31 Pa. Super. 495 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1906
Opinion by
The plaintiff is the owner of ninety-two acres of land in Fayette county, which is subject to the mining rights of the defendants Stauffer & Wiley, who own the coal and other minerals underlying thirty-three acres of said tract and have for many years operated a mine in said coal, known as the Home Works, in connection with a coke plant. The coal and land were both formerly owned by Jacob Sherrick, who in 1878 opened the mine and built the coke works and continued to operate them for some time. Sherrick adopted as the plan for freeing the mine from water a drain some 300 or 400 feet long extending out, under and through his land to a run on the surface of the Frick Coke Company’s land. This drain was covered except some thirty or forty feet at the lower end. The coke and coal works, “together with the right to mine, extract, remove and take away the entire amount and body of said coal and other minerals without being bound or required to leave any part thereof for the support of any part of said lands or the surface thereof in any manner whatsoever, and without being in any way liable for any damage or injury which may be done to said lands or to any water or water courses therein or thereon, or to anything growing on said lands or to any buildings erected or which may hereaftér be erected thereon,' by the mining or extracting or removal of the whole of said coal and other minerals as aforesaid, together with the right to make all such openings as may be desirable for the ventilation and drainage of the mines or pits used in the mining of said coal or other minerals, and to drain said mines or pits on or through any lands of the said grantor without being in any way liable for any damage or injury which may be done to said lands or to any water or water courses therein or thereon,” were granted and conveyed by Sherrick to Joseph R. Stauffer in 1881, and in the same year Stauffer conveyed an undivided interest therein to James W. Wiley, and since then and until the present time the firm of Stauffer & Wiley have continued to operate the mine and the Home Coke Works. In 1895 or 1896, the wooden box drain originally constructed by Sherrick was taken up and • a twelve-inch tile drain laid upon the same line by Stauffer & Wiley. In the fall of 1901 Stauffer & Wiley took up the twelve-inch tile drain
The bill conceded the right of Stauffer & Wiley to drain the Home Works mine through the lands of the plaintiff, but 'averred that the waters from coal mines of the American Sheet Steel Company and the H. C. Frick Coke Company were also being conducted through the Home mine and discharged by the drain in question through plaintiff’s land, and prayed that a permanent injunction be granted to restrain the defendants from continuing and maintaining said trespass. The defendants filed an answer to which the plaintiff filed a replication, and evidence was heard by the court below upon the issue thus raised. The court below found that the water from the mine now owned by the American Sheet Steel Company had been discharged through this drain since 1890 and that the water from part of the mine of the H. C. Frick Coke Company had been discharged in the same way since 1898, but that under the facts as found by the court the plaintiff was estopped to question the right to so discharge said waters.
The court found as a fact that the natural drainage of the mine of the American Sheet Steel Company and that part of the Frick Coke Company mine which passed through the drain in question was through the Home mine and out'by way of this drain. The court further found that the Scottdale Iron & Steel Company, Limited, a limited partnership association, was organized about 1887; that plaintiff was a member of said company and was duly elected one of its board of managers at the annual meeting of July 15, 1889, and was re-elected a manager of said company annually thereafter, and served and qualified in that capacity until the sale of the company’s property to its present owners in 1900 ; that the Scottdale Iron & Steel Company, Limited, in 1887 purchased a tract of land containing 125 acres
Jacob Sherrick died in 1895, and his daughter,, Flora Stauffer, wife of Ely M. Stauffer, having purchased the interest of the other heirs, conveyed the ninety-two-acre tract above referred to, subject to the mining rights of Stauffer & Wiley, to A. S. Livengood, the plaintiff, by deed dated March 8, 1900.
The plaintiff had accurate knowledge as to what had been done with the drainage system of the three mines for almost ten years; he knew that the Frick Coke Company had been
The mine which the plaintiff and his associates thus sold to the American Sheet Steel Company was subject to the burden of taking care of a.part of the water from the Frick Coke Company’s mine, which together with the water from the mine purchased was discharged, and apparently rightfully so, through an entry which opened into the mine of Stauffer & Wiley. The agreement under which the water from the Frick Coke Company’s mine had been drained into the mine which was the subject of the sale was, so far as the evidence shows, in parol; the enjoyment of the license necessarily involved an expenditure of money by the Frick Coke Company, the licensee, and as the money had been expended and the agreement carried into execution, the license had become irrevocable: McKellip v. McIlhenny, 4 Watts, 317; Huff v. McCauley, 53 Pa. 206; Thompson v. McElarney, 82 Pa. 174; Harris v. Brown, 202 Pa. 16. This was a permanent burden upon the property which the plaintiff and his associates were selling, but the burden was apparently minimized and the value of the property greatly increased by the right which appeared to be appurtenant to the
The decree of the court below is affirmed and the appeal is dismissed at the costs of the appellant.