusion of your orator from his rights therein and in utter disregard of said rights, to the great Joss and *669 damage of and to said trust estate, and the depletion of the coal and other mineral deposits, upon said land, and the value of said land, and has unwarrantably leased and undertaken to lease portions of said land for other purposes than mining' to strangers to this plaintiff, who have no privity of contract with your orator.” It is alleged that plaintiff had demanded an accounting but the defendant had failed to account to him, or any predecessor of him in the premises for any part of the rents, issues or profits of said land or for any matter of account whatsoever, since the first of January, 1890. The bill prays for: (a) an accounting; (b) that defendant be decreed to pay the plaintiff all sums found to be due on said accounting; (e) that the defendant be enjoined “from further excluding your orator from, said land and from further interfering with the rights of your orator in said land held by this trustee in trust as aforesaid, and from mining or removing any coal or other property from said land; and from further occupying said land adversely to the interests, of your orator”; (d) that defendant be adjudged to pay to- the plaintiff such damages as he may have sustained from the wrongful acts of the defendant, and (e) for further relief.

As there were not filed with the bill copies of the order of 'Court, by which the plaintiff alleges he was appointed, and of the will of J ane II. Nicholas, we have no information in the record of their contents beyond the allegations in the bill. The judge of the lower Court could not properly have granted the injunction prayed for without having those exhibits before him. Miller’s Equity Procedure, sec. 582, pp. 689-690; Miller v. Balto. Co. Marble Co., 52 Md. 612, 646. Under the circumstances of this case it was necessary to have before the Court a copy of the will, as the Court is not authorized to accept the construction placed on it by the plaintiff— especially as the copy of the lease filed with the bill -shows that it was signed and executed by “George C. Nicholas, committee of the estate of Philip Norboume Nicholas.”

The amended bill seems to proceed on the theory that the defendant and the plaintiff are tenants in common. In addi *670 tion to what we have quoted it is alleged that “excepting as arising from said cotenancy, no contractual rights or privity exist or have existed between him, or his predecessor in title, and said defendant.” It is contended by the appellee that the bill in effect alleges an ouster.

The “indenture” referred to—marked “Plaintiff’s Exhibit A,” is a lease dated January 1st, 1900, to the appellee by a large number of persons, including “George C. Nicholas, committee of the estate of Philip Norboum© Nicholas, by his attomey-in-fact, Cumberland Dugan.” Edwin M. Wilmer individually is also one of the lessors. By that lease the lessor's undertook to grant, demise and let to the defendant “the exclusive right and privilege of digging, mining and carrying away anthracite coal wholly at their own cost and expense in and from their interest (being two hundred and eighty-three five hundred and seventy-sixths part) of, in and to” certain tracts in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, with the right to> deposit the slate, dirt and refuse thereon, for the term of fifteen years, from the 1st day of January, 1899, to the 31st day of December, 1913. It is signed, sealed and acknowledged, and when executed by attorneys in fact, it purports to be executed under letters of attorney intended to be recorded in Schuylkill County, Pa.

Although according to the.bill the appellant was not appointed substituted trustee until the 12th of July, 1913, and he was individually a party to that lease, the first prayer of the bill reads as follows: “(a)

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Bluebook (online)
101 A. 538, 130 Md. 666, 1917 Md. LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilmer-v-phil-reading-coal-iron-co-md-1917.