225 Pa. 211 | Pa. | 1909
Opinion by
The court below refused to find that the culm bank, at the date of the agreement of December 14, 1888, and afterwards, belonged to the appellant, but did properly conclude, as a matter of law, from the evidence before it, that “the culm upon the premises whether mined by J. H. Swoyer and the Hillside Coal & Iron Company claiming under him prior to the lease of December 14, 1888, or mined by the Hillside Coal & Iron Company and the Avoca Coal Company after the lease of 1888, was the property of the Hillside Coal & Iron Company and the Avoca Coal Company respectively, paid for to the plaintiff by the royalties reserved respectively in the leases of November 12, 1868, and December 14, 1888.” This conclusion is not assigned as error. The Avoca Coal Company, Limited, one of the appellees, has accounted to and paid the Hillside Coal & Iron Company its lessor, the other appellee, for all coal taken by it from the culm bank of the. size of buckwheat and above, and the Hillside Coal & Iron Company, as the lessee of the appellant, has accounted to and paid it for all coal taken from the demised premises, including the culm bank, of the size of pea and above. The claim of the appellant is that it must be paid for all coal taken from the premises of a smaller size than pea resulting from the mining operations and known as buckwheat, rice and barley. Whether this claim is a valid one is to be determined by the terms of the lease by which each of the parties to it is bound, if they clearly and unambiguously set forth what the lessor is to receive as royalties and what the lessee is to get in consideration of their payment. The contention of the lessee, sustained by the court below, is that, having paid for all coal taken from the premises of the size of pea and above, there is no liability .to pay for the smaller sizes.
By its indenture of December 14, 1888, the appellant demised, leased and to mine let unto the Hillside Coal & Iron Company its successors and assigns, “all the merchantable anthracite coal in, under and upon” the described premises
The claim for rental for the use of the gangways on the demised premises in transporting coal from other properties was properly disallowed: Lillibridge et al. v. Lackawanna Coal Co., 143 Pa. 293; Webber v. Vogel, 189 Pa. 156; and as to that made for the use of the surface in placing upon it coal transported from the other properties, the court propei’ly said that, even if the bill should be regarded as containing such a claim, there was no evidence upon which to base the measure of compensation.
The assignments of error are all dismissed and the decree is affirmed at appellant's costs.