3 A.2d 200 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1938
Argued October 4, 1938. This is an action of trespass for injuries to real property. The suit was brought by the plaintiff, claiming possession and title, against the defendant for wrongfully removing coal from plaintiff's land. The parties by written stipulation waived the right of trial by jury and submitted the decision to the court below pursuant to the provisions of the Act of April 22, 1874, P.L. 109 (12 Pa.C.S.A. § 688). The common pleas court found for the plaintiff and we find no error.
On July 27, 1901 Nelson J. Shaulis and wife, an alleged common source of title, conveyed to Oliver Hoblitzell all the coal in a certain tract of land containing 79 acres 24 perches, situated in Lincoln Township, Somerset County. By various mesne conveyances this title became vested in plaintiff. On April 1, 1905 Nelson J. Shaulis and wife conveyed to William Friedline, the defendant, 82 acres 94 perches, which comprehended the 79 acres 24 perches, excepting and reserving *3 all the coal and mining rights conveyed to Oliver Hoblitzell by the deed to which we first referred.
The defendant, while admitting these conveyances, relied upon a patent from the Commonwealth to him dated July 17, 1908 for land containing 31 acres 7.3 perches, part of the tract of 79 acres 24 perches claimed by plaintiff. The locus in quo of the trespass was all on the larger tract and partly on the smaller one. The plaintiff, however, showed a prior warrant issued February 10, 1836 to Christian Emmert for 400 acres of land of which the parcels above described are a part, a subsequent survey dated October 18, 1837 and a return of the survey to the land office. The consideration for the granting of the patent to defendant was the monies paid by Emmert at the granting of the warrant and the patent fees of $15, provided for by Act of May 5, 1899, P.L. 229 (
The patent of July 17, 1908 issued to the defendant will not under the facts here proved avail the defendant as against the prior title of the plaintiff. "In Pennsylvania a warrant and survey, attended with payment of the purchase-money, is to be considered, as against all but the Commonwealth, in the same light as the legal estate in England, and is not to be distinguished, as to the mode of conveying, entailing, and barring entails, from estates strictly legal: Burkart v. Bucher,
2 Binn. 355; Duer v. Boyd, 1 Ser. R. 203; Caines v. Grant, 5 Binn. 120; Maclay v. Work, Id. 158. A patent is only prima facie
evidence of title: 4 Binn. 213; 2 Binn. 12. The patentee is a trustee for the right owner: 1 Ser. R. 203. It has been the custom to suffer the validity of a patent to be contested, and the question generally is, not who has got the patent, but who *4
was entitled to it, on principles of law and equity, at the time it was issued: 5 Binn. 157": Gingrich v. Foltz,
While the patent recites that the right and interest of Christian Emmert had become vested in William Friedline, the conveyances set up by him in his application for a patent show that he did not have the title to the coal and in any event, it is well settled that recitals in a patent are not evidence at all against one holding by settlement, or other right, originating prior to the date of the patent: Penrose v. Griffith, 4 Binney 231; Bell v. Wetherill, 2 S. R. 350; Bonnet v. Devebaugh, 3 Binney 175; Gingrich v. Foltz, supra.
"But a warrant and survey, returned and accepted, on which the purchase-money has been paid, confers a perfect title against all the world but the Commonwealth, which has itself the legal title only as security for the patenting fees. On payment of them, the owner has a right to a patent, which, however, as to all third persons, gives him no better title than he had before. The patentee, like the Commonwealth, is but a trustee for the true owner": Hoffman v. Bell,
Defendant also suggests that the plaintiff cannot recover because he did not show that he was in possession of the coal at the time of the alleged trespass. It was held in Collins v.Beatty,
Finally defendant contends that the plaintiff's claim is barred by the Act of April 22, 1856, P.L. 532, § 6 (12 PS 83), arguing that the limitation therein provided ran from the date the patent was issued. He relies principally on Strimpfler v. Roberts,
A comparison of the facts in the Kingston case with those in the case we are considering will show that the positions of the two plaintiffs are just reversed. Justice (later Chief Justice) MOSCHZISKER was careful to point out in the opinion in the Kingston case (p. 246) that *6 "the alleged (landlord) rights of such lessor [plaintiff's predecessor in title] are no way acknowledged, exercised or asserted until more than a century has run, during all of which time title has been treated and marketed as a fee simple in the lessee [defendant's predecessor] under a patent out of the Commonwealth." In addition, it was pointed out (p. 244) that the trust there alleged was not a dry trust which would execute itself. Here the defendant never entered into actual possession of these premises, that is the coal, until 1935 when he conceded he was a trespasser by settling for such trespass. On the other hand, the plaintiff to the knowledge of the defendant had actual possession of the coal in 1914 and 1915 through its lessee, another coal company. In 1908 the defendant was in possession of the surface of this land under a deed which recognized plaintiff's right and title to the coal. His possession is presumed to correspond with and continue in accord with the title under which he entered. That being the situation, he procured a patent. This was not followed by an ouster of plaintiff or by any notice of an adverse claim or by any interference with plaintiff's possession until 1935. Then plaintiff's possession was recognized by the settlement. All this goes to show that either the title to the coal was held by the defendant for the plaintiff or that the defendant was a mere naked trustee and that the trust executed itself. It must be remembered that the consideration had been paid in full to the Commonwealth for the conveyance of this land long before 1908 by the former owner, a common source of title, and all that remained to be done to procure a patent was to pay a fee for the mere issuing of the patent. The limitation prescribed by the Act of 1856 could not possibly begin to run until defendant exercised some hostile act towards plaintiff's possession, different from the possession under which he entered.
Judgment affirmed. *7