Opinion by
In this appeal we are called upon to determine an issue oft recurring in recent years: whether under the
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terms and provisions of a lease of mineral rights strip or open mining of such minerals is permissible. In our determination of this issue we bear in mind the language of the late Mr. Justice Stearne in
Mt. Carmel R. R. Co. v. M. A. Hanna Co.,
On April 10, 1918, Mrs. Jennie McNaul et al., owners of a 170 acre tract and a 1 acre tract in Pike Township, Clearfield County, conveyed these tracts to one Harry W. Riddle. In the deed of conveyance there was an express exception and reservation of “all the fire clay together with the mining rights and privileges” contained in a lease for said clay which Mrs. McNaul et al. had entered into with Harbison-Walker Refractories Company (Harbison) on September 14, 1915. By virtue of various wills and conveyances, the ownership of these two tracts of land is now vested in Leonard A. Heidt and Jennie W. Heidt (Heidts), as tenants by the entireties, and the surface of said tracts of land is now occupied by John Riddle and Ellen Jean Riddle (Riddles), who have a contract to purchase the said tracts of land from Heidts.
Harbison, under its lease, deep mined fire clay under the said tracts of land from 1915 until 1926 and Harbison’s rights under the lease are now vested in Aughenbaugh Coal Company (Aughenbaugh). On June 8, 1957, Carrie McNaul et al., the present owners in reversion of the fire clay under said tracts of land, made an additional lease of the fire clay to Aughenbaugh, said lease not being recorded until October 27, 1960, which was subsequent to the institution of the present litigation. 1
*191 On or about October 1, I960, Heidts and Riddles posted the land with “No Trespass” signs and advised Aughenbaugh that they would not permit bulldozers, power shovels, power drills and other heavy strip mining equipment to enter upon the surface of the said tracts of land for the purpose of strip mining and removing the fire clay thereunder. However, Aughenbaugh did enter upon the land and began to strip mine the surface. The surface of both tracts of land is now farm land devoted to agricultural purposes.
On November 10, 1960, Heidts-Riddles (appellants) filed a complaint in equity in the Court of Common Pleas of Clearfield County against Aughenbaugh seeking to enjoin Aughenbaugh from strip mining the premises. After answer filed and reply thereto, Aughenbaugh moved for judgment on the pleadings. President Judge Pentz granted Aughenbaugh’s motion and entered judgment on the pleadings in favor of Aughenbaugh and against appellants. From that judgment, this appeal was taken.
Determination of this controversy is dependent upon an interpretation and construction of the 1915 Mc-Naul-Harbison lease. In the construction of this lease certain well-established legal principles must be followed. These principles were well stated recently by Mr. Justice Eagen in
Wilkes-Barre Township School District v. Corgan,
The 1915 lease granted to Harbison the .exclusive right and privilege “to enter upon the land of” (Mrs. McNaul et al.) “for the purpose of exploring, mining and removing fire clay”. Harbison was granted “the right to the possession of so much of the surface and interior of [the] land as may be required for the safe, expeditious and economical mining and removal of . . . minerals from [the] land . . .” and the right to deposit waste and refuse on the land and Harbison’s possession was to-include ground for “necessary buildings, machinery, and fixtures, railway tracks, tram *193 ways, wagon or other roads at most convenient grades” with the restriction that the “roadbed on surface where the tracks shall be made or laid for hauling not to exceed 30 feet in width.” The term of the grant was so long as Harbison continued to mine or pay the minimum royalty, with the right in Harbison to abandon the lease by giving 60 days’ written notice. The most significant provision in this lease provides: “The right to mine to include all practical methods now in use, or which may hereafter he used, and the use of improved machinery and fixtures or appliances for said purposes; and the right to strip the surface for, excavate, dig, bore, shaft, quarry and otherwise explore for and mine said minerals, with the right to remove all pillars and supports that may be left in the progress of said mining ; and the lessee is hereby released from all damages or liability that may be caused to, or result to the property from the mining and removal of said minerals, or from the exercise of any of the rights granted to the lessee, whether the said injuries shall be direct or consequential.” (Emphasis supplied)
The two principal methods of mining fire clay are deep mining and open or strip mining. “Strip mining is done from the surface of the earth. In general, it is performed by stripping off the earth, known as overburden, which lies over the [mineral] and then removing the [mineral] so uncovered”. Mr. Justice Whittaker in
Parsons v. Smith,
An examination of the grant to Harbison clearly reveals that the language of the grant expressly and unqualifiedly gives Harbison: (1) the right to mine fire Clay by the employment of “all practical methods now *194 [in 1915] in use, or winch, may hereafter be used”; (2) “the right to strip the surface for” fire clay and other minerals; (3) a release from all damages caused to the surface from the mining of fire clay.
Appellants have a two-fold argument: First, that strip mining for fire clay was unknown in 1915 and, second, that other provisions of the grant, such as the restriction of Harbison’s possession of the surface, the limitation of the width of any roadbed on the surface, the reference to the removal of pillars and the deposit of waste and refuse, all show an intent that the property was to be deep, not strip, mined. Assuming, arguendo, that strip mining of fire clay was unknown in 1915, the grant to Harbison permitted it expressly to employ any type of mining which might “hereafter”— i.e., after 1915 — be employed or used. While we agree that this grant must be read in its entirety and that there may be implications from such provisions as removal of pillars and the deposit of waste and refuse that deep mining was contemplated, such implications must fall in view of the express grant of the “right to strip the surface” for fire clay.
Appellants rely on Rochez Bros., Inc. v. Duricka, supra, and Wilkes-Barre Township School District v. Corgan, supra. In Rochez the coal reservation therein contained neither an express right to strip the surface nor an option as to the method to be employed in removal of the coal, and unlike the provisions of the instant lease clearly contemplated only deep mining. Appellants urge that Rochez was based on the fact that the surface of the land, as in the instant ease, was used for agricultural purposes and that strip mining would render such land incapable of production for many years; such was not the rationale nor decisional point in Rochez. In Wilkes-Barre Township School District, unlike the instant lease, the reservation did not clearly express the intent that strip mining was *195 among the methods of mining contemplated by the parties and the language of the reservation gave rise to no implication that strip mining was intended but rather the implication was that only deep mining was intended. Neither Rochez; nor Wilkes-Barre Township School District are apposite.
Walker v. Forcey,
In
Mt. Carmel R. R. Co. v. M. A. Hanna
Co., supra,
Appellants complain that to permit strip mining of the premises will destroy its utility for agricultural. purposes. 3 While such result is most regrettable yet *197 appellants and tbeir predecessors in title knew or should have known that in the original conveyance of 1915 and all subsequent conveyances of the premises the right to “strip the surface” for fire clay was expressly reserved to Harbison and its successors or assigns. Such knowledge, actual or constructive, on appellant’s part mitigates the strength of their complaints.
In 1915 the parties expressly provided that Harbison should have the right to strip for fire clay. We cannot and should not modify or alter the intent of the parties to this lease. In the language of the lower court in Mi. Carmel adopted by this Court: “ ‘To thus construe the grant [i.e., prohibit strip mining] would be to make a new contract for the parties. The law will not imply a different contract from that which the parties themselves made. Here the matter of access to coal is provided by express covenants, stated in clear and unequivocal language and leaving nothing to implication.’ ”
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Both parties and the court below relied upon the 1915 Mc-Naul-Harbison lease as the basic document and the terms and pro *191 visions of the 1957 lease are not of record, except by reference In Aughenbaugh’s pleading.
The Court in its opinion recognized that, if strip mining were permitted, it would require removing earth beneath the railroad company’s tracks for a distance of about 300 feet to depths varying from 50 to 250 feet and would make operation of the railroad impossible until the ground was backfilled within a year after completion of the mining as required by statute,
In this case it is to be noted, although in no sense controlling, that the surface of the premises herein in question may in “the relatively near future” be the site of the construction of a dam by the United States Army Engineers which will inundate the premises.
