14 Pa. Super. 32 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1900
Opinion by
The defendant executed an oil and gas lease of his farm to the plaintiff and another, “ for the term of one year and so long thereafter as oil or gas can be produced in paying quantities.” The lease was dated February 12, 1890. .The lessees formed a company, of which they were members, for operating the lease, and the plaintiff entered into a contract with the company for the drilling of the wells; he furnished his own tools and machinery. In the year 1892, after the plaintiff had suspended operations in drilling the wells for some time,, the defendant brought an action of ejectment, and on February 2, 1894, obtained a verdict, against the plaintiff and his associates, in that action. At the time tins verdict was obtained there was a considerable amount of personal property belonging to the plaintiff, on the premises which, subsequently to the verdict, the defendant declined to permit the plaintiff .to remove. The plaintiff, alleging that the defendant had converted the property to his own use, brought this action to recover the value thereof.
The defendant sought to interpose the bar of the statute of limitations to the plaintiff’s claim, and in support of that position offered evidence tending to establish that the defendant before bringing the action of ejectment, in 1892, had insisted upon the plaintiff’s going on and finishing a well which was then being drilled. The defendant testified in answer to a question by the court: “ Q. Counsel has asked you what was said between you and Mr. Sattler. You will confine yourself to that. A. Well, he wouldn’t finish the well, and I told him if he don’t want to finish the well, I will sue him; I told him if he don’t want to finish the well to take his tools away, and if he don’t take his tools away I will sue the whole company.
The third specification of error relates to the refusal of the court to charge that “under the terms of thh lease ^offered in evidence the plaintiff had no right to remove the personal property after the expiration of the lease and after the verdict in the ejectment case at No. 655, December term, 1892.” There is no authority for the suggestion that a tenant who does not succeed in getting all his personal property away from the leased premises before the expiration of his lease forfeits that property to his landlord; nor can it be successfuly maintained that he who, in an action of ejectment, recovers the right to possession of a farm and establishes his title to the land, at the same time becomes the owner of the farming implements, cattle and horses which happen to be upon the premises at the time of the rendition of the verdict. Every question raised by this specification of error has been squarely ruled in the recent cases of Wick v. Bredin, 189 Pa. 83, and Cassell v. Crothers, 193 Pa. 359, and further comment is unnecessary.
Judgment affirmed.