248 Mo. 155 | Mo. | 1913
A reading of the record and the statements made by counsel upon the two sides of this
“This was an ejectment to recover the coal under a part of the east half of the southwest quarter of section 16, township 48, range 12, in Boone county, Missouri. This is a part of the same tract involved in Gordon v. Park, 202 Mo. 236, and Gordon v. Park, 219 Mo. 600, and the plaintiffs relied on the same chain of title, which is as follows:
“1. Deed from Berkley Estes to Boyle Gordon, executed February 26, 1859, and duly recorded, and conveying ‘the equal undivided half of the coal mines situated on the east half of the southwest quarter, etc.; said mines are now showing themselves in the bed of the creek running through said described tract of land. ’
“2. Deed from Boyle Gordon to George W. Gordon, containing the same description and recitals.
“3. Will of George W. Gordon, devising the residue of his property to the plaintiffs.
“For the purpose of proving that Berkley Estes was the common source of title, plaintiffs read:
“1. The will of Berkley Estes, devising this tract of land to his daughter, Sarah F. Estes, ‘except the interest in the coal mines which I have sold, etc.’
“2. Deed from Allen Park, sole heir of Sarah F. Estes, deceased, to Mary E. Million, conveying that part of the tract in controversy. This deed contained no exception of the coal mines.
“3. The admission that Mary E.. Million died intestate, leaving the defendants as her sole heirs at law.
“The oral evidence showing that no mining had ever been done on this part of the tract, and no pits or*159 shafts had been opened, bnt that while Allen Park was the owner of the land, a well was dng, and that the-men struck a seam or vein of coal.
“The plaintiff, Webster Gordon, also testified that the defendants were in possession of the surface, and claimed the coal also, because the deed under which they claimed contained no exception of the coal. The defendants offered no evidence, and the court sitting as a jury found for the plaintiffs.
“Defendants now appear to rely on three points,. viz.:
“1. That the language of the'deed from Berkley Estes, namely, ‘The coal mine being, and situate on the east half of the southwest quarter, etc.,’ was not sufficient-to pass title to any and all coal deposits under that tract, but that because' of the recitals that ‘said mines are now showing themselves in the bed of the-creek,’ etc., the grant should be restricted to these precise croppings, or at least the same seams or veins so mentioned, and hence the plaintiff could not recover without proof identifying the coal under this part of the land as the same vein mentioned in the deed as cropping out in the bed of the creek above the ford.
“2. That there was no proof that defendants were in possession of the coal because no mines had been opened on the part of the land here in controversy.
“3. That there was no proof that Berkley Estes was the common source of title, and hence no proof of plaintiffs’ title to the coal.”
This statement had page references to the abstract which we have omitted in quoting the statement. It may be that appellants’ contentions are not as fully stated by respondents as they are urged in the brief, but upon the whole this statement of the respondents-sufficiently states the case, and we adopt it because it is as concise and fair as we could make it.
“Know all men by these presents that I, Berkley Estes, of the county of Boone and State of Missouri, in consideration of the sum of fifty dollars in hands paid, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, have this day granted, bargained and sold, and by these presents do grant, bargain, sell, and convey unto Boyle Gordon, his heirs, and assigns, the one equal, undivided half of the coal mines being and situate on the east half of the s'outhwest quarter of section sixteen, township forty eight and range twelve in Boone county, Missouri; said mines are now showing themselves in the bed of the creek running through said described tract of land about one hundred and fifty yards more or less above the ford of said creek on the road leading from Fulton to Columbia. The other half of said mines having been sold to John B. Gordon in his lifetime by Richard Estes by deed dated 31st of May, 1850. To have and to hold said undivided half of said mines unto the said Boyle Gordon, his heirs and assigns forever.”
“The objection urged is in the use of the word*161 ‘premises’ in the last sentence. As said by Black, J., in Snoddy v. Bolen, 122 Mo. l. c. 487: ‘Coal, mineral and stone under the surface of the earth are subjects of grant and exceptions; and when excepted in a deed become a separate and distinct inheritance. They may be conveyed separate from the surface. [Wardell v. Watson, 93 Mo. 107; Caldwell v. Fulton, 31 Pa. St. 475; Lillibridge v. Coal Co., 143 Pa. St. 293; Coal Co. v. Mellon, 152 Pa. St. 286,]’
“In this case the separate inheritances were ■created by deed of grant, whilst in the Snoddy case they were created by exception in the deed. But whether created by a deed directly granting the mineral estate, or by an exception in a deed granting the surface estate, there are created two separate and distinct estates. To the same effect is Wardell v. Watson, 93 Mo. l. c. 111. To our minds the words ‘said premises’ used in the judgment simply refer to what precedes, and only mean that restitution go for two-tenths of the separate mineral estate. In other words, it means the mineral premises as distinguished from the surface premises. ' .
“The grant of the coal carries with it the use of the surface so far as is necessary to carry on mining operations. [Wardell v. Watson, 93 Mo. l. c. 111, and cases cited.]
“The word ‘premises’ as used in the judgment only goes to the mineral estate and things appurtenant thereto, and in this sense it is correct. ’ ’
The Cordon-Park case is a part of the land covered by this Estes deed. I do not understand that the appellants now seriously challenge the law as to the divisibility of lands into> two separate estates as. discussed in the Park case, supra, but they do contend that the Estes deed upon its face is not broad enough to carry the mineral estate in these lands, and especially
doing therefore to the whole instrument for the meaning of the words “coal mines” we are of the impression that the term is used in the sense of “coal deposits, subject to being mined” rather than to open or worked mines. The deed is warranty in form, thus evincing the idea of creating a fee simple estate. Had the grantor desired to restrict his broad grant to a grant of mines then being open and operated on the land, by appropriate terms he could have done so. He did- not do so, but chose a form of conveyance calculated to not only separate the fee in the land into two estates, i. e., the surface and the mineral estates — but to make each fee simple in character. It is urged* however, that there is a limitation by the usé of the words “said mines are now showing themselves in the bed of the creek running through said described tract of land.” We do not think so. We think that had there been an idea to restrict the deed to.the particular veins of coal shown by the croppings in the creek, the
This suit was brought in 1907, and the only deed,without the coal reservation, in their chain of title, is> the deed from Allen Park and wife to Mary E. Million of date April 25,1899. Under this deed the defendant's-
But in this case the defendants claimed possession prior to suit of everything attempted to be conveyed by their deed. This includes the mineral estate, and having so claimed the possession prior to suit, and not having denied such claim at the trial, they are in a bad plight to here urge that there is no proof of their possession. The proof of their claim to possession is in the record and undenied.
It is sufficient to say in this case that the evidence adduced shows a common source of title, and when such a title is admitted or shown by the evidence, the plaintiff in a case need not go back of such common source. The contention, therefore, that plaintiffs failed in making a paper title, because they did not go back further than the common source, is unavailing.
This we believe answers the crop of contentions suggested by us in the beginning. The cause seems to have been well tried and the judgment should be and is affirmed.