203 Ky. 307 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1924
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
The parties are each corporations engaged in mining coal. They own their mineral interests either as
Many questions supposedly affecting the merits of the case, either directly or collaterally, are discussed in
In disposing of question (1), we might dismiss it absolutely upon the ground that it was abandoned by plaintiff at the trial, since it did not offer nor did the court give an instruction authorizing a recovery of damages for the conversion of the coal taken from its land after defendant separated it from its natural position in the earth. On the contrary, it offered instructions ■only upon the theory that its action was one solely to recover damages for trespass to realty. But, since the question is discussed in briefs, we will give it the con.sideration we think it deserves.
The strongest case relied on by plaintiff, as sustaining its right to recover in this case under the rules and principles governing actions for conversion, is that of Dennis Bros. v. Strunk, 32 Ky. L. R. 1230, where plaintiff sought to recover the market value of logs cut from trees
Moreover, to hold that a plaintiff may, under the same state óf facts, adopt one of two or more remedies to which he is entitled and to thereby change the rules applicable to the extent of his relief flowing therefrom would not only confer unwarranted power and authority upon plaintiffs, but would render the law as well as its remedies unsettled and uncertain and bestow upon litigants the right to greatly enhance the extent of their recovery by the mere choosing of the form of action they see proper to adopt. It is well enough to recognize the •right in a litigant to adopt any procedure to which, under the facts, he is entitled, and to obtain the benefit of such remedy over another, equally open, but perhaps not a present adaptable one; but, in so doing no increase of .amount of recovery should be allowed as an available benefit. The benefits to which he would be entitled by exercising his right of choice are such as relate to the venue of the action or other similar incidental or related questions, as was,pointed out in the case of Roberts v. Moss, supra, wherein it was recognized that an action to recover personal property or for its value, if wrongfully converted, is_ a transitory one and may be brought in any county wherein defendant may be served; but the venue of one to recover for trespass to realty is local to the county in which the realty is situated. If, therefore, plaintiff should conceive that it would be to his advantage to locate the venue of his action in the one place or the other (granting there are more than one) he might do so by adopting the procedure maintainable in the venue he selects.. Other authorities affecting the question under consideration will be referred to later in this opinion in the discussion of subdivision (a) of question (2). Hence, it is our conclusion that although plaintiff may select his remedy when more than one are appropriate to the facts, yet he may not by doing so change the measure of his recovery, from that fixed by the settled law as flowing from the same acts. A contrary rule would render the law inconsistent by limiting the measure of its relief to one litigant adopting one course of procedure and enlarging the same character of relief to another or the same one, dependent upon the remedy employed, and when
The rule governing the amount of' recoverable damages for trespass on realty, resulting in converting some of it into personalty and then appropriating the converted article, such as minerals and timber, is, that if the trespass was willfully and knowingly committed the value of the converted article at the time it was appropriated is the measure of recovery; but if the trespass was committed through an innocent mistake and under the bona fide belief that the trespassing defendant was the owner of the premises from which the separation took place, then the measuring rule is the value of the article in place before it was separated from the realty, and in ease of minerals that value is the customary and usual royalty from mining privileges in that community. Many text authorities might be cited in support of the statement; but, since it has been frequently adopted and applied by this court, we will refer to only some of the later cases, which are: Sandy River Cannel Coal Co. v. White House Cannel Coal Co., 125 Ky. 278; Burke Hollow Coal Co. v. Lawson, 151 Ky. 305; Bennett Jellico Coal Co. v. East Jellico Coal Co., 152 Ky. 838; North Jellico Coal Co. v. Helton, 187 Ky. 394, and New Domain Oil & Gas Co. v. McKinney, 188 Ky. 183. In stating the rule, the opinion in the Helton case said: “In view of another trial we deem it proper to say that the measure of damages for coal taken from another’s land through an honest mistake is the value of the coal taken as it lay in the mine, or the usual, reasonable royalty paid for the right of mining. ... On the other hand, where the trespass is wilful, and not the result of an honest mistake, the measure of damages is the value of the coal mined at the time and place of its severance, without deducting the expense of severing it.” Those cases, as will be seen, firmly fix the rule to be that when the trespass is an honest one, the recoverable amount is the value of the mineral in place, and it would violate the coveted uniformity and certainty of the law to allow a plaintiff upon the same facts to change and alter it by the mere invoking of a differently named remedy.
The court submitted to the jury the criterion of recovery based upon both a willful and an honest trespass, and the jury evidently found that it was willful,, as is perfectly manifest from the size of its verdict, and under the conclusion above expressed the instructions were erroneous in the respect mentioned.
The next point, under this question, is a most difficult one. It is: When does the statute of limitation applicable to trespasses-to real'estate (section 2515, Kentucky Statutes) commence to run in a case of this kind? The statute provides that an action to recover for trespass on realty “shall be commenced within five years next after the cause of action accrued.” If it should be held that a cause of action for the taking of a mineral from under one’s land through an opening located off his land, and without any occupancy, temporary or otherwise, of his surface, all" of which was true in this case, accrues at the time of the taking, then the statute of five years applies and courts could not engraft an exception thereon for the benefit of the one whose minerals were so taken, although, as will be readily seen, he had no possible means by which he could discover the wrong. That the courts are without authority to create exceptions to the terms of a statute, be it one of limitation or one dealing with other subjects, when those terms are broad enough to cover all cases, regardless of their hardships under particular circumstances, is a well settled rule. Shellenberger v. Ransom, 25 L. R. A. 564, and extensive annotation; Wall v. Pfanschmidt, 265 Ill. 180, 106 N. E. 785, 1915C L. R. A. 238, and annotation; Robertson v. Robertson, 100 Ky. 696; Western & Southern Life Ins. Co. v. Weber, 183 Ky. 32, and E versóle v. Evers ole, 169 Ky. 793,1916E L. R. A. 593.
The question involved in the Ransom and Eversole cases was whether an heir or distributee forfeited his right to inherit by murdering his ancestor or the person from whom he inherited, and it was held in each of them and in many others in the annotations in the publication in which they are reported, that notwithstanding the extreme unfairness and injustice of allowing the inheritance, yet, since the statute of descent and distribution made no exception in such a case, the courts were without authority to engraft one. And that pmiciple, as is shown by the cases, is as applicable to statutes of
“Mere ignorance will not prevent the running of the statute in equity any more than at law; but there is no reason, resting on general principles, why ignorance that is the result of the defendant’s conduct, and not of the stupidity or negligence of the plaintiff, should not prevent the running of the statute in favor of the wrongdoer.
“It seems to be a general doctrine in courts of law that the plaintiff is bound to know of an invasion of the surface of his close. The fact that his land is a forest, and that the defendant goes into its interior to trespass by the cutting of timber, does not relieve against its operation. What is plainly visible he .must see at his peril, unless, by actual fraud, his attention is diverted and his vigilance put to sleep. But ought this rule to extend to a subterranean trespass? The surface is visible and accessible. The owner may know of its condition without trespassing on others, and for that reason he is bound to know. The interior of the earth is invisible and inaccessible to the owner of the surface, unless he is*317 engaged in mining operations upon his own land; and then he can reach no part of his own coal stratum except that which he is actually removing. If an adjoining landowner reaches the plaintiff’s coal through subterranean ways that reach the surface on his own land and are under his actual control, the vigilance the law requires of the plaintiff upon the surface is powerless to detect the invasion by his neighbor of the coal 100 feet under the surface.
“The case at bar affords an excellent illustration of ignorance due to the defendant’s conduct, and without fault on the part of the plaintiff. The defendant was mining its own coal through its own shafts or drifts opened on its own lands. In the course of its operations, and for its own convenience, it pushed an entry or passage under the plaintiff’s lands, and appropriated the coal removed therefrom. It was bound to know its own lines, and keep within them. If, by mistake or for any other reason, it did invade the mineral estate of another, and remove and appropriate the coal therefrom, good conscience required that it should disclose the fact, and pay for the coal taken. Its failing to do this is, in its effects, a fraud upon the injured owner; and if he has no knowledge of the trespass, and no means of knowl-. edge, such a fraud, whether it be called constructive or actual, should protect him from the running of the statute.”
To the same effect is the text in section 867 in Bindley on Mines, and the case of Lightner Mining Co. v. Lane, 161 Cal. 689, 120 Pac. 771, Ann. Cas. 1913C, 1093, in which are cited many cases from different courts, some of which are: Porter v. Smith, 65 Ala. 169; Tillison v. Ewing, 87 Ala. 350, 5 So. 276; Traer v. Clews, 115 U. S. 537; Bailey v. Clover, 21 Wall. 346; Cook v. Chicago, Bock Island and Pacific Ry. Co., 81 Iowa 551, 25 A. S. R. 512; Shelby County v. Bragg, 135 Missouri, 298, and many others, some of which are English eases. The basis for the ruling in most of the cases so holding is that it was the duty of the trespasser to know when he crossed his line and became such, and it thereupon became his duty to notify the owner of the premises trespassed upon, and if he remained silent and failed to do so, it was a constructive fraud the same as positive fraud by denying the trespass when inquired about it;
A minority of the courts hold to the contrary, but we think the reasoning of those applying the majority rule, is not only sound but manifestly just. It does not attempt to engraft an exception to the letter of the statute, but provides a means by which one may not be deprived of his property without remedy by postponing the time of the accruing of the action until he actually discovers his rights, or it becomes reasonably possible for him to do so. Yre do not think that section 2519 of the statutes has any application to the case. The fraud therein mentioned is descriptive of the acts and conduct producing the cause of action itself, and which produce the injury or damage constituting the right of action and does not refer to fraud, the only effect of which is to conceal the cause of action. It will, therefore, be seen that the cases and authorities postponing the accrual of the cause of action in cases of this kind, place it upon principles analogous to an estoppel, and which, as hereinbefore stated, we think is both sound and just. There is nothing in the opinion in the case of Dragoo v. Cooper, 9 Bush 629, militating against the above expressed views, since in that case the cause of action was not concealed, but on the
It is, however, seriously contended by learned counsel for defendant that the evidence in the case discloses that plaintiff discovered the trespasses complained of more than five years before the filing of its petition. There is considerable evidence to support that contention, but it was contradicted by the testimony of the president of plaintiff, and there was other evidence that some of the pillars and stumps in the territory trespassed upon were removed within less than five years prior to the filing of the action, and of course the liability of defendant for such taking, if true, was not barred. We, therefore, conclude that the court properly submitted the issues as to the time of plaintiff’s discovery of the trespasses, as well as defendant’s liability for all coal taken within five? years thereafter.
The court, as stated in briefs, declined to submit to the jury a portion of defendant’s counterclaim growing out of alleged trespasses and deprivations by plaintiff on a certain 20 acre tract of land claimed to be owned by defendant. The testimony show’s that a link in the chain of its title to that tract is a lease to a one-half undivided interest in it, but the lease does not include that tract. A link in the chain of defendant’s title to the other half undivided interest in the tract is a deed from a trustee executed in the city of Chicago, but not acknowledged as required by law, the notary before whom it purports to have been executed attached thereto only a jurat saying: “Subscribed and sworn to before me this 6th day of May, 1890. ” Clearly that was insufficient to entitle the deed to registration. But, without any certificate of acknowledgment, defective or otherwise, the deed was sufficient to pass the title as between the parties. Ferrill v. Childers, 172 Ky. 760; Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Co. v. Combs, 186 Ky. 261; Riddell v. Jones, 191 Ky. 763. No alleged innocent purchaser is claiming any interest adverse to that deed, and plaintiff is in no attitude to take advantage of the want
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed with directions to grant a new trial and for proceedings consistent with this opinion.