82 W. Va. 590 | W. Va. | 1918

POJTENBARGER, PRESIDENT :

Having obtained, upon its answer to the plaintiff’s bill and affidavits filed in support thereof, a partial dissolution of an injunction restraining and inhibiting it, its officers, agents, servants and employees from interfering with the plaintiff, its agents and employees, in the mining and removal, under granted rights, of the coal in a tract of land owned by the defendant and containing 33.15 acres, and from threatening, annoying, intimidating and obstructing plaintiff, in the opening and mining of said coal and building necessary and proper approaches, ways, roads and tracks to such openings and mines, the defendant has appealed from, so much of'the decree as left the residue of the injunction in force and overruled its motion for full and complete dissolution. On the other hand, the plaintiff cross-assigns error in so much of the decree as deprived it of- a portion of its injunction.

The defendant owns the surface of said tract of land and the plaintiff the coal therein and express grants of mining rights and privileges to be exercised in the mining and removal of the coal. It was formerly a part of a tract containing 1,790 acres and known as the “Falls Tract.” The coal in the whole of the “Falls Tract” was separated in title from the surface by a deed from Benjamin E. Lemon, and others to Joseph E. Barnes, dated Sept. 17, 1902. The Barnes title came into the hands of William P. Murray by a deed *592dated'December 26, 1902, and he conveyed it to the plaintiff by a deed dated February 1, 1907. In addition to the coal and mining rights, the Lemon deed conferred upon the grantee, his heirs and assigns, right to purchase and take, at any time, as much of the surface of the tract of land as might be necessary to “operation of said coal or manufacturing coke,” at a price not exceeding $50.00 per acre; and this right passed by subsequent conveyances to the plaintiff. The defendant obtained its title to the surface by a deed dated February 9, 1907, and the plaintiff released to it its option or privilege of purchase, by a deed dated February 16, 1907. Soon after the procurement of this release, the defendant began the erection of coke ovens, miners houses and other structures on the tract, and completed them, at a cost of more than $70,000.00. These struetnres or some of them are still used by the defendant in connection with its mining operations on adjacent lands.

The cOal the plaintiff desires to mine on the 33 acre tract, through an opening thereon, underlies only a small portion of it, about five acres, and the opening made does not interfere with the operations of the coke ovens, nor with the occupancy of the miners houses, but it destroys a spring from which some of the houses were supplied with water by means of a pipe, and subjects the occupants of the houses to some annoyance. It is in the rear of the miners houses, some of the witnesses say, about 100 feet, and another says the tipple will be not more than 75 or 80 feet distant. The approach or way to it extends over rough ground for a distance of about 150 feet, to a road made over the property by the defendant and used by it. The plaintiff 's plan, or method of operation is to mine the coal from this opening and haul it from there by means of a wagon over one of defendant’s roads, to a public road running through the property, and thence, by the public road, to a railroad siding.

In so far as they are material here, the mining rights and privileges granted with the coal in the “Falls Tract,” arc defined in the deed as follows: “The free and uninterrupted right of way into, over and under the said tract of land, at such points and in such manner for such ways, trades and *593roads as may be necessary and proper for the purpose of ventilating, draining, digging, operating, shipping and carrying away said coal or other coal or coke without any liability for damages that may arise from the removal of any or all of said coal or the manufacture of coke, without being required to provide for the support of the overlying strata or surface, or -without being liable for any injury to the same or anything therein or thereon, or to the springs or the water courses thereof. ” The defendant took its title to the surface of the 33.15 acres, subject to these rights and privileges, by an express exception in its deed. Plaintiff’s release of its right to purchase said surface is full and complete, but it does not release its mining rights and privileges therein, nor does it refer to them in any way.

In as much as the plaintiff executed to the defendant a release of its right to purchase the surface of the tract of land in question, with knowledge of the purpose for which the defendant had bought it of Coban and others, and its refusal to enter upon or make any use thereof until after the execution of the release, it is insisted that the release extinguished, all rights of the plaintiff in the surface, notwithstanding its silence as to the mining rights and privileges vested in the grantee of the coal and then held by the plaintiff. Such an interpretation of the release would be a manifest departure from its terms, and the occasion of its execution is not necessarily inconsistent with its express provisions, since some necessary and proper mining rights could be exercised upon a tract of this area, Avithout unreasonable interference with the uses to which the defendant expected to devote the property. A mine entry on it and a roadway or tramway leading therefrom, or a ventilating shaft on it, would require but a very small portion of the 33 acres, and might be so located as not to interfere with the operation and enjoyment of the coke ovens, miners houses and other structures likely to be erected upon it. It is matter of common knowledge that the surface of land can be advantageously used for many purposes, in subordination to the exercise of reasonable and ordinary mining rights, and both parties are deemed to have had knowledge of this fact. Though conclusively presumed to have had such *594knowledge as well as that of the existence of the plaintiff’s mining rights in the property, the defendant took a release limited by its terms to its mere right to purchase the surface and wholly silent respecting the mining rights. The deed conferring the right of purchase and referred to in the release vested the mining rights. If it had been the intention of the parties to exclude them, it is altogether improbable that they would have failed to mention them in the release, and, since it is possible for the defendant to have substantial enjoyment of its purchase, subject to the mining rights of the plaintiff, it is highly probable that they did not intend to extinguish them. Moreover, title to the surface for the purpose to which it is devoted was taken by a deed expressly excepting the mining rights. Regardless of the option of purchase, the defendant held the surface, at the date of the release, subject to two burdens, right to mine and right to purchase, and the release dealt with the latter only. Obviously, therefore, the rule of construction applied in John v. Elkins, 83 W. Va. 158 and Gas Co. v. Oil Co., 56 W. Va. 402, and other •cases relied upon in argument, does not apply here.

The conclusion just stated, as well as the general principles therein referred to, is altogether inconsistent with the theory •of loss of the mining rights under the law of estoppel. The mining rights in the surface are appurtenant to the coal, ■and, though they may be restricted or narrowed to some extent, under principles and rules of interpretation or the law •of estoppel, by the condition in which the surface is found in consequence • of improvement, at the date of the exercise •thereof, they cannot be deemd to have been extinguished by the mere use and improvement of the surface, with the .knowledge of their owner, nor by his non-user thereof, in view of knowledge of such improvement. As long as there is title to the coal, separate and distinct from the title to the ¡surface, right of mining and removal of the former must necessarily exist, and mining rights and privileges granted with the coal, being appurtenant thereto, must likewise exist In some form and to some extent, as long as the title to the •coal remains valid. Possession of the surface and improve‘ment thereof are not inconsistent either with the title to the *595coal outstanding in another, nor with the right of mining the same. Nor does such possession extinguish the outstanding title to the mineral. Wallace v. Elm Grove Coal Co., 58 W. Va. 449; Plant v. Humphries, 66 W. Va. 88; Montgomery v. Fuel Co., 61 W. Va. 626. To what extent, if any, the mine owner must respect buildings and other improvements on the property in the exercise of his mining right, is a question that does not arise upon the contention of entire extinguishment of such right, in so far as it involves a surface opening.

Economy and practicability of mining the coal from a point on adjoining surface owned by the plaintiff, at which an opening has been made or is contemplated, are relied upon in resistance of the claim that the opening in question is necessary and proper. From that point, which is only 550 feet distant from the opening on the 33 acre tract, the coal in question can be obtained and loaded into cars, without the necessity of hauling it in wagons, but the coal at the point of the hill, the location of the opening, would not be immediately available, since it would be necessary to mine to it from the other point, before it could be taken out. As the coal dips toward the point of the hill, the opening in question is the lowest point of the vein, wherefore better drainage is obtained by it than would be effected by the other. Though it is not suggested, the prime object of the enterprise complained of may be procurement of drainage for the mining of the entire body of coal in the immediate, vicinity of the opening at the point of the. hill and the other prospective one farther north. Removal of the coal from the point of the hill, within the 33 acre tract, so as to give drainage there, might greatly cheapen and facilitate the mining of the main body of coal through the other opening, without infliction of any serious injury upon the servient estate. A drainage ditch through it might be practically harmless, though passing between miners’ houses. As to this, however, we decide nothing, since the facts are not fully developed. The additional expense of 75 cents or $1.00 per ton, incident to the hauling of part of the comparatively small area of coal in question, may be fully justified by the advantages to accrue from the operation, to the larger mining proposition.

*596As to whether a considerable part of the coal in the 33 acre tract can be advantageously, properly and conveniently mined from any opening other than the one in question, the affidavits filed by the litigating parties are highly conflicting. For the defendant, the practicability of mining and marketing it from another, at lower cost, is insisted upon and proved by the affidavits of several experienced coal men. For the plaintiff, the impracticability of drainage from another opening is relied upon, and the case supplemented by the opinions of other experienced men, that advantageous and proper mining of part of the coal can be done only from the opening at the point of the hill. There seems to be no absolute or physical necessity for entry upon the surface of the 33 acre tract, but that is not the sense in which the words “necessary’’ and “proper” in grants of ways and other easements, are used. They have a broader significance. That which is really appropriate, useful and convenient is necessary and proper, notwithstanding something different might be made to subserve the same purpose. In the application of this principle to easements, the necessity for one way may be disproved by the "existence of another previously selected or established, but, in the establishment of one way, when no other exists, 'utility and convenience ai*e the dominating factors, subject to the limitation that the selection shall be so made as not to work unnecessary injury to the servient estate. Gale, Easements, 169; Jones, Easements, sec. 313, No doubt, there must be reasonable necessity and propriety in the selection and what is reasonably necessary and proper is largely a question of fact. The grant of mining rights involved here contemplates more than a single means of access to the coal. It gives a right of way into, over and under the land, at such points and in such manner for such ways, tracks and roads as may be necessary and proper for ventilating, draining, ^digging, operating, shipping and carrying away the coal. Having granted right to go both over and under the land, the grantee cannot be consistently limited to. an underground approach to the coal in any part of it, if there is reasonable necessity for use thereof. The advantage of natural drainage for some acres of coal area is a circum*597stance of considerable weight in the solution of the question. Then, again, the mine owner, having right to more than one opening and more than one way, may find it very much to Ms advantage to operate two openings at the same time. Reasonable necessity for his purposes, the mining and marketing of the coal, is the true test, although the means adopted by him may be subject to reasonable limitation by the conditions he finds on the servient estate. The rule of reason works both ways.

The enterprise in question has not thus far wrought any serious injury to the servient estate. There is a space of about 100 feet between the opening and the rear of some of the houses, and the small tipple will not be witMn 75 feet of them. A small garden has been destroyed, but that is not an improvement of such character as to work a limitation upon the granted mining rights. l^Tor can the annoyance to tenants from coal dust and debris be permitted to control, since it necessarily exists and obtains to a greater or less extent in and about all mining operations. As to the spring, the grant specifically absolves from liability for injury thereto or destruction thereof, and its loss is a mere incident of the removal of the coal, whether taken out through one opening or another. The time of such destruction thereof has no legal potency and cannot control or deny the right granted. In other words, it signifies nothing that the spring would have lasted longer, had the mining under it been done from, a different opening and direction. Right to mine the coal, under the stipulations of the deed, carries right to destroy the spring, and the time of mining it is clearly witMn the discretion and power of its owner.

The cross-assignment of error is not well taken. Roads and streets laid out and improved by the owner of the servi-ent estate cannot be arbitrarily appropriated and used to their injury by the owner of the dominant estate. No necessity for the use of any portion of the defendant’s road has been shown. It cannot be adopted merely to save the time and expense incident to the construction of a mining road.

These conclusions are limited, of course, to the rights of parties respecting merely interlocutory orders and a cause *598that may be only partially developed. What the ultimate and complete rights of the parties are may depend somewhat upon facts and circumstances not yet disclosed.

Seeing no error in the decree complained of, we will affirm it. Affirmed.

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