Opinion by
This is an action in assumpsit by a vendee against his vendor to recover damages by reason of failure of the latter to deliver coal underlying the surface of the land sold, the coal having been mined out before the conveyance and without the knowledge of either party. ¡.
Defendant in 1896 leased to a third person on a specified royalty all the coal underlying a five hundred acre tract of land belonging to him, reserving “the right to retain three acres in one body underneath the buildings now erected on the land if desired. Said three acres to be located and designated by the first party hereto.” In 1907, eleven years after the execution of the lease above referred to, defendant sold to James D. Clark, plaintiff in this case, a part of the above tract containing one hundred and four acres and one hundred and twenty rods, which included the buildings and the three-acre tract mentioned in the deed “excepting and reserving” from the grant “all the coal in and underlying the above described tract of land (saving three acres of said coal surrounding and underneath the farm buildings now
The first and third to ninth assignments of error inclusive relate to the right of plaintiff to sue in assumpsit for the alleged breach of covenant for failure of consideration. These assignments are without merit. The deed in the present case contains the words “grant, bargain and sell” and also a covenant of general warranty. Section 6 of the Act of May 28,1715, 1 Smith’s Laws, 91 provides that “All deeds to be recorded in pursuance of this act, whereby any estate of inheritance in fee simple shall hereafter be limited to the grantee and his heirs, the words grant, bargain, sell, shall be adjudged an express covenant to the grantee, his heirs and assigns, to
The principles governing the remedy of the grantee where the grantor has failed to deliver possession or a good title in accordance with the expressed or implied covenants in the deed were fully stated by this court in Beaupland v. McKeen, 28 Pa. 124, 130, as follows: “We have gone further in Pennsylvania in relieving purchaseers of real estate from payment of purchase-money, on the ground of defects and encumbrances, than courts of justice have gone in any other state or country where the common law obtains. We administer 'not only all
The second assignment alleges error in the charge of the court with respect to the measure of damages. The court charged: “The measure of damages is the relative value of the coal mined out of these three acres before the plaintiff purchased, as compared with the value of the entire tract as described in the deed, estimated with regard to the price fixed by the parties for the entire purchase, and, in considering and estimating the damages, you take into consideration the peculiar advantages or disadvantages of the part lost with reference to the whole of the land. You may consider the effect which the part lost would have upon the value of the entire purchase, keeping in mind that the consideration mentioned in the deed and paid by the grantee to the grantor limits the amount of the recovery.” This, instruction is in accordance with the general rules on the subject heretofore adopted by this court. In the case of Beaupland v. McKeen, supra, the measure of damages was stated to be the relative value which the part taken away bears to the whole and the rule was further explained in the following language: “The relative value of the part to the whole is to be estimated with regard to the price fixed by the parties for the whole. The whole purchase'being assumed to be worth the price agreed pn, what part of the price would fairly be represented by the
The same . rule was applied by the Superior Court in
The burden of proving the relative value of the part to which title fails as compared with the value of the whole property was of course on the plaintiff. He met this burden by offering the testimony of persons familiar with land and mineral values in the neighborhood, and of the effect of the removal of the coal upon the value of the remainder including the buildings. Appellant contends this evidence was improperly admitted and that the limit of plaintiff’s right to recover was the value of the coal recovered as measured by the royalties received thereon. This argument is inconsistent with the rule which permits plaintiff to show the peculiar advantages of the part lost in its relation to the remainder. If, for example, it could be demonstrated that the probable effect of the removal of the coal would be a subsidence of
It must be conceded it was the duty of plaintiff not only to prove the damages which he suffered, but properly to allege them'in his statement of claim. The statement in the present case is very brief and merely sets Out the fact of the conveyance of the property from defendant to plaintiff, quotes the portion of the deed containing the reservation and follows this by an allegation that, when plaintiff purchased the land, the coal under the three-acre tract had been removed from the premises, although at the time he had been assured by the defendant, and also by the lessee of the coal under the remainder of the tract, that it had not been mined and that the purchase was made in reliance thereon. He further alleges that by reason of the partial failure of the consideration and breach of warranty, plaintiff sustained a loss of $5,000. While there is no specific claim for damages for injury to the buildings or to the water supply on the premises, it does appear there were farm buildings on the land. The general averment of the resulting damage is sufficient to warrant recovery of such damages as would naturally follow from the breach of covenant and which must therefore be held to have been within the contemplation of the parties at the time the contract was made, or such as, in the ordinary course of things, they might have expected to follow its violation : Adams Express Co. v. Egbert, 36 Pa. 360; Billmeyer, Dill & Co. v. Wagner, 91 Pa. 92; Kinports v. Breon, 193 Pa. 309; Clyde Coal Co. v. Pittsburgh & Lake Erie R. R. Co., 226 Pa. 391.
The parties lived in a mining section and were both familiar with the general effect on the surface of the removal of underlying coal including the danger of a subsidence of the surface and consequent injury to buildings, springs and streams. It will be presumed, therefore, that they had these things in mind when they con
The tenth and eleventh assignments of error complain of the action of the court in permitting plaintiff to ask a witness as to the present condition of the buildings, wells and springs. We see in this no cause for reversal, in view of the fact that defendant had already cross-examined the witness concerning these matters. The evidence complained of in the twelfth assignment was properly admitted under the rule laid down as to the measure of damages. The thirteenth assignment is also without merit. Whether or not plaintiff was willing to accept what he paid for the farm had no bearing on the question of the value of the land. While on the whole the damages found by the jury seem high, their verdict finds ample support in the evidence.
The assignments of error, are all overruled and the judgment affirmed.