128 Va. 383 | Va. | 1920
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a suit in equity brought by the appellants, W. F. Claybom and others, against the appellee, Camilla Red Ash Coal Company, for an injunction and accounting. The decree appealed from denied the relief sought.
The appellants are the owners in fee of a tract of land containing about eight acres, known as the Helton tract, except the coal thereon which belongs to the appellee under a deed made in 1887 conveying “all the coal on, in or under” the land, “with the right to mine and remove” the same. Adjoining this Helton tract on the west, the company owns in fee a tract of 2% acres; and adjoining the former on the east the company owns and operates a coal lease upon what is known as the Burk land. On the 2%-acre tract the company has a coal tipple and a mine opening or drift-mouth at. a point which for convenience we may designate as “A.” From that point it has driven an underground haulway which extends east about seventy-five feet through the 2%-acre tract to the line of the Helton land, and then all the way through the latter and beyond to a second drift-mouth at a point which we may designate as
Considerable attention was given in the argument to the
ever, this question is not one of controlling importance. It does not affect the legal rights of the parties. It might, in some cases, be entitled to consideration in determining whether equity should grant or refuse an injunction.
The accompanying sketch is not drawn to scale, nor does it purport to show the comparative acreage of the tracts, nor the exact bearings and distances, but it will serve to accurately illustrate the situation.
We are, therefore, not bound by precedent in this case, and are at liberty to follow the view which seems to us most in accord with right and justice and with the legal principles applicable to the question.
Undoubtedly the grantee of coal in place owns a corporeal hereditament; but all the American authorities agree that
We shall not undertake a complete review of the authorities in- support of the generally accepted doctrine. It would seem sufficient to say of them in general that they are right if the first and leading American case was right, and that they are wrong if that case was wrong, because, in the main, all the others have simply followed, with more or less elaboration, the principles laid down in that case. We refer to the case of Lillibridge v. Lackawanna Coal Co., 143 Pa. St. 293, 22 Atl. 1035, 13 L. R. A. 627, 24 Am. St. Rep. 544. The observations in the majority opinion in that case
Again, in the course of the opinion in the Lillibridge Case, the court uses this language: “Under all the decisions the coal in place was absolutely owned in fee simple by the defendant. In a state of nature the coal necessarily occupied space. How could the defendant own the coal absolutely
The reasoning of the Pennsylvania court in the later case
In the still later Pennsylvania case of Webber v. Vogel, 159 Pa. St. 235, 28 Atl. 226, the court held that the grantee of the coal, with the right of way for mining and removing it, had no right to haul coal from adjoining lands through an open entry or pit on the granted premises. The opinion does not mention the Lillibridge Case, but the decision is in apparent conflict therewith. Upon a later appeal of the Webber Case, 189 Pa. St. 156, 42 Atl. 4, the court undertook, with limited success, as it seems to us, to reconcile the former decision with the Lillibridge Case, on the ground that the former was dealing principally with surface rights, while the latter was dealing with the right to transport coal from other lands, not over the surface, but through underground passages — a distinction for which we think there is no logical foundation.
Another evidence of the inconsistency and the danger of the rule approved in the Lillibridge Case is found in the discussion of the question on the second appeal of the Webber Case, 189 Pa. St. 156, 42 Atl. 4, where the court stated that the right to transport coal from adjoining lands exists only so long as the coal on the particular tract in question is being mined in good faith, and that it would be a perversion of the intention of the parties to use such passageways merely and only for the purpose of reaching other coal, and, besides, that such use would be a continual menace to the stability of the surface. This qualification of the doctrine seems to us not only illogical but inherently incapable of any practical administration. There is no safe or sound middle ground. The instant case affords a ready illustration of
In this connection it seems appropriate to refer briefly to the West Virginia case of Armstrong v. Maryland Coal Co., 67 W. Va. 589, 69 S. E. 195, cited and relied upon by the appellee. The main question at issue here came up rather indirectly and remotely in that case, but in so far as it was dealt with at all, the opinion, like all others in America on the subject, purported to follow the Pennsylvania decisions. A significant suggestion' is found in the opinion, however, and one entirely inconsistent with the second Webber Case, in which the West Virginia court (67 W. Va. 608, 69 S. E. p. 203) seems to hold that the grantee, after the coal has been practically exhausted in the particular tract, may extend his ownership of the haulways therein for an indefinite period for the purpose of transporting coal from other lands, merely “by leaving some of the coal unmined until the coal from adjoining tracts could be removed, and that if need be a few pillars could be left for subjacent support, which would answer all the requirements.”
In Schobert v. Pittsburg C. & M. Co., 254 Ill. 474, 98 N. E. 943, 40 L. R. A. (N. S.) 826, Ann. Cas. 1913-B, 1104, the court rested the opinion upon the authority of the cases of Consolidated Coal Co. v. Schmisseur (Ill.), supra, and Lillibridge v. Lackawanna Coal Co. (Pa.), supra, all of which have been commented upon.
But the case before us does not warrant a refusal of the injunction upon any of the exceptional grounds above mentioned. The appellee was allowed to transport coal from the Burk tract over the surface of the lands owned by appellants upon terms which appear to have been reasonable, and of which no complaint is made in the record. It is true
The decree complained of will be reversed, and this court will enter an order enjoining and restraining the coal company from using the tunnel or the surface of the Helton tract for any other purposes than those reasonably necessary in connection with the mining on that track, and the cause will be remanded to the lower court for a reference to a commissioner to ascertain what damage if any the appellants have sustained by reason of the unlawful use of the tunnel and the surface by the company in connection with its operation on the Burk land.
Reversed.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I cannot agree with the majority in its conclusions in this case, and because I think the question involved is one of great importance, I think that dissent should be expressed.
It appears from the majority opinion that its conclusions are contrary to the unbroken current of authority in England and in this country. I therefore think that the rule should be considered a rule of property, because doubtless many leases have been acquired in reliance upon the advice
Upon petition to rehear, March 24, 1921.
The court having maturely considered the petition for rehearing in this case is of opinion that the same should be denied.
In view of the insistence in the petition that the questions involved in this case ought not to be, disposed of without the consideration of the full court, we deem it proper to add that Judge Burks, the only member of the court who did not hear the oral argument, participated in the consideration and decision of the case and concurs in the majority opinion and in the refusal to rehear.