81 Mo. App. 1 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1899
The answer was a general denial supplemented with an admission that the defendants were in possession of the lands on both sides of the plaintiff’s right of way and engaged in excavating coal from beneath such right of way, and an allegation in substance that such excavations had been made with plaintiff’s knowledge and acquiesence. There was a paragraph in the answer stating an offer by defendants in the future to leave every alternate fifty feet underneath plaintiff’s right of way untouched and to mine every alternate fifty feet, and after such mining to fill the chambers solidly with slate, coupled with an allegation that if defendants mined in that way underneath plaintiff’s right of way there would be no danger from settling, etc. There are many superfluous and redundant allegations, both in the petition and answer, to which it is not necessary to allude in order to present the material issues in the case. After a hearing on the motion to dissolve, the court found the issues for the defendants and dismissed the plaintiff’s petition.
The plaintiff’s right of way over said land amounted to no more than an easement. It was neither alleged in the petition nor shown by the evidence that plaintiff owned the fee in the strip of land embraced in its right of way, nor that its interest therein was not limited to a mere surface right. The
The decisive issue in the case is, whether or not the defendants in conducting their mining operations threatened to so negligently and carelessly excavate and remove the subjacent support of -the surface'of the ground on which plaintiff’s right of way is located as to entail upon the plaintiff the injurious consequences alleged in its petition. The trial judge found in favor of the negative of this issue.
There was testimony adduced which tended to show that it was owing- to the insufficient support afforded by the columns left to the roof of the entries and rooms in that part of the defendants’ mines underlying the plaintiff’s right of way that on two occasions the surface of the ground under the plaintiff’s track had sunk a few inches, and from this it seems the plaintiff’s inferred that if defendants were permitted to further prosecute their mining operations the stability of the track would be again jeopardized. But this inference was repelled by the showing that the defendants proposed to continue their mining so as not to injure the plaintiff in any way. There was no testimony tending to show that the defendants threatened or proposed to continue their mining operations in such a manner as would interfere with plaintiff’s rights.
It appears that after the sinking of the plaintiff’s track in 1898 the defendants paid plaintiff the damages occasioned-thereby and did no further mining under the plaintiff’s right of way between that time and that of the filing of the petition for the injunction. All things considered, it seems to us that the case is one in which we may with much propriety defer to the finding of the learned circuit judge who heard the case. We see no good reason why we should disturb the fin ding made by him.
The judgment will be affirmed.