| Tenn. | Oct 29, 1891

Caldwell, J.

This is a bill to remove an alleged cloud from the title to certain mineral interests in land, and to establish a right of way over and under the surface of adjacent land for the removal of the minerals.

*621Defendant, by answer, denied tliat complainant was entitled to any relief at all. On final hearing the Chancellor granted the prayer of the bill in part and refused it in part. Both parties appealed specially.

In 1837 the State granted to Moore & Spessard a tract of land containing two thousand acres, of which they conveyed two hundred acres to Bullock and subsequently two hundred acres to Diggs. The conveyance to Diggs was made in 1855. It excepted and reserved to the grantors “ the miu-•erals of all the precious kinds.”

In 1859 Diggs conveyed to Vowell an undivided three-fourths of his two hundred-acre tract, “ and one-half of the stone-coal of the whole tract,” with its appurtenances, “ except the minerals of all the precious kinds,” which the grantor reservedto himself.

Thereafter, in 1868, Yowell conveyed to Pearne, the complainant,, “one-half the coal and minerals” in the said two hundred acres, “ except the minerals of all the precious kinds.”

Pearne brought this bill to assert, protect, and make available his right and title under the last named deed.

. The conflicting claim of the defendant arises in a manner now to be stated. In 1859 Moore & Spessard conveyed to Birdseye the residue of their two thousand acres grant; and, by the same deed, undertook to convey to him also “ the minerals on” the four hundred acres previously sold to Bullock and Diggs.

*622Through several mesne conveyances the Coal Creek Mining and Manufacturing Company, the defendant, in 1872, acquired Birdseye’s title, by virtue of which it claims to own all the minerals in the Biggs two hundred acres.

Complainant alleged that this claim was a cloud upon his title. The Chancellor so adjudged, and, by his decree, canceled the deed to that extent. This part of the decree the defendant assigns as error.

The Chancellor was right. The deed to Biggs, in' 1855, passed to him full title to the land, “ except the minerals of all the precious kinds; ” and the later deed to Birdseye, though purporting and intended to pass title to all the minerals, was effective only as to “ the minerals of all the precious kinds.” Moore & Spessard reserved nothing* else in their deed to Biggs, and consequently could pass nothing else to Birdseye, a subsequent vendee. The recital in their deed to Birdseye that they had not sold or conveyed “the minerals” to Biggs did not change the real facts of the transaction, and will not be considered to impair the title of Biggs and those claiming under him. A vendor may not prejudice the title of his ven-dee by subsequent statements against it; and much less can he divest an interest which he has conveyed, by a recital in a subsequent deed that he did not convey it.

It is true, as argued, that the language of the reservation is unusual, and cannot be said to have *623a technical meaning; yet we see no .reason in that for- the rejection of the word “precious,”- or for substituting in its place the word “ various,” so as to destroy the natural import of the words used and make the reservation include all minerals. It is possible that the Register, in transcribing the original deed, may have written the word precious erroneously for the word various, thereby changing the reservation from “the minerals of all the various kinds” to “the minerals of all the precious kinds;” but there is absolutely no proof that such was the fact. The Court cannot infer that such mistake was made. The loss of the original deed being shown, the certified copy is presumed to be strictly correct in the absence of proof to the contrary.

The Chancellor adjudged that complainant’s deed gave him title to one-half of all the minerals in the Biggs tract of land, except those of “the precious kinds.” The defendant assigns error on this part of the decree, and insists that, at most, complainant has title to one-half of the stone-coal only, and that the title to all the .other minerals not “of the precious kinds” is outstanding.

The solution of this question depends upon a construction of certain descriptive language in the conveyances under and through which complainant asserts title. It has already been seen that Biggs received title to all the minerals except those of “the precious kinds.” He conveyed to Yowell by metes and bounds “ a certain tract or parcel of *624land containing two hundred acres, more or less, three-fourths of the land and one-half of the stone-coal of the whole tract, * * * with its appurtenances, except the minerals of all the precious kinds.” Manifestly this deed would have passed three-fourths of the two hundred acres of land, surface and minerals, but for the limitation and exception as to the latter. Hence, it will be held to have passed every thing not excluded by such limitation and exception. The exception was of minerals of “the precious kinds” only, and the stone-coal conveyed was limited to one-half that contained in the whole tract. Nothing was said about the other minerals, consequently they passed with the land as a part of it. This would not have been so, but the result would have been as contended by the defendant’s counsel had the conveyance been of three-fourths of the surface instead of three-fourths of the land. That would liave excluded all minerals except those expressly included.

Vowell conveyed to complainant “one-half the coal and minerals” in the two hundred acres of land, “ except the minerals of all the precious kinds,” which were reserved. This deed needs no construction. Its terms plainly give complainant title not only to one-half the stone-coal, but also to one-half of all other minerals in the land except those of “the precious kinds.” The decree ..on this point is correct.

Passing from defendant’s assignment of errors, *625complainant’s objections to other parts of the decree will be stated and considered.

In 1848 the State granted to Richmond 5,000 acres of land, and to "Wiley another 5,000 acres. The two tracts adjoined each other on one side, and together they embraced within their boundaries the whole of the 2,000 acres granted to Moore & Spessard eleven years before. Coal Creek Mining & Manufacturing Company acquired title to both the Richmond and the Wiley tracts at or about the same time it became owner of Birdseye’s title under Moore & Spessard. Thus, the defendant became owner of lands lying on three sides of the Biggs tract, and immediately adjoining it. Bullock’s 200 acres bounds it on the other ¿ido.

The relative positions of the three grants, and of the Bullock and Biggs tracts, are indicated by the following diagram:

The Biggs tract is situated near the top of *626Butt Mountain, a spur of the Cumberland Mountains, iu Anderson County. The coal in it is about 600 feet beloAv the surface, with no frontage on the particular tract through which it can be removed. Eor this reason, and because his coal cannot, at present, be profitably mined through perpendicular shafts, complainant insists that he is entitled to a way of necessity over and through the adjacent lands of the defendant for the .purposes both of mining and transportation; and ho seeks to have the Court declare his right to such a way.

The record discloses the fact that the most convenient way for complainant- to remove his coal would be over and under the Wiley tract. That would be the most direct route to a railway on defendant's land, and the least, expensive to complainant. In fact, the defendant has opened a horizontal way, for its own mining purposes, in the Wiley tract, up to, or near, the line of the Biggs tract, and in the same vein of coal which complainant desires to work; and the insistence is that complainant has a legal right to remove his minerals through that way.

The prayer of the bill is, substantially, that complainant be given the most practicable way, whether over and through the Birdseye part of the Moore & Spessard grant, or over and through the Wiley tract.

The Chancellor held him entitled to a reasonable surface way in the former, and denied him any way at all in the latter.

*627Complainant assigns error on the refusal to grant him a reasonable way over and through the "Wiley tract; and the contention- in support of that assignment is that the State impliedly granted such a way to Moore & Spessard, and their successors in title, by her grant of the two thousand acres of land to them, she, at the time, owning all the surrounding lands. This contention cannot be sustained.

A right of way over the. grantor’s land may arise in several aspects; as, where one man sells to another land wholly surrounded by other lands which he retains, or where the parcel sold is surrounded partly by that retained and partly by that of a stranger, over which there is no right of access. The way in such cases is a necessary incident to the grant, and without it the grant itself would be useless. The necessity of the case raises an implication that the parties intended that the right of way should pass with the grant, though not expressed therein. 3 Kent, *420, 421; Washburne’s Easements and Servitudes (4th Ed.), 258; 57 Am. Dec., 760, note; Brigham v. Smith, 64 Am. Dec., 76; Nichols v. Luce, 35 Am. Dec., 302; Cooper v. Maupin, 35 Am. Dec., 464, note; Rightsell v. Hale, ante, ¶. 556; Pettingill v. Porter, 85 Am. Dec., 675, note; 36 Am. R., 415, 421.

This is a doctrine well recognized by all the Courts, but it has no application to the State in the grant of her unsettled lands. By public statutes she provides for the establishment and main-*628tenauce of public roads, penetrating every neighborhood and sufficiently numerous to meet the general wants of her citizens. Beyond this, and the full protection of the title conferred, she owes her grantees, as such, no duty or obligation. It would be ruinous to establish the precedent contended for, since by it every grantee from the earliest history of the State, and those who succeed to his title, would have an implied right of way over all surrounding and adjacent lands held under junior grants, even to the utmost limits of the State.

The Chancellor' was clearly right, therefore, in refusing the desired way either over or through the Wiley tract.

Complainant further assigns error on the decree because he was not allowed a way under, as well as over, the surface of the other tract.

Under the doctrine just stated, the deed from Moore & Spessard to Biggs carried with it, by implication, a right of way over the residue of the original tract in favor of Diggs, he having no other means of access; and that right of way passed to those succeeding to his title, the same necessity continuing and the right not being expressly cut off* by any subsequent conveyance. As to that right of way, the Diggs tract is still the dominant and the Birdseye tract the servient estate, notwithstanding the several deeds intervening between the severance of the heritage and the present time.

*629This right of way is raised hy implication from the contract of the parties because necessary to the use and enjoyment of the principal thing granted; therefore, when that thing includes both the surface of the land and the minerals contained therein, the way must be for the use and enjoyment of both the surface and the minerals. It does not follow, however, that there shall be two ways — one on the surface and the other under the surface of the servient estate. On the contrary, there can be but one way, and that an overland way. In some cases, as in the one before us, i't may happen that the minerals can be more conveniently or profitably removed and put upon the market by an underground than by an overland way; yet that fact will not authorize the implication that the pai’ties intended that a right to the underground way should pass with the deed, which is silent on the subject. The question is not one of convenience, but of necessity. If the necessity exist, then the grantee may have the way over the grantor’s land, and, being thus entitled to the way, he may have it at a place convenient for him. The overland wray is one of necessity, the underground way is not; hence the former, not the latter, is the one the claimant may liave.

The fact that the party who seeks the establishment of the way in this ease owns only the minerals in the dominant estate does not change the rule. It gives him no higher or other rights than he would have if ho owned both surface and *630minerals. By his deed lie lias an express grant of all mining privileges on and through the surface; and, if it were not so expressed in his deed, the grant of the minerals would carry with it, by implication, a right to the reasonable use and enjoyment of the surface for all necessary mining purposes. Marrine v. Brewster Iron Mining Company, 55 N. Y., — (S. C., 14 Am. R, 332); 15 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 584 and 588.

The desired way under the surface of the Birdseye tract was properly refused.

Finally, the decree recites that the way over the Birdseye tract to which complainant is entitled, shall “ be laid out in the place and manner most convenient and favorable for the mining and removal of his said coal and other minerals, at the time the same shall be done.”

The defendant assigns error on this part of the decree for various reasons.

It is shown in the proof that Biggs and Vow-ell together have resided upon this 200 acres of land for more than thirty years. Nothing is disclosed, however, as to the route or manner of their ingress or egress. If. they have appropriated a way over the Birdseye tract, then complainant’s way for the removal of his minerals should be along the same line; and if the way, as used by them, is not reasonably sufficient for his purposes, it may be made so by him, due regard for the interests of the defendant being observed. He cannot be required to accept a way insufficient for *631mining purposes, merely for the reason that the way established by the owners of the surface may be all that they have desired or' claimed. Their establishment of a way does not conclude him, unless it will answer his purpose reasonably.

The right to the way is implied in favor of the land, as land, including surface- and minerals; hence, the way should be sufficient for the reasonable enjoyment of both.

If it should appear, by a reference to the Master or by agreement of the parties, that the owners of the surface have, in fact, established no way over the Birdseye tract, then the complainant may establish one, under dirction of the Chancellor, in such place and manner as may be necessary for the transportation of his minerals, and as may not result in unreasonable detriment to the servient estate.

Had the deed to Higgs defined and limited the way, in that case the beneficiaries would be bound by the express terms of the grant, whether such way should turn out to be sufficient for their purposes or not. Haskell v. Wright, 23 N. J. Eq., 390. But, since the way results by implication from the necessity of the case, it may be made to conform to the reasonably necessary demands of the owners, due regard being had, at the same time, for the rights of those owning the land over which it passes.

The decree will be modified as here indicated, otherwise affirmed, and the cause remanded for the *632location and establishment of said way, as soon as practicable, under the orders of the Chancellor, and in conformity with this opinion.

All the costs will he paid equally by complainant and defendant.

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