213 Pa. 28 | Pa. | 1905
Opinion by
On August 30, 1870, Milton Dana and others, owners of coal lands in Luzerne county, entered into an agreement with the Wilkes-Barre Coal and Iron Company, granting, demising and leasing unto it, its successors and assigns, all the coal in said lands. The appellee succeeded to all the rights of the original lessee. The demise or lease, as the agreement is termed by the parties, was to date from January 1, 1870, and “to determine and end when all the mineable (and) anthracite coal shall have been mined and removed from the demised premises, unless the term be sooner ended under provisions ” thereinafter contained. The lessee covenanted to pay to the lessors the annual rental of $20,000, in quarterly installments of $5,000 each, in consideration of which it is permitted annually to mine and remove 80,000 tons of coal. There is a further provision that, “ if the said party of the second part shall pay said twenty thousand dollars rent in any one year, as is hereinbefore provided, and during that year less than eighty thousand tons of coal, of the pounds aforesaid, be mined and removed, the said party of the second part may, in any subsequent year within six years thereafter, during the continuance of this lease, mine and move sufficient coal to make up the deficiency.” On default in the payment of “ an installment of rent, or any part thereof,” for a period of sixty days, it was covenanted and agreed that the lessors, in their option might declare the term of the “ lease ” at an end, and the “lease” was thereupon to absolutely cease and determine.
Dana received his share of the payments made for the coal mined and removed up to April 1, 1880. On April 3, 1880, on an execution upon a judgment against him, the sheriff of the county sold to Joseph Birbeck and Alexander H. Van Horn all his “ right, title and interest in and to all the coal in and under ” the land embraced in the lease. Since the sale and delivery of the sheriff’s deed to these vendees of Dana’s interest the payments for the coal mined and removed have been made to them. The affidavit of defense, in addition to the allegation of Birbeck’s and Van Horn’s ownership of interest in the coal and their right as the sheriff’s vendees to receive payments for the same as mined, avers that the payments were made to them in the lifetime of Dana with his
The questions raised by the statement and affidavit of defense are properly stated by the court below to be (1) “ Whether the sheriff’s sale to Birbeck and Van Horn passed to them the right of the execution defendant Dana to receive rentals ’ or royalties under the coal lease; ” (2) “ If not, then, is the administrator of his estate estopped from now asserting the right to recover from the defendant company royalties already paid to the sheriff’s vendees or their representatives ? ” (8) “ Would the facts averred, if proven, raise a presumption of a grant by Milton Dana to said vendees, of his right to receive such royalties ? ” Having been of opinion that the first of these three questions should be answered in the affirmative, and having so answered it, the court below deemed the discussion of the other two unnecessary.
Though the agreement of August 80, 1870, is called by the parties to it a demise or lease, we have, from Hope’s Appeal, 29 W. N. C. 365, down through a long line of cases, called it a sale of coal in place as land: Sanderson v. Scranton, 105 Pa. 469 ;D., L. & W. Railroad Co. v. Sanderson, 109 Pa. 583; Lillibridge v. Coal Co., 143 Pa. 293; Kingsley v. Coal and Iron Co., 144 Pa. 613 ; Lazarus’s Est., 145 Pa. 1; Denniston v. Haddock, 200 Pa. 426. In the last case cited the lease was for twenty years and provided for the payment of a minimum royalty. It was executed on September 27, 1870, by Margaret Denniston and others to Charles Hutchinson, whose interest became vested in Haddock, the appellant. It appeared that Hutchinson and his successors in title had paid royalty during the whole term of the lease, but, on account of strikes and other circumstances, were prevented from mining coal to the full extent of the minimum paid. On September 22, 1891, the lessors executed a new lease, to take effect from October 1, 1891. Haddock, the lessee, had been continuously
“ With the decisions in these cases no fault can be found, but the expression that a conveyance of coal in place, even by a lease for a limited term is a sale, is inaccurate as a general proposition of law, and unfortunate from its tendency to mislead, which is apparent in some of the subsequent cases. Whether 'it would be better to call such an instrument accu
“ The defense in the present case is an ingenious misapplication of the principle of a sale. Appellant in compliance with his obligation under the lease paid a minimum royalty each year, and at the end of his term had paid more royalty than would have been required by the coal actually mined. He remained in possession of the land for a year under arrangement with one of the owners, and then took a new lease, under which the royalties now sued for accrued. He now claims to defalk the overpayments under the old lease, on the ground that he had paid for the coal and was entitled to it without further charge, because under his continued possession he could take it away without a trespass. The defect of this view is in the assumption that ho had paid for the coal. He had not. He had paid his rent on the stipulated terms, but he had paid nothing for the coal in place. His sole claim and title to that was to mine it during the term of the lease. As to it he was in the position of a lessee of a house bound to pay rent whether he occupied it or not. The fact that he paid without occupying it would not excuse his liability for further rent if he accepted a new lease.
“ Appellant admits that if he had gone out of possession at the termination of his lease, he would have had no further claim to the coal, but his reason assigned is not the correct one. The right to remove the coal would have ended, not because the lessee had forfeited or abandoned his property in it, but because he had never acquired any such property, his right to do so being expressly limited to the term covered by the lease.”
In D., L. & W. Railroad Co. v. Sanderson, supra., the question was as to who should pay the taxes on the coal as land — the lessor or lessee under a coal lease — and Trunkey, J., distinctly stated that no question arose “ respecting the grantors’ security for the purchase money, nor of their power to subject their right under the deed to the lien of a mortgage.” Here
If the lessee had paid the rental of $20,000 for the first year, but had mined no coal, and in the second year, on its default in payment of a quarter’s rent, the lessors had, in accordance with the terms of the lease, declared it terminated, and resumed possession under the forfeiture clause, the lessee could not thereafter have mined and removed any coal because it had paid $20,000 for the first year. This is the clear meaning and intent of the contract. That sum would have been retained simply as rent paid and received as such for the right to occupy and use the land by removing the coal therefrom for one year: Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. v. Wright, 177 Pa. 887; Lehigh Valley Coal Co. v. Everhart, 206 Pa. 118. It is only “ during the continuance of the lease,” that is, before the rights of the lessee have terminated by a forfeiture of them, that it can, during any six years following an annual payment of $20,000, appropriate to the payment of coal mined so much of that sum as has not been appropriated in any prior year to the payment of coal mined. After the expiration of six years no such appropriation can be made, and the minimum royalty is to be retained purely as rent for the year’s occupancy of the land.
The agreement of the parties is that the minimum rental of $20,000 may be applied by the lessee on account of the purchase money of the coal, provided it will actually purchase and acquire title in the manner pointed out in the agreement, viz.: by mining it within six years. Until it is so mined the legal title remains in the lessors, and if not taken from them within six years during the continuance of the lease in the manner stated, the money paid them belongs to them as rental for their land which had been occupied by the lessee, though not used and appropriated by it as it had the right to do. This was just the situation when the interest of Dana in the coal land was seized and sold under the execution against him. If the coal had all been mined, the worked-out space would have reverted to him, and what had not been worked out was under a continuing contingency of reverting to him by a forfeiture of the lease. He still had an interest in the coal as land, title to por
As the question raised on this appeal did not arise in any of the cases holding a lease like the present to be a sale of coal in place as land, they are not to be regarded as in conflict with the view here expressed. Though expressions in some of them are apparently irreconcilable with it, it is to be remembered, as is said in Denniston v. Haddock, “ the rules applicable to sales are not to be applied indiscriminately” to these leases; and when, as here, the question is as to the right of the grantor or lessor to subject the interest in the land which remains in him to the lien of a judgment or mortgage, no other doctrine than the one announced by the court below can accord with reason or the authorities relating to the interest retained by a vendor under an agreement for the sale of his land. The order of the court below discharging the rule for judgment is affirmed.