12 A.2d 435 | Pa. | 1940
Plaintiff brought an action in trespass against defendants for the recovery of damages for the mining and removal of coal from plaintiff's land.
The statement of claim avers that defendants mined and dug from plaintiff's land, without the latter's consent, 25,472 tons of coal of the value of $12,736, knowing the same to be upon plaintiff's land, and removed and converted the coal to their own use, and did the mining through their agent, the Wilson Coal Company, to which defendants had made a lease dated May 1, 1931, and, in addition to making the lease, defendants aided and abetted their agent, and participated in the mining of the coal, and required their agent to account therefor to them and to pay over proceeds thereof to them, and that they received and retained such proceeds. Plaintiff claimed treble damages of $38,208, with damages for detention thereof.
The affidavit of defense raised questions of law in that the mining was not done by defendants but by their lessee, under the terms of the contract of May 1, 1931.
The court below held that the agreement "constituted a sale of the defendants' interest in the coal therein described" and that plaintiff's statement of claim did not set forth a cause of action, and entered judgment in favor of defendants. This appeal followed.
The lease between Emma A. Plummer, executrix, heir and devisee under the will of Edward E. Cannon, deceased, et al., and The Wilson Coal Company, set forth that "the Lessors have demised, leased and to mine let unto the Lessee, all their right, title and interest in and to the remaining coal [in certain veins] lying and being *376 in and under that part of the Samuel Callender Tract." The tract containing the coal demised was described as "a division of the Edward London Warrant and situate in the Borough of Blakely, County of Lackawanna." Its boundaries are stated but its acreage is not. As to the tenure, it was provided that the lessee would "remove all the coal therefrom which can be mined, stripped and removed by a diligent and energetic prosecution of the business." The lease further provides: "It is understood and agreed that this lease is given and accepted subject to any failure of title to any part of said coal or otherwise, and that said Lessee, its successors and assigns, assume sole and entire responsibility in the mining of the coal hereunder, without any liability in the Lessors under any circumstances whatsoever." The lease then provides for the payment of rent and royalty based upon the tonnage of coal taken out.
It is the contention of the defendants that the relationship between them and the Wilson Coal Company is that of grantor-grantee and that the lease referred to above was in legal effect a quit-claim deed to such coal. The defendants gave no warranty as to their title to the coal described in the lease, but, on the other hand, the lease expressly stipulated, as above noted, that "it is given and accepted subject to any failure of title." It is clear, that this agreement of lease constituted a sale of the coal in the veins leased until "all the coal" was removed: Hosack v. Crill,
The coal of whose mining plaintiffs' complain was the coal whose ownership was decided by this court in Greek CatholicCongregation of Olyphant v. Wilson Coal Co.,
In view of the substantial dispute as to the ownership of the coal in controversy, there is no question as to the good faith of the lessor in this matter. The coal which was later adjudged to belong to the plaintiffs in this action was only a portion of the acreage of coal subject to the 1931 lease. Since this lease was in effect, if not in form, a quit-claim deed, the question before us comes down to this: Is the grantor in a quit-claim deed liable for trespasses committed by his grantee on the property subject to the deed after it is established that the grantor held no title to the property quit-claimed?
Both on reason and authority this question must be answered in the negative. Quit-claim deeds, long known to the law, are used when a party wishes to sell or otherwise convey an interest he may think he has in land but does not wish to warrant his title. It does not purport to convey anything more than the interest of the grantor at the time of its execution. 16 Am. Jur. p. 560, sec. 219: "The distinguishing characteristic of a quit-claim deed is that it is a conveyance of the interest or title of the grantor in and to the property described, rather than of the property itself." If persons who in good faith believe that they have title to real estate or possibility of title to real estate cannot convey whatever right or title they have in such real estate without being answerable in trespass should it later be decided that they had no *378 title and the person to whom the conveyance was made exercised an owner's right in the property, the use of quit-claim deeds will be greatly curtailed. Their long continued employment indicates that they serve a useful purpose and, except for compelling reasons, courts should not impose on the grantors in quit-claim deeds such obligations as would check the employment of such deeds. There is nothing in a quit-claim deed which should incite the grantor therein to commit a trespass by exercising dominion over property he did not own. If there is any doubt of his ownership, he proceeds at his own peril and not at the peril of the party who quit-claimed to him. He is supposed to know the law, and the law is that "a quit-claim deed is one which purports to convey, and is understood to convey, nothing more than the interest or estate of which the grantor is seised or possessed, if any, at the time." 18 C. J. p. 156, sec. 32.
In the few instances where the question has arisen, courts have taken the view that "one who merely sells property to which he has no title is not liable for trespasses committed by his vendee." 63 C. J. p. 934, sec. 77.
It is settled law in this Commonwealth that the lessor of a coal mine is not responsible in trespass for the negligent mining by his lessee which results in damage to the surface. InHill v. Pardee,
Appellant cites two Pennsylvania cases in which the Lessor was held liable for damage caused by its lessee: Dundas v.Muhlenberg's Executors,
The allegations in plaintiff's statement of claim and which are quoted in paragraph two of this opinion as to defendants' mining and digging from plaintiff's land and "aiding and abetting" the mining by the Wilson Coal Company would sufficiently plead a cause of action, were it not based (as we understand from the argument of appellant's counsel* it is based) on the lease itself, which lease is attached to plaintiffs statement. The language of the lease warrants no such conclusion, and therefore we must treat the allegation of defendants' "mining and digging" coal and "aiding and abetting their agent, the Wilson Coal Company" in doing so as mere legal conclusions and not as averments of facts. *381
Appellant cites section 158, "Comment I", p. 363, of Restatement of Torts. In this "comment" it is set forth that "if the actor has commanded or requested a third person to enter land in the possession of another, the actor is responsible for the third person's entry if it be a trespasser." It is self-evident that one who merely quit-claims his right, title and interest (if any) in land to another for a consideration does not come within the description of an actor who "commands or requests" a third person to enter another's land. When A quit-claims to B he is not "intentionally causing" B to commit a trespass on the land in respect to which A quit-claimed whatever title or interest (if any) he had. If B proceeds to exercise dominion over that land, he does so at his own peril, and if it is shown that A had no title or interest in the land he quit-claimed, B's quit-claim deed is no defense to an action of trespass nor does that deed make A a joint tort-feasor with B. In Robinson v. Vaughton Southwick, 34 Eng. Com. Law Rep. 718, it was held that if A gives B leave to go on a field, in which A has no right and B goes there, this will not make A liable as a co-trespasser with B.
In the case of Power v. Foley, Newfoundland Reports, 1897-1903, p. 540, the Supreme Court of Newfoundland held, in an opinion by Justice EMERSON: "A mere sale of property, to which a man has no title, does not of itself carry with it a cause of action against the seller, even though the purchaser subsequently trespasses on and converts the property to his own use. It must first be proved that the defendants actually took possession of the property in question, or exercised actual dominion over it, or delivered it to the trespassers in some other manner than by the mere delivery of a document purporting by its alleged construction to convey a title. In order to fasten a liability on defendants in this action for legal damage, . . . these defendants must have actually by themselves, or their agents or servants, wilfully trespassed upon the plaintiff's property, and taken *382 down the house and converted the goods to their own use, or wrongfully deprived the plaintiff of them. Has this been proved?" This question was answered in the negative. The following cases were cited: England v. Cowley, L. R. 8 Ex. 126, and Owen v. Legh, 3 B. Ald. 470.
Appellant contends that the defendants were trespassers because they put the lessee "under legal obligation to mine the plaintiff's coal." This obligation arose, so it is argued, from the fact that the lessee "covenanted and agreed to work the veins demised" continuously and to remove "all the coal therefrom which can be mined by a diligent and energetic prosecution of the business."
The answer to this contention is that the provision in the lease as to diligent mining is subject to the condition that the title of the lessors does not fail. The lease (as already noted herein) was expressly "given and accepted subject to any failure of title to any part of said coal." Failure of title to the coal ipso facto terminated the lessee's agreement to mine it. There is in the law the doctrine of "frustration," which holds that under the implied condition of the continuance of a contract's subject-matter, the contract is dissolved when the subject-matter is no longer available. In Nitro Powder Co. v.Agency of Canadian Car Foundry Co.,
In the lease now under review what the lessors said to the lessee, in effect, was this. "We do not guarantee title to the coal we are quit-claiming. If the title proves to be good, you are obligated to mine the coal diligently," etc. It was reasonably assumed that if the title failed, the owner of the coal would take appropriate action to stop its mining. The lease provisions quoted by appellant were not either commands, directions or incitements to commit trespasses upon another's property. These provisions were subject to the limitation that when title failed the lease became inoperative.
Appellant also contends that because the defendants sent a mining engineer into the mine from time to time to inspect and report to the lessor on the mining operations, they "aided and abetted and participated in the mining and digging out of the said coal as fully and effectually as they individually could have done had they been present in person." In making this contention the appellant is asking this court to attribute to a well recognized custom in respect to mining "leased" coal a legal significance the custom does not have. Lessors of coal, whose remuneration depends on the tonnage mined, are properly vigilant in seeing to it that none of the coal is wasted by reckless, unskilful mining and to this end they customarily reserve the right to inspect the workings either by themselves or by a competent mining engineer. That such a provision does not make the lessor a "director" of the mining operation was expressly held by this court in Offerman v. Starr,
The case of McCloskey et al., v. Powell et al.,
The judgment is affirmed.