Court Opinion

ID: 6513071
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-19 18:24:08.646765+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:54:56.496658
License: Public Domain

SOMERVILLE. J.'
The present suit, which is one of ejectment under the statute, involves a controversy between the superjacent and subjacent owners of land, upon which there is a coal mine, opened and in process of being worked by the defendant. The plaintiff, Gibson, is the owner of the surface, and the defendant Williams, of the “coal and other minerals,” with certain incidental and other rights, derived through various mesne conveyances from one Green B. Erost, the original owner in fee simple of the premises. In November, 1881, Erost conveyed to one Peters “all the coal and other minerals in, under and upon” these lands, which are fully described in the deed; “and also all timber and water upon the same, necessary for the development, working and mining of said coal and other minerals, and the preparation of the same for market and the removal of the same; and also the right of way, and the right to build roads of any description over the same, necessary for the convenient transportation of said coal and other minerals from said land, and the conveying and transporting, to and from said lands, all materials and implements that may be of use in the mining and removal of said coal and other *231minerals, or in tlie preparation of the same for market.” Subsequently, in August, 1884, Frost conveyed the same lands to one C. L. Frost and J. B. Beeves, reserving, by exception from the lands sold, the mineral rights and other interest previously conveyed to Peters, using the same language of description adopted in the deed to him. The defendant is shown to have acquired by deed, through sundry mesne conveyances, the precise interest which. Peters owned.
This interest may be briefly described under three general heads: (1) A grant of all the coal and other minercds upon, or in the land; (2) So much of the Umber and water on the land, as may be necessary (a) for the development, working and mining of the coal and other minerals, and (ft) for the preparation of the same for the market, and their removal from the soil and the premises; (3) The right of way, by roads of any description, to and from the lands, so far as may be necessary for the transportation of all minerals mined, and of materials and implements needed in the business of mining and the preparation of the minerals for market.
The material question is what, if any surface rights pass to the grantee under the first head, which is a grant of all the coal and other minerals upon and in the land.
This is dependent in some measure upon the nature and characteristics of the thing granted. Minerals which are unsevered from the soil, or, as sometimes said, which are “in place,” are parts of the freehold, and constitute landed property. They are capable of a possession distinct from that of the surface, and may form a separate corporeal hereditament, which is the subject of a distinct inheritance. The title of the soil, as such, including the surface, may be vested in one person; and that of the mines and minerals on it in another. It is only when the minerals are severed from the soil that they become personal chattels, and it is only where the right to dig or to mine them is not exclusive that it may be classed as an incorporeal right, or easement merely in the nature of a license. — Bainbridge on Law Mines and Mining (Amer. Ed.), pp. 3, 261; Massot v. Moses (3 S. Ca., 168); s. c., 16 Amer. Rep. 697; Caldwell v. Fulton, 31 Penn. St., 475; Melton v. Lambard, 51 Cal. 258; Rycman v. Gillis (57 N. Y.); s. c. 15 Amer. Rep. 464.
The express grant of all the minerals, or mineral rights in a tract of land, is, by necessary implication, the grant also to work them, unless the language of the grant itself *232repels this construction. This is the result of the familiar maxim that “when any thing is granted, all the means of obtaining it, and all the fruits and effects of it are also granted.” — Shep. Touch. 89; 11 Coke, 52a. This involves the incidental right to penetrate the surface of the soil for the minerals, and to use such means and processes for the purpose of mining and removing them as may be reasonably necessary, in the light of modern inventions, and of the improvements in the arts and sciences, but without injury to the right of support for the surface, or superincumbent soil, in its natural state. — Marvin v. Brewster Iron Mining Co., 55 N. Y. 538; s. c. 14 Amer. Rep. 322; Wilms v. Jess (94 Ill. 464); s. c. 34 Amer. Rep. 242; Bainbridge on Mines and Mining, *35, *62, *63. It is said by a standard English author touching this subject: . “The right to work mines is so inseparable from the grant of them that it has been expressly decided, not only that the right to enter and work mines is necessarily incident to the grant of mines, without any express authority for that purpose; but that this power can not be restrained by a special power given in the affirmative, which would authorize more acts than would be implied by law, but which will in no wise exclude the full operation of the law.” — Bainbridge on Mines and Mining, (Amer. Ed.), *34, *35.
It is contended that this incidental right to work the mines on the land is limited by the special grant of certain timber and water privileges, and of the right of way to and from the mines, and that the mention of these privileges, under the maxim expressio warns est exclusio alterius, would rebut the grant of any right to occupy the surface of the soil for miners’ houses, or other like purposes. It is often said that great caution is frequently necessary in the application of this maxim, and of its twin legal aphorism of synonymous meaning, epressum fac'd cessare taciturn. — Broom’s Legal Max. *506. It is obvious that without the right of surface occupation, to some extent, the grant in question is rendered nugatory. The principle is well settled that one who has the exclusive right tó mine coal upon a tract of land has the right of possession even as against the owner of the soil, so far as is reasonably necessary to carry on his mining operations. — Turner v. Reynolds, 23 Penn. St. Rep. 199; Rogers v. Taylor, 38 Eng. Law & Eq. 574; Tenn. & Coosa R. R. Co. v. East Ala. R. R. Co., 75 Ala. 524, 525. To construe away this right would be to construe away the grant *233itself, which can not be enjoyed without it. It is our opinion that the enumeration of these special privileges was not intended to exclude another which was absolutely necessary to the very life of the grant itself. The right to use timber would not pass by implication. — Bainbridge on Mines and Mining, *04. This was, therefore, the ace risition of a new and valuable right. The right of way and water privileges were also more comprehensive possibly than would have been yielded pacifically by mere construction. At any rate these several grants themselves necessarily imply the right to occupy so much of the surface as might be needed to open and work the mines. There could be no use of timber, or water, or right of way, except in connection with working the mines, and there could be no working of the mines without an occupation of the surface in the vicinity of the shafts, slopes, or other requisite openings. These specifications strengthen rather than repel the implication in question. — Marvin v. Brewster Iron Mining Co., 14 Amer. Rep. 329, supra; Bainbridge on Mines and Mining, *34, *35.
The owner of the minerals and mining rights must use his own so as not unreasonably to injure his neighbor, the owner of the surface or soil, and it is, we repeat, now settled by the authorities quite universally that he must conduct his mining operations so as to leave a sufficient support for the surface. — Carlin v. Chappel (101 Penn. St. 348); s. c. 47 Amer. Rep. 722, and cases cited; Harris v. Ryding, 5 M. & W., 69; Bogers on Mining, 455. In other words, the exclusive grantee of minerals in lands is entitled to dig and carry away so much of them as he can excavate from the soil without injury to the surface owned by the grantor, the mining right being servient to the surface to the extent of sufficient supports to sustain it in its natural state. — Jones v. Wagner, 5 Amer. Rep., 385. But he is not liable for any incidental damages necessarily occasioned by the ordinary and careful operation of his mines, not injurious to the surface, as for example, the loss of springs by the owner of the soil. — Coleman v. Chadwick, (80 Penn. St. 81); s. c. 21 Amer. Rep. 93; or the disturbance of the peace and comfort of the surface owner’s dwelling by necessary blasting in the mines. — Marvin v. Brewster Iron M’g Co., 14 Amer. Rep., 322.
These incidental rights of the miner, which are appurtenant to the grant of the mineral rights, are to be gauged by *234the necessities of the particular case, and, therefore, vary with changed conditions and circumstances. He may occupy so much of the surface, adopt such machinery and modes of mining, and establish such auxiliary appliances and instrumentalities, as are ordinarily used in such business, and may be reasonably necessary for the profitable and beneficial enjoyment of his property. But he is not limited, as we have already said, to such appliances as were in existence when the grant was made, but may keep pace with the progress of society and of modern invention. — Bainbridge on Mines & Mining, *63, *64; Marvin v. Brewster Iron Mining Co., 14 Amer. Rep. 322, supra. It has been accordingly held in England tnat a reservation of mines of coal (which is usually the same in legal effect as a grant), with rights of way for transportation, involved the right to construct a modern railway, although this mode of transportation was unknown at the time of the grant. The ground of the decision seems to have been that without use of the railway for shipment, the mines could not, under the evidence, have been worked beneficially, or with reasonable profit.
We do not construe the language of the present grant, or reservation as it appears in the deeds of the plaintiff and those under whom he claims, to confer any right by implication, or otherwise, to use the surface of the land for the purpose of erecting coke ovens, designed for the conversion of coal into coke. His only right is to mine and transport coal in its first marketable state. The contract clearly contemplated nothing else. Such is the usual construction placed upon similar grants, the principle being thus stated by Bainbridge in his treatise on Mines and Mining, *63: “An owner of that kind can not use the surface or any of the materials of the land for changing the character of the mineral to which he is entitled, as for converting coal into coke, clay into bricks, or for smelting the metallic ores, much less for any further purpose of manufacture.”
The evidence shows that the defendant claimed the right to occupy as much as three acres of the surface of plaintiff’s land as incident to his grant. Upon this area he had erected five two-story framed miners’ houses; four log cabins for the occupancy of employes; an air-shaft for conveying smoke from and ventilating the mines; a powder house for keeping powder used for blasting; a blacksmith shop; and a storehouse for furnishing the miners with supplies. Which of these improvements are reasonably necessary for the profita*235ble and beneficial working o£ tbe mines is a question of fact to be determined from the evidence by tbe jury. And so likewise -the inquiry as to bow much of tbe surface of the land may be reasonably needed for this purpose. It may be tbat other suitable lands, conveniently situated, could be obtained at a reasonable price for tbe site of tbe miners’ bouses, tbe cabins and tbe store; or tbe contrary may be true. It may be tbat tbe mine was so far distant from tbe market for supplies, and tbat prices in neighboring stores were so extravagant, as to render necessary tbe establishment of a supply store both for tbe economy of time and money of the employes. It may.be tbat such a store was a mere convenience, and not a necessity, within tbe meaning of tbe law, for this necessity can not be deemed to exist if a similar privilege can be otherwise secured by reasonable trouble and expense. — O’Rorke v. Smith, 23 Amer. Rep. 446, note; Tiedeman on Real Prop. §§ 606, 609. These and other like considerations it would be proper for tbe jury to consider in solving tbe question of necessity — a word of relative import, which may mean, on tbe one band, less than imperative need, and, on the other, more than mere suitable convenience.
It is manifest tbat tbe rulings of tbe Circuit Court are not in harmony with these views, including both tbe instructions to tbe jury and tbe rulings on tbe evidence.
■ Tbe defendant should have been permitted to show to what extent his occupancy of the surface of tbe lands, around tbe opening of tbe mine, was reasonably necessary, under the above rules, to tbe prosecution of tbe mining business.
Tbe evidence as to bow much of tbe surface was or might be needed for tbe erection of coke ovens was properly excluded.
It was not competent to show tbat particular individuals in tbe neighborhood carried on a mine without a store bouse for supplies, although a usage in tbe matter by other miners, similarly situated might be relevant if it bad prevailed sufficiently long, and possessed tbe other requisite characteristics of an established custom. But tbe business of mining in this particular part of tbe State is probably of a date too recent at this time to give such a custom tbe age necessary to its validity.
Tbe court did not err in allowing evidence to be introduced showing tbat two other stores were located near tbe mines. It was quite as relevant to show tbat there were two stores near by as tbat there were a hundred, with a view of testing *236tbe urgency of tlie alleged necessity impelling the defendant to establish one for his own needs. The two cases differ only in degree, not in kind.
The value of the improvements erected by the defendant around the mines was relevant as affecting the rental value of the three acres of land sued for — the defendant being liable for rent by way of use and occupation in the event of plaintiff’s recovery.
The verbal contract of purchase, which the witness Smith testifies he made, of part of the surface in controversy, from Erost & Reeves, who sold to the plaintiff, was never reduced to writing, nor accompanied by a payment of any part of the purchase-money. It was, therefore, void under the statute of frauds, and could confer no rights on the alleged purchaser which would prejudice those of either party to the present suit.
The judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.