106 Va. 100 | Va. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On the 27th day of September, 1853, James T. Clarke and wife made, executed and delivered to one Anastatius ISTicholas their deed conveying two adjacent tracts of mountain land, setting out the metes and bounds thereof, situated in Augusta
“In the foregoing deed there is reserved to the grantors all of the timber on the lands conveyed with the privilege of removing the same. The extent of such reservation is only intended to allow the said Clarke the privilege of cutting and removing such timber from the said lands as he may want from time to time without let or hindrance from said Nicholas, but is by no means intended to prevent said Nicholas or his assigns also to cut and use whatsoever timber he may want, from time to time. Witness the following signature and seal September 29, 1853.
“James T. Clarke. (Seal.)”
By deed dated Mardh 17, 1875, Anastatius Nicholas conveyed the lands above mentioned and the appurtenances to the Shenandoah Land and Anthracite Coal Company, together with other lands in the same locality; and on the 21st day of April, 1906, the Shenandoah Land and Anthracite Coal Company filed its bill in the Circuit Court of Augusta county against James T. Clarke, praying an injunction restraining Clarke, his agents, etc., from cutting timber standing and growing upon the lands in question, and from removing any timber cut by Clarke upon said land, and from selling or disposing of any of said timber so cut and removed. Upon this bill a temporary injunction was awarded, in accordance with the prayer thereof, and subsequently the cause was heard upon the bill of complaint, the answer of James T. Clarke thereto and certain affidavits taken and filed on behalf of Clarke, and depositions taken
The effect of the decree appealed from is, as appellant claims, that the appellee, Clarke, is the absolute owner of all the timber on the lands in question, and that appellant has no interest in or right to this timber, or any part of it.
The first error assigned is that the court overruled the exception taken to the answer of Clarke filed in the cause, and refused to strike out and expunge from the answer the portion thereof excepted to.
The bill of appellant called for an answer from Clarke to each and every allegation thereof, on oath, as fully and to the same extent as if he were directly and particularly interrogated as to each allegation; and the answer of appellee was accordingly made under oath, admitting the execution of the deed of September 27, 1853, filed with the bill, and also the indorsement thereon dated September 29, 1853, and sets out fully the facts and circumstances as they existed at the time of the execution of these two writings from the standpoint of appellee.
«As to the objection that the answer is sworn to, it need only be said that the bill called for an answer under oath, and therefore the answer was admissible and conclusive in so far as it was responsive to the bill until it was overcome by the testimany of two witnesses, or by one witness and corroborative circumstances. Appellant might have waived oath to the answer, but this it did not see fit to do, and there was no ground upon which the answer or any part of it could be excluded merely because it was under oath.
For should the exception thereto, on the ground that the answer was not responsive to the bill, have been sustained, as the matters set up in the answer were clearly relevant to the issues presented in the bill, and responsive thereto.
The answer, after setting out that the lands conveyed by the
Concerning the timber upon the lands conveyed in the deed •of September 27, 1853, the deed is not susceptible of any other construction than that by it the absolute right to all of the timber upon the lands was reserved to the grantor, Clarke, and it is by reason only of the “addendum” to this deed that any ■difficulty is encountered in reaching a satisfactory conclusion as to the meaning and import of the language employed by the parties contracting. According to the contention of appellant, •the language of the “addendum” is to be construed as giving to Nicholas and his assigns the absolute ownership of the timber upon the lands. Plainly this contention cannot be sustained, for if the words “the right to cut and use” timber gave Nicholas -the absolute ownership of it, then the words preceding, which reserved to the grantors all the timber on the lands conveyed “with the privilege of removing the same,” must necessarily have the saíne construction, the result being that both the •grantors and the grantee in the deed thereby reserved or ac•quired an absolute ownership of the timber, with the right to the former to “cut and remove” and to the latter the right to ■“cut and use.” It is impossible that both could own an absolute right to the timber. It is immaterial, we think, whether the deed and the “addendum” be treated as one paper or separate. Under the deed the whole of the timber is unmistakably reserved to the appellee, and there is nothing in the “addendum” which required him to surrender the whole of it to Nicholas and his assigns; on the contrary, it is distinctly stipulated that he may cut and remove as much of the timber as he might want from time to time, without let or hindrance from Nicholas, who was given the privilege merely of cutting and using whatever timber he might want from time to time; but the exercise of
The rule that parol evidence is not admissible to alter the terms of a written instrument or to add thereto does not exclude evidence going to explain the instrument, where the language employed is of equivocal import.
“Where a written contract is obscure in its meaning, evidence of what was said and done at the time of its execution is competent, not to add to or change it, but to explain it.” Knick v. Knick, 75 Va. 12; Richardson v. The Bank, 94 Va. 136, 26 S. E. 413.
“If the meaning of an instrument be doubtful, evidence of
To ascertain the intent of the parties is the fundamental rule in the construction of an agreement; and in such construction courts look to the language employed, the subject-matter and the surrounding circumstances. They are never shut out from the same light which the parties enjoyed when the contract was executed, and to that end they are entitled to place themselves in the same situation which the parties who made the contract occupied, so as to view the circumstances as they viewed them, and so to judge of the meaning of the words and of the correct application of the language to the things described. Talbott v. R. & D. R. Co., 31 Gratt. 685.
Considering the language employed in the “addendum” to the deed in question, in the light of the well established rules adverted to and the proof in the record, the construction of it claimed by appellee is fully sustained. Eor about fifty-three years prior to the institution of this suit appellee cut and removed-tan-bark and timber from these lands, according to the very terms of the deed of September 27, 1853, without hindrance on the part of Fichólas or anyone claiming under him, no question being raised by anyone at any time as to appellee’s right to do so. It further appears that it was the sole purpose of Fichólas, and appellant who claims under him, to develop such minerals as might be found npon the lands in question, and that neither ever contemplated cutting and removing from the lands the timber thereon reserved in the deed to appellee. It further appears that neither Fichólas nor the appellant, during the period from the date of the deed to Fichólas in 1853 to the institution of this suit, ever attempted to cut and use any of this timber, nor have they, or either of them, during that period attempted to open and operate any mines under the lands, but, on the contrary, their course with reference thereto has been such as to warrant the conclusion that they had aban
The facts and circumstances shown in the record clearly sustain thé contentions of appellee—(1) That the addendum to the deed was made after the execution and delivery thereof, and without consideration; (2) that it was made for the purpose only of conferring upon Nicholas the right or privilege of using enough of the timber upon the lands conveyed as he might need to prop up his mines in taking out any coal he might find and want to market or show, with the view of selling his purchase of the lands at an advance, it being the purpose of Nicholas to either mine and market the coal he believed he could find in the lands, or .to sell the lands, together with other lands in the same locality, with the right to mine coal or other minerals therein, for an advanced price; (3) that Nicholas never intended to purchase, nor ever considered that he had purchased, the timber on the lands conveyed by him to appellee, or any interest therein which he could assert in hindrance of appellee in cutting and removing the timber at his convenience; and (4) that neither Nicholas nor appellant ever conceived the idea that the “addendum” in question conferred upon Nicholas any interest in the timber other than the mere privilege of using such of it as Nicholas might want to use in propping up openings in the lands to take out coal found therein, or to show the same, until long after all expectation of finding coal or other minerals in the lands had been abandoned, the lands regarded of little or no worth, and the timber had become valuable only by reason of the construction of a railroad to the
In our view of the case the occasion has never arisen for Nicholas or his assignee, appellant, to exercise the right or privilege conferred upon the former by the “addendum” to the deed of September 21, 1853, and that by the concession of appellant in its bill, which agrees fully with the proof in the record, the occasion can never arise for the exercise of such "right or privilege; therefore it would be manifestly unjust and inequitable to grant the relief prayed by appellant in this case.
It follows that the decree appealed from is without error, and should be affirmed.
Affirmed.