Opinion by
These appeals involve the right of the court below to enter judgment n.o.v. Each plaintiff sought to recover damages in an action of trespass against the City of Philadelphia, Trustee under the Will of Stephen Girard, *182 Deceased, sustained as a result of a subsidence affecting a nine block area over Indian Ridge Colliery in Shenandoah. The defendant owned certain mining property in Schuylkill County known as Kehley’s Run Colliery, which is adjacent to the Borough of Shenandoah.
Indian Ridge Colliery had not been actively mined for many years prior to March 1¡., 191/0 when the subsidence began. Mining was being conducted in Kehley’s Run Colliery since May 8, 1988, not by defendant, but by the Morea Coal Company under an agreement of lease or sale with defendant, which agreement had been approved by the Orphans’ Court of Schuylkill County. Nevertheless plaintiffs sued, not the Morea Coal Company nor the Indian Ridge Colliery, but the Girard Trust Estate. Moreover, the suits were brought on February 28, 1946, almost six years after the subsidence. The two cases were consolidated and tried together. The plaintiff Borough proved damages to street paving and municipally owned water lines and sewer lines, as well as loss of tax revenue; the School District proved the total destruction of one high school building, the cost of repair of another which was seriously damaged, and a loss of tax revenue. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff Borough in the sum of $431,-418.57 and for the plaintiff School District in the sum of $430,721.54. The jury also specifically found (1) that the subsidence was caused by the failure of support of Kehley’s Run Mine; (2) that the defendant was guilty of negligence in entering into the 1938 lease with the Morea Coal Company; and (3) that after the lease was made in 1938, the defendant was guilty of negligence in permitting the Morea Coal Company to continue with its mining operations in the Kehley’s Run Mine.
The court below entered judgment n.o.v. for the defendant alleging more than a half dozen reasons, and *183 further stated: “Had we not entered judgments notwithstanding the verdicts, we would have granted new trials in both of the cases, on the ground that the finding of the jury was in each instance against the weight of the evidence — not only upon the issue of negligence, but also upon the question of causation”.
The importance of this case to the coal regions is evidenced by the fact that 41 political subdivisions joined as intervenors in this suit.
From the voluminous record we shall briefly epitomize the most important facts. The plaintiff School District of Shenandoah based its claim against defendant on the ground that on May 3,1938, defendant leased Kehley’s Run Colliery “and the lessee thereof from said date conducted mining operations therein under the supervision, direction, management and control of the Defendant * , its engineers, servants, agents and employees”. Plaintiff also averred that the lessee under the defendant’s supervision, direction and control was engaged in second mining operations, that is, was “robbing” or removing pillars of coal in the several veins on said property and in consequence of this robbing, the surface area overlying said veins was caused to subside and the lateral support of plaintiffs property was removed thereby; and that the defendant was bound, in the exercise of due care, to foresee that the mining so conducted would cause an extensive subsidence. Similar averments were made by the Borough of Shenandoah in its statement of claim. There was no evidence to prove the facts on which each plaintiff based its claim or the negligence thus charged against this defendant; and, as we shall see, each plaintiff subsequently amended its statement of claim by adding additional acts of negligence long after the Statute of Limitations had expired.
*184
Stephen Girard at the time of his death on December 26, 1831, was the owner of many tracts of land, including Kehley’s Run Colliery, in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania. He gave his residuary estate, as is well known, to the City of Philadelphia, in trust for several charitable uses and trusts, the major one of which was the establishment of a college for poor white male orphans. Years after Mr. Girard’s death, coal was discovered in some of the land in Schuylkill County, including Kehley’s Run. Mr. Girard’s will gave his trustees no authority to mine coal or to operate a coal mine, but did give authority to lease real estate; and the courts subsequently, from time to time, authorized the trustee to sell real estate. See
City of Philadelphia v. Heirs of Stephen Girard,
On
May 3, 1938,
the City of Philadelphia,
Trustee
Under the Will of Stephen Girard, denominated “lessor”, entered into a written agreement with the Morea Coal Company, denominated “lessee”, granting the
“exclusive license to mine, dig and carry away coal in and from all the beds or seams of coal upon
. . .
Kehley’s Run Colliery . . .
for a term of ten years”. The surface subsidence above mentioned, which commenced on
March 4, 1940,
was entirely above the Indian Ridge Mine and apparently (plaintiffs’ testimony on this point was very vague) there was no surface subsidence over the Kehley’s Run Mine. Plaintiffs sued the Girard Trust Estate in its capacity
as a public charity
and did not sue the trustee in its individual capacity, apparently under the authority of
Winnemore v. Philadelphia,
Another important contention of appellants is that the written agreement of May 3, 1938 was a lease and not a sale of coal in place. The parties are denominated lessor and lessee; the lessor grants the lessee exclusive license to mine, take and carry away coal, for the term of ten years; the lessee promises to pay royalty on all coal mined; the lessee shall furnish the lessor statements of sales; the lessor shall have the right to examine all contracts and books of lessee; whenever the workable coal is actually exhausted the lease shall terminate, and lessor shall be entitled to resume possession of the premises; all taxes assessed upon the premises as land, including coal or surface or both, shall be paid by the lessor; the lessee shall open slopes, shafts or tunnels for mining coal in a workmanlike manner and as prescribed by the Mining Laws and Regulations of the State of Pennsylvania; the location and size of the slopes, shafts, tunnels, etc., and of the engines, pumps, breakers and other improvements shall be subject to the approval of the lessor; the lessee shall use the most approved methods of modern mining and shall comply *186 in every respect with laws now existing or hereafter enacted by the State of Pennsylvania or of the United States. The question of whether a coal bed or, seam was workable was left to arbitration. The lessee shall leave no coal unmined for the purposes of affording vertical or lateral support to any easement or structure upon or adjacent to the demised premises when such easement or structure shall not have a proven legal right to such support. There was a prohibition against transfer or assignment of the estate granted. The right was reserved to lessor to have its mining engineer and other representatives examine the mines, machinery and improvements of every kind on the premises. There then followed legal remedies giving the lessor the right to distrain for rents or royalties, etc., and a right of forfeiture and re-entry.
To a great many people who do not live in coal counties, the aforesaid instrument having the usual terms and attributes of a lease, would seem to be a lease. Nevertheless the law is long and well settled in Pennsylvania that “ ‘The grant of a right to mine coal in the lands of the lessor and remove it therefrom, although the instrument may be called a lease, is a grant of an interest in the land itself, and not a mere license to take the coal.’ The transaction . . . constituted a sale of the coal conditioned upon its being removed within the period specified”:
Lazarus’s Estate,
. “It is none the less a sale, if the parties called the deed a lease, and styled themselves lessor and lessee, and contracted that in case of non-payment of the ‘royalty’ the grantor should have the right of distress, or at his option the right to forfeit the’ grant”:
Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company v. Sanderson, 109 Pa.
583, 589,
Whether the written instrument of May 3, 1938 is a sale or a lease, is in our opinion immaterial since neither the vendor nor lessor of a coal mine is responsible in trespass for the negligent mining by his (so-called) lessee which results in damage to the surface:
Offerman v. Starr, 2
Pa. 394;
Greek Catholic Congregation v. Plummer,
In
Greek Catholic Congregation v.
Plummer,
The court below correctly held that there was no evidence to prove the averments in plaintiffs’ statements of claim, that the lessee conducted mining operations or robbed pillars under the supervision, direction, management and control of the defendant.' Faced with this situation each of the plaintiffs, toward the end of the trial of their case, amended each of their statements of claim by adding additional acts of negligence. Briefly stated these amendments charged that defendant failed in the exercise of due care in entering into the “lease” of May 3, 1938, when it knew or should have known that the mine was practically exhausted and the removal of further coal would cause the withdrawal of lateral support and subsidence of plaintiffs’ property, and, in permitting or failing to stop the mining of coal by the lessee when defendant knew or should have known damage would be occasioned thereby.
Plaintiffs offered expert testimony to support and prove the allegations of their amendments. The right of surface support and of lateral support and the kind and quantum of negligence required to be proved is set forth in
Home Brewing Co. v. Thomas Colliery Co.,
In
Grier v. Northern Assurance Co.,
In
Martin v. Pittsburg Rys. Co.,
In
Cox v. Wilkes-Barre Rwy. Corp.,
In
Noonan v. Pardee,
These cases control in principle the instant case. It is therefore clear that the court below was correct in holding that plaintiffs’ amendments introduced a new cause of action and having been offered at least nine years after the plaintiffs’ cause of action arose, were of course barred by the Statute of Limitations.
Plaintiffs having failed to prove the averments in their original statement of claim, namely, that the lessee (vendee) conducted mining operations and was robbing pillars of coal under the supervision, direction, management and control of the defendant, their cases against this defendant must fail.
A number of other important legal questions were *193 raised and vigorously argued by both appellants and appellee. We have considered them all, but deem it unnecessary to discuss them herein.
Judgment affirmed.
