55 Pa. Super. 116 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1913
Opinion by
It may be conceded there is no privity of contract between the plaintiff and the defendant appellant. There has existed, however, and does now exist a privity
In 1909 the Indiana County Gas Company sold and conveyed to the American Natural Gas Company, the appellant, its wells, pipe lines, rights of way - and other property, including that it had obtained' by the grant aforesaid from the plaintiff. That company entered into possession, and from that time down to the filing of this bill and to the present moment, so far as this record shows, has continued to exercise and enjoy all of the rights in the property of the plaintiff which passed by his grant to its predecessor in title. From the same time down to the period of the notice next to be referred to it continued, without objection, to render to the plaintiff the compensation stipulated for in the contract under which it took and lawfully holds its easement or estate in his lands. It ought to be added that the grant referred to vested in the grantee, and therefore in the present appellant, not only the right to
In 1911. the appellant company appears to have determined that it was no longer to its interest or advantage to pay the stipulated compensation for the grant in the manner therein provided. In an attempt to relieve itself of that obligation, it caused to be served on the plaintiff a written notice of which the following is a copy:
“You will please take notice that the American Natural Gas Company claims the right to maintain its line of pipe through your land in White township, Indiana county, Pa., for the purpose of transportation and supply of natural gas for public consumption in pursuance of its power of eminent domain, and will not be bound by any contract by which gas is to be supplied as a consideration for said right of way without cost or at a reduced rate, and any gas supplied upon said land from said pipes must be at the uniform established rate charged by said company and under a written contract which must be uniform with other consumers and which must be signed on or before July 31, 1911.”
It further appears in the bill, and is not denied, that at the same time an additional notice was served on the plaintiff that the défendant would present, on a day named, a bond to the court of common pleas of Indiana county, and thereafter, on the day named, did present to said court a petition “for leave to file said bond for the purpose of maintaining said pipe line through said land of your orator under right of eminent domain.” The bill, further averring an intention on the part of the defendant to shut off the plaintiff’s supply of gas if he refused to accede to its terms, prayed for an injunction. In due course a final injunction was decreed and the defendant appeals.
It is clear the present appellant, as well by the terms of the contract under which the pipe fine was laid and
The simple question presented by this record is, may the defendant, in any lawful assertion of its right of eminent domain, continue to hold and enjoy the right to maintain and operate its pipe line and telephone line through the lands of the plaintiff and at the same time insist, as it does in its notice, that it will no longer be bound by that portion of the contract which fixes the compensation to be paid for the easement? If so, the effect of the operation would be to split what was an entire contract into a severable one; to divorce the compensation to be paid from the granted rights for which it was to be paid; and to use the right of eminent domain to convert into a liquidated sum of money, presently payable, the annual compensation which the parties had stipulated should be paid as long as the grant continued. We are of the opinion this cannot be done, and further that the precise question has been authoritatively decided against the contention of the appellant by the Supreme Court in Semple v. Railroad Co., 172 Pa. 369.
That case presented features which seemingly gave to the railroad company, as a public carrier, a stronger right to escape from some of the obligations of the contract under which it held its right of way than any that can be advanced by the appellant here. In that case the predecessor in title of the then defendant obtained
The language of Mr. Justice Williams, speaking for the court, is just as applicable to the situation presented by this record as it was in the case in which the opinion was delivered: “But the contract is an entire one. The consideration for all the rights secured by the railroad company under it is the price or commission to be paid to the landowner for his services as agent in the collection of freight and the sale of tickets at the depot being built or owned by him. The company cannot therefore rescind in part. It must stand on its contract rights or rescind in toto, and fall back upon its right of eminent domain to protect itself in the enjoyment of its right of way and the other rights acquired originally by the contract. Now the company has undertaken to
It cannot be pretended that the notice of July 18 was a notice of the appellant’s intention to surrender and abandon the property rights in the land of the plaintiff acquired under the contract to which it succeeded. No mention is made whatever of the right to operate the telegraph or telephone line that had been constructed; no notice that it no longer intended to maintain and utilize the pipe fine and right of way in which it was buried. On the contrary, a distinct notice that it claimed the right to maintain the line under its power of eminent domain, and the further statement' that it would not be bound by the contract referred to in so far as that contract required it to supply gas to the plaintiff at the stipulated price. The effect of this notice would be to leave, as the single subject upon which the defendant’s right of eminent domain- was to operate, that portion of the contract' which the notice declared the company then repudiated. When the company shall have unequivocally indicated its intention to surrender or abandon all of the rights in the property of the plaintiff which it acquired by virtue of the grant so often referred to, it may be in a proper position, to
It requires but a glance at the cases of Kenny v. Railway Co., 208 Pa. 30, and Dougherty v. Railways Co., 213 Pa. 346, to discover how readily they are distinguishable from Semple v. Railroad Co., 172 Pa. 369, and to conclude they are in no way in conflict with that case. We are of opinion, therefore, that an injunction properly issued to restrain the' defendant from shutting off the plaintiff’s supply of gas to enforce his acceptance of the proposed new conditions. We do not think the record presents a case for a general decree against the defendant for specific performance of the contract made between the plaintiff and the defendant’s predecessor. The defendant is no party to that contract. It has succeeded to the rights conferred by that contract, and it must hold them as it took them cum onere. But it may reheve itself at any time of any obligation to further perform in the manner we have already indicated. The decree must therefore be modified by striking from it the first paragraph relating to specific performance, and as thus modified the decree is affirmed.