72 W. Va. 680 | W. Va. | 1913
Plaintiffs recovered a judgment for $500, the forfeiture provided by section 7, chapter 79, Code (1906), to be paid to the party injured, for mining and removing coal within five feet
The first error -assigned is that the court improperly overruled the demurrer to the declaration. It is urged that there is a mis-joinder o’f plaintiffs, that only one could sue. This question was recently decided otherwise in Shinn v. O’Garra Coal Mining Co., — W. Va. —, 78 S. E. 104. We there held that the life tenant and remainderman, or reversioner, could unite as-plaintiffs in one action. The words of the statute, “any person injured thereby," include all persons whose property is injured by a violation of the statute. But, of course, there can be but one recovery; said if mare than one is injured by the same violation of the statute, there is no reason why they should not all join.
The declaration is in three counts in debt. It is not necessary for us to decide whether or not the first count is bad for failure to aver that the defendant was “the owner or tenant of any land containing coal." For, even if this count is bad, and either one ' of the other two is good, the demurrer, being general and not to each count, was properly overruled. The statute does not prescribe the form of action, and therefore an action of debt lies. Maple v. John, 43 W. Va. 30, decides that either debt or trespass on the case lies to recover the forfeiture.
The second count is good; it avers that plaintiffs are the owners of a certain tract of land containing coal, and that defendant is the lessee of an adjoining tract containing the same vein of coal, and also avers that the defendant “unlawfully and contrary to the statute in such cases made and provided, did dig, excavate, work, mine and remove the said vein of coal within five feet of the said boundary and division line between said1'tracts of coal land, without the consent of the plaintiffs in writing or other-wiseN This is a sufficient averment that the statute has been violated, and that the defendant is liable for the forfeiture thereby imposed. It is immaterial that the declaration does not allege how the defendant encroached within five feet of the line, whether by sinking a shaft, or by following and removing the vein of coal from its outcrop on the hillside. Digging and removing the coal within five feet of the line, without written per
It is further urged that the declaration is defective because it does not state the cause of action in the exact language of the statute. But the pleader has employed language which is the legal equivalent, and that is sufficient. Even in ease of an indictment for & statutory offense, where the rules of pleading are, if any difference, more rigid than in civil cases, it has been held that, although it is the safer method to pursue the exact language of the statute in describing the offense, still it is sufficient to do so in legally equivalent language. State v. Riffe, 10 W. Va. 794. True, the statute is penal in nature, and is therefore subject to strict construction. But the rule is applied only for the purpose of ascertaining the actual wrong intended to be prohibited. Gawthrop v. Fairmont Coal Co., 68 W. Va. 650, 70 S. E. 556. It does not apply to the form and manner of pleading.
The defendant offered no evidence, but submitted its case upon a demurrer to plaintiffs’ evidence; and it is insisted that its demurrer was improperly overruled. But we do not think so.
The court properly overruled defendant’s objection to the introduction of the deed from Thomas Selvey to John W. Sel-vey, dated 14th May, 1890. There is no material variance between that deed and the averment 'in the declaration that plaintiffs are the owners of the land. That averment is substantially proven by the deed, notwithstanding it purports to convey only coal and mining rights. Coal in place is land. The word “Band” includes “tenaments and hereditaments, and all rights thereto and interests therein, except chattel interests.” Section 17, clause 15, chapter 13, Code. Proof that plaintiffs were owners of coal in place was not a material variance from the averment that they were the owners of land which contained a valuable vein of coal. The statute authorizing this action was designed to protect the owner of the seam of coal as well as the owner of the surface of the land above it. Gawthrop v. Fairmont Coal Co., supra.
It is contended that the evidence does not prove that defendant did not have plaintiffs’ consent in writing. John W. Selvey testified that he did not give his consent; this proves that he, at
Defendant claims that it is not proven that it was the owner or tenant of the adjoining land. Plaintiffs introduced in evidence the coal lease from Adolphus Armstrong to defendant for the coal under a number of contiguous tracts of land, one of which is described in the lease as “the Thomas Selvey parcel of thirty-two and three-fourth acres.” The lease refers to the deed from Selvey to Armstrong by date, deed book and page where recorded. That deed is also in evidence. It conveyed coal and described the tract of land containing it by metes and bounds, and also as containing 37 acres and 3 roods, and excepts 5 acres of coal which is also described by metes and bounds. Five acres deducted leaves the exact quantity conveyed to defendant: This evidence, together with the testimony of witnesses who surveyed the lines of the live acres and also the mine, and who viewed the mine, and the testimony of other -witnesses that defendant was then, and had been, operating the mine, established the facts that defendant is the lessee, that its coal is in a tract contiguous to the plaintiffs’, and that defendant had removed the coal within five feet of the dividing line of the properties. The testimony of the county surveyor, R. A. Morrow, and George Brackett, the mining engineer, who surveyed the lines of the five acres, proves the location of the line encroached upon, with sufficient definiteness.
Defendant is not prejudiced by the introduction in evidence of the excerpt from the deed of Thomas Selvey and wife to Adolphus Armstrong, containing the metes and bounds of the five acres reserved in that deed. It was the data upon which the surveyor had made his survey of those lines. The deed itself is ' in evidence and the metes and bounds of the five acres are therein given and are identical with those given in the paper objected to.
It was not necessary for plaintiffs to prove injury. The injury
Inasmuch as the statute protects the owners of coal in place as well as owners of the surface lands, it is immaterial that one of plaintiffs is a joint owner only of the coal, while the others are joint owners of both coal and surface. All, nevertheless, have the right to join in this action to recover the forfeiture. The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.