125 S.E. 226 | W. Va. | 1924
Defendant complains of a judgment rendered in an action for trespass upon plaintiff's coal lands.
Plaintiff sued to recover (1) the value of coal wilfully mined and removed from its premises, and (2) damages for injury done to its unmined coal. Counsel for defendant urge that the declaration is subject to demurrer, because they say *372 in effect that plaintiff's case is based on two theories, — first, that it seeks recovery of the value of the coal mined, without deduction of the expense of mining, and second, it seeks to recover damages done to the freehold. They argue that the second demand includes the first; but the declaration is not so drawn. As already stated, it charges that defendant wilfully mined and removed a large tonnage of coal of the value of $100,000, for which it seeks recovery; it also alleges that defendant conducted its mining operations on plaintiff's property so as to make it impossible for plaintiff to mine large quantities of its coal left unmined; that by reason thereof plaintiff has been and will be compelled to expend large sums of money which it otherwise would not have been required to do, in conducting its mining operations, whereby it has been greatly damaged. It seeks recovery therefore for two items, one for the coal mined and removed, the other for damages to the coal unmined.
Counsel for defendant cite, among other authorities, 26 Rawle C. L., p. 973, which they say is applicable to the case here. It says:
"In actions of trespass for the wrongful severance of trees from the land of another, the plaintiff has his election between an action of trespass de bonis asportatis and trespass quare clausum fregit. If he brings the former action, the proper measure of damages is the value of the trees destroyed independent of the real estate. If he brings the latter action, the measure of damages is the diminished value of the real estate. In the latter case the compensation for the increased value of the trees can not be included."
We do not question the proposition stated. But suppose the defendant while wrongfully cutting and manufacturing some of plaintiff's trees into lumber also injures other standing trees of plaintiff or destroys buildings or other property of the plaintiff; in other words, does an injury to plaintiff's realty other than the mere removal of the trees. Can not the plaintiff recover in the one action for the value of the trees removed as well as the other damages done to the realty? We see no reason why he can not, and some of the *373
cases cited by defendant's counsel so hold. This view is fully sustained by 3 Sedgwick, Damages, § 933; Spink v. RailroadCompany,
Plaintiff and defendant own adjoining mining leaseholds, separated by a line which runs almost due east and west. Plaintiff's property lies on the north side. The eastern end of the line is not in dispute, but the western end is. Defendant admittedly mined coal on plaintiff's side; but if the line is where defendant would locate it, the quantity of coal taken from plaintiff's property would be very much less than if the line be located where plaintiff claims. On the call of the case for trial, defendant asked for an order of survey, but this was refused. This is the second point of error assigned. Defendant was not prejudiced. Both sides had competent engineers who testified that they had surveyed the line in dispute; numerous maps made by them were admitted in evidence, and we do not see that any survey made by a surveyor under an order of court could throw any further light on the matter. We find no error on this point.
The third ground urged for reversal is that the court overruled defendant's motion for a bill of particulars. Under the allegations in the declaration, defendant was fairly apprised of plaintiff's demands. It was not taken by surprise. We do not think the trial court exceeded its discretion, as the case comes fairly within the rule laid down in Clarke v. OhioRiver *374 R. R. Co.,
Defendant's fourth assignment of error is that the court erroneously admitted in evidence certain deeds which are parts of plaintiff's chain of title to its leasehold, — one made by M. S. Taylor, Trustee, to Pan Coal Company, and another made by J. W. Chapman, Trustee, to McDowell Pocahontas Coal Company. It is urged that these two deeds are void because the grantors as trustees had no authority to execute them. McDowell Pocahontas Coal Company executed a coal mining lease to R. C. Sweet and J. S. Wallace, covering 1418 acres. By deed Sweet assigned his half interest to M. S. Taylor, Trustee, "to have and to hold the same unto the said M. S. Taylor, Trustee, and his assigns", for the residue of the term, free from encumbrances, but subject to the conditions and provisions of the lease. The assignment confers no express authority on Taylor to sell or convey, though the authority might be implied from the use of the words "and his assigns", if that were necessary to a decision in the present case. Taylor, as trustee, and Wallace assigned the lease to Pan Coal Company. Prior to these conveyances, St. Clair and others conveyed to J. W. Chapman, Trustee, 5684 1/2 acres of coal land, covering part of the lands in controversy, to be held by the trustee pursuant to a certain written agreement filed with the Bank of Tazewell. On May 10, 1911, J. W. Chapman, as Trustee under that agreement, conveyed to McDowell Pocahontas Coal Company seventeen-eighteenths of the 5684 1/2 acres, subject to certain exceptions. That trust agreement was not offered in evidence; hence defendant's contention that the two deeds made by the two trustees were executed without authority and that they have no legal effect. There would be force in this argument if this case were in equity in a contest between the trustees and the beneficial owners; but this is an action at law. These trustees held the legal title, and as such had the power to convey it even in violation of their trusts. The law is thus stated inAtkinson v. Washington Jefferson College,
" 'Trustees of real or personal estate may, at *375 law, sell, convey, assign, or incumber the same, as if they were the beneficial owners, and each of several trustee may exercise all his rights of ownership. If the trustees are joint tenants, each may receive the rents, and each may sever the joint tenancy by a conveyance of his share, and each may collect the dividends on stocks, and on the death of one, the survivor may sell the whole estate. The general power of a trustee to sell and convey the estate is co-extensive with his ownership of the legal title; and this general power over the legal title is entirely distinct from the execution of a special power given in respect to the sale of an estate. Though the trustees may thus sell, even in breach of the trust, a conveyance without consideration will not injure the cestui que trust; as the grantee, who is a volunteer, will hold upon the same trusts as the trustee held, and if the purchaser for a valuable consideration have notice of the trust he will still hold the estate upon the trust.' Perry on Trusts, section 334."
" 'As a general rule, the legal estate in the hands of a trustee has, at common law, precisely the same properties, characteristics, and incidents, as if the trustee were the absolute beneficial owner. The legal title vests in him, together with all the appurtenances and all the covenants that run with the land. The trustee may sell and devise it, or mortgage it, or it may be taken on execution. It may be forfeited, and it will escheat on failure of heirs, and so it will descend to heirs on the death of the trustee. All these properties and incidents attach to the legal estate at common law, whether in the hands of a trustee or of an absolute owner; but these incidents do not generally interfere with the proper execution of the trust, for all conveyances and all incumbrances made or imposed upon the estate by the trustee, for other purposes than those of the trust, or in breach of the trust, are utterly disregarded by a court of equity, whatever may be the effect of such conveyances or incumbrances in a court of common law.' Perry on Trusts, section 321."
It was held in High's Heirs v. Pancake,
The fifth and main ground urged is that the court misdirected the jury as to the measure of damages. The jury returned the following verdict:
"We, the jury, find for the plaintiff 12,528 tons net at $2.00 per ton, $25,056 Damages 1,500 ------- $26,556
"And we establish the old patent line as the true line."
The verdict was then amended so as merely to assess damages against the defendant to the amount of $26,556. One of the matters in controversy was the true location of *377
the boundary line, which the jury found to be at the "old patent line"; the evidence is conflicting on this point, but the finding as to the division line is fairly justified. Assuming this line to be located as claimed by defendant, a line slightly different from the old patent line, it encroached upon plaintiff's property at four points, designated on plaintiff's exhibit No. 7 as Sections 1, 4, 6 and 7. Locating it as found by the jury, defendant encroached at seven sections, numbered from 1 to 7. Defendant admits encroachments at sections 1, 4, 6 and 7. It makes no defense as to sections 4, 6 and 7, which are very small areas, but it claims it was authorized by a parol agreement made between Carroll Taylor, plaintiff's superintendent and J. W. Baldwin, defendant's general manager, to mine section number 1, covering 2.15 acres, in exchange for a like right on plaintiffs part to mine some of defendant's coal, with the additional right to a road-way across defendant's land for hauling timber. This was denied by plaintiff; but even if plaintiff's superintendent so agreed, it was clearly shown that he had no authority to make any such agreement. He could not bind his principal so as to estop it from recovery for the coal mined on plaintiff's property.Carroll-Cross Coal Co. v. Abrams Creek Coal Coke Co.,
"The court instructs the jury that if they shall believe from the evidence in this case that the plaintiff's mine superintendent, Carroll Taylor, and defendant's mine manager, J. W. Baldwin, had an agreement as testified to by the latter by which they were to exchange certain coal, whereby the plaintiff was to be given a timber right of way over the defendant company's premises, and the further right to mine a certain territory of the defendant company's coal and defendant company was to mine and remove a certain territory of the *378 plaintiff's coal, that pursuant to such an agreement the said Baldwin, acting in good faith and in the reasonable and honest belief that he had the right to do so, mined and removed certain coal of the plaintiff which the said Taylor so undertook to give Baldwin the right to mine and remove, then that such mining and removal thereof was not in bad faith or wilful, and the plaintiff in this case is entitled to recover therefor the value of such coal in place at the time of such mining and removal, which is the then market value thereof at the drift mouth or pit mouth of the mine to which it was so removed, less the cost of such mining and removal."
Whether the trespass was innocent or wilful, of course, does not affect the right but merely the amount of recovery. Defendant does not claim that it should, under the alleged agreement, be relieved from paying for the coal mined from section one; if the coal was removed through innocent mistake or inadvertence it would be compelled to pay for it, but at its value in place. However, if the trespass was wilful, then the value at the tipple or pit-mouth would be the basis of recovery, the defendant not being allowed to deduct from that value any expense for mining or hauling the coal to that point. There is no controversy as to the law governing the measure of recovery. The precise point is whether there was sufficient evidence of good faith on defendant's part to permit the question whether the defendant was a wilful or an innocent trespasser to go to the jury. J. W. Baldwin testified that Carroll Taylor and he agreed upon an exchange of coal, to the mutual benefit of both companies; that this was at the request of plaintiff's superintendent. But no lines were run, no definite portions were agreed on; the areas were just pointed out in a general way, it being understood that the areas to be exchanged should be about equal; that plaintiff was to have a roadway for some timber over defendant's land; that defendant mined the area on plaintiff's property agreed upon and Baldwin supposed plaintiff was mining the coal agreed upon to be mined on defendant's land, as that area had been left for that purpose; that plaintiff shot out the *379 rock for and graded the roadway on defendant's land and used it in hauling its timber. Defendant began mining section number 1 in August or September, 1921, some months after the alleged agreement was made. There was some correspondence between the president of the plaintiff company, M. S. Taylor, and Mr. Baldwin regarding an exchange, beginning in April, 1921, and continuing some weeks; Taylor states he would submit the matter to his board of directors, but that as they were located at various points, it would require considerable time to have a meeting. Finally Taylor made a proposition which defendant's manager would not accept, and the matter fell through. Defendant claims no right because of the correspondence. It seems to relate to a larger area than that encroached upon, and whether it included section No. 1 does not appear. Defendant relies upon the agreement made with plaintiff's superintendent, Carroll Taylor. It alleges that it performed its part of the agreement in good faith; in like manner it permitted the plaintiff to use its land for a haulway and would have allowed plaintiff to mine the coal on defendant's land covered by the agreement; had in fact thought this was being done until this controversy arose. But Carroll Taylor had no authority to make any such agreement, nor was it shown that the company had held him out as having any such authority. Had he been the chief owner of plaintiff company, and been allowed to pursue a course of dealing with the company's property that showed he dictated its policy, the situation might be different. In that event his failure to obtain the formal assent of his board of directors might not be material. But here the superintendent was not the chief owner; he did not dictate the company's policy; he was not held out as having authority other than that of a superintendent, — that and no more. No authority to make such an agreement could be implied from his mere holding of that office. It is but fair to say that Carroll Taylor unequivocally denies that he ever made or attempted to make any such agreement. In regard to the roadway he says that he instructed his foreman to build it on a cliff above defendant's line, and was called away on some other business; that when he returned he found that the *380 road had been built lower down than where he had located it, and it extended for about two feet of its width over on defendant's land for a distance of about seventy-five feet; that the road was used by both parties. But there is nothing to indicate that the plaintiff's board of directors knew that defendant claimed any right to mine plaintiff's coal because of plaintiff's use of the roadway, or in fact that the board knew anything about the roadway, other than its acceptance of the benefits derived from its use. Other than this there is nothing to show any ratification of the alleged agreement. But Carroll Taylor's testimony can not be considered in passing upon the propriety of defendant's instruction. If upon defendant's showing there was sufficient evidence of its good faith to submit the matter to the jury, then the instruction should have been given.
Assuming that plaintiff's superintendent made the agreement, when defendant dealt with him it was bound to know the extent of his authority, and this applies to any representations made by him as to the extent of his authority. Thompson v.Manufacturing Company,
"If either or both these presumptions make every trespasser a wilful and intentional wrong-doer, because he is chargeable with knowledge of *381 the law, then there never has been, and never can be, a trespasser through inadvertence or mistake, or one who violates the law in the honest belief that he is acting within his legal rights; and the rule that the damages caused by such a trespasser shall be limited to the value of the wood or timber in the tree or of the ore in its bed, which was announced in Bolles Wooden-Ware Co. v. United States,
106 U.S. 433 ,434 ,27 L. Ed. 230 , and which has been reiterated and applied in numerous cases since, is functus officio and useless, because no class or party to which it is applicable can ever be. The truth is, however, that this rule, and every other rule which measures the damages caused by trespassers, does not call the righteous, but sinners to restitution. None of these rules have any application to those who do not violate the law. Every trespasser breaks the law, and to every trespasser the maxim applies that every man knows the law. Notwithstanding all this, the law in its wisdom, perceives the marked difference between the heinousness of the offenses of those who recklessly, or with actual intent to rob others of their rights, trespass upon their property, and of those who trespass by mistake, and with no evil purpose, no actual, wilful intent to commit a wrong; and it declares that the former class shall pay to their victims the full value of the lumber or the ore they take at the time they sell or use it, while the latter shall be relieved from liability upon restitution of the value of the timber in the trees or of the value of the ore in the mine. The maxim that every man knows the law applies to all the members of both classes alike. It neither differentiates the classes nor their members, and it has no more relevancy to the real question which cases of this character present than the proposition that three and three are six. The question is always based on the conceded propositions that the defendant has violated the law and that every man knows the law. The question, then, is, did the trespasser violate the law, which he constructively knew, recklessly, or with an actual intent to do so, and to take an unconscientious advantage of his victim, or did he violate it inadvertently, unintentionally, or in the honest belief that he was exercising his *382 own right? If the former, he was a wilful trespasser, and the value of the manufactured timber or the extracted ore measures his liability. If the latter, he was an innocent trespasser, and the value of the wood in the tree or of the ore in the mine is the limit of his indebtedness. The test to determine whether one was a wilful or an innocent trespasser is not his violation of the law in the light of the maxim that every man knows the law, but his honest belief, and his actual intention at the time he committed the trespass; and neither a justification of the acts nor any other complete defense to them is essential to the proof that he who committed them was not a wilful trespasser. Durant Min. Co. v. Percy Consol. Min. Co., 93 F. 166, 35 C.C.A. 252; Gentry v. U.S., 101 F. 51, 41 C.C.A. 185; U.S. v. Van Winkle, 113 F. 903, 51 C.C.A. 533."
In that case the United States sued to recover damages for certain timber that defendant had cut and removed from government lands; the question involved was whether the stumpage value or the value as manufactured lumber should be the basis of recovery. Defendant claimed the trespass was not wilful because it acted under a permit from the Secretary of the Interior. It was found that under the law as it then stood the Secretary had no authority to issue the permit, but that defendant acted under advice of counsel, in good faith, and was liable for the stumpage value only.
In our case of Pittsburgh West Virginia Gas Company v.Pentress Gas Co.,
"One who, with full knowledge of the facts which make his claim of title to land invalid enters thereon and commits trespass, is a wilful trespasser within the meaning of the law, even though he may honestly believe that under such known facts the law confers upon him good title."
This statement is probably too broad, though correct when applied to the facts in that case. There the defendants, claiming under junior oil and gas leases, obtained injunctions restraining the plaintiffs from drilling the lands and sought a *383
cancellation of the senior leases, which they claimed had become forfeited. The trial court on final hearing perpetuated the injunction and cancelled the senior leases. While the injunction was in force the defendants drilled two producing oil wells on the land. The plaintiffs upon appeal obtained a reversal of the decrees and their leases were held valid.Johnson v. Armstrong,
But a different conclusion was reached in Kahle v. Crown OilCo.,
Can we say as a matter of law that the defendant was a wilful trespasser as to section No. 1? If he was, then the refusal of defendant's instruction was not error. If we can not, then it became a question for the jury, and should have been submitted to it. That defendant intentionally mined out the section, knowing it was plaintiff's coal, there can be *384 no doubt. In the sense that it did it intentionally its trespass was wilful. But so is every trespass under a bona fide claim of right. However, in the law of trespass, the terms intentional and wilful are not always synonymous.
For instance, let us assume that A owns a tract of coal land; that B, the agent of A for some purposes, mistakenly assumes that he, B, has the right to lease it for mining; that he leases it to C, who also honestly believes that B as A's agent has the right to lease it. C intentionally enters upon it and mines the coal. It turns out that B exceeded his authority and had no right to make the lease. A sues C for the trespass and for the value of the coal mined and removed, insisting that he is entitled to damages done to his unmined coal and to damages equal to the value of the mined coal at the pit-mouth as of the time it was removed and sold. Is C a wilful trespasser merely because he intentionally did what he honestly believed he had a right to do? Not necessarily so. In this sense to be a wilful trespasser one must not only intentionally commit the act of trespass, but must do so under such circumstances as would warrant the court or jury in finding that he did it in bad faith. If C had reason to believe and did believe that B had authority to execute the lease, he ought not to be treated as a wilful trespasser. It will not do to say that C was bound to know the extent of B's authority and therefore in law knew that B had no such authority, and because of such imputed knowledge knowingly entered without legal right and thereby became a wilful trespasser. To so hold would in every instance make one who invades the lands of another under license from the owner's agent, where the agent exceeded his authority, a wilful trespasser, even though both trespasser and agent honestly believed the agent had full authority to grant the license. This may be illustrated by a number of cases, in which the facts are not exactly like those in the present case, but which involve the same principle.
In Keys v. Pittsburgh Wheeling Coal Co.,
In Trotter v. Maclean, L. R. 13 Ch. Div. 574, 49 L. J. Ch. N. G. 256, 10 Mor. Min. Rep. 263, it appeared that the owner of a coal mine worked from his own mine into an adjoining mine, in the bona fide belief that he was to obtain a contract authorizing him to work, and gave to the trustee in charge of the adjoining land notice that he was about to commence working the mine. It subsequently developed that the trustee had no power to make the contract. In an action for trespass it was held that the taking of the coal by defendant before he was notified that the contract would not be let should be treated as an inadvertent or innocent trespass.
Other cases in point are: Trustees of Dartmouth College v.International Paper Co., 132 F. 92; Crawford v. Forest OilCo., (Pa.)
While the facts in this case are somewhat like those found inCarroll-Cross Coal Co. v. Abrams-Creek Coal Coke Co.,
Serious objection is also made to plaintiff's instruction No. 7, which reads:
"The court instructs the jury that the mining and removal of the coal by defendant company beyond and across the division line between plaintiff's *387 and defendant companies' leased land, as located by the defendant's surveyors and engineers and shown on the map filed in evidence by the defendant, constituted and is in law a wilful trespass or trespasses, and as to such coal so mined and removed and rendered unrecoverable or unmineable by such trespass or trespasses and damages resulting to plaintiff's property thereby, the measure of damages is the value of such coal so taken and made unmineable at the pit mouth when mined, without taking from such value any cost or expense of mining, as well as also such if any damages to plaintiff's property as are proven with reasonable certainty by the evidence, and directly flow from such mining or directly caused thereby, therefore, if you believe from the evidence that defendant company, its agents or employees mined coal across or beyond said line and that the evidence shows with reasonable certainty the amount of coal so mined based upon a two thousand pound ton, and the value of such coal with reasonable certainty at the time or times it was mined and the amount of damages to plaintiff's property with reasonable certainty, your verdict will be for the plaintiff against the defendant company for the value of such coal at the pit mouth, without making any deductions for expense of mining and the damages to the property in addition not exceeding, however, the sum of $100,000.00."
It will be noted that the same measure of damages is applied to the coal not mined but rendered unmineable as is applied to that mined. This can not be the law, even where the trespass is wilful. This is not a case for exemplary or punitive damages, but one for compensation only. The theory upon which the plaintiff recovers for wilful, but not malicious trespass, as for the mining of coal, where he seeks to recover the value of the coal at the pit mouth is that the title to the coal remained in the plaintiff up to that time; that the conversion takes place when it is loaded on the lines of the common carrier, and plaintiff is entitled to the value as of the time of the conversion. The trespasser, when he seeks to reduce the amount of the recovery by the amount expended in mining the coal and bringing it to the pit mouth does so, not *388 on the theory that it became defendant's coal when it was severed from the vein, but on the ground that he has in good faith, in an honest belief that he had the right, expended labor and money on plaintiff's property, before it was converted, and therefore is entitled to the amount of his expenditures. But where coal is left unmined and made unmineable there is no conversion. As to that plaintiff can recover only for the value in place, that is, in the coal vein. Of course, if the trespass were malicious, a different rule would prevail as respects punitive damages, but not for compensatory damages only. Scores of cases might be cited for this proposition. It is tacitly conceded that the instruction given is erroneous and we hold that it is. But for the refusal of defendant's instruction No. 1 quoted above we might require the plaintiff to reduce the amount of its claim by $1,500, the "damages" ascertained by the first verdict, and upon its doing so, affirm a judgment for the coal mined, or $25,056.00, but because of such refusal we must reverse the judgment. The verdict will be set aside and a new trial awarded.
Reversed; verdict set aside; new trial awarded.