92 Va. 238 | Va. | 1895
delivered the opinion of the court.
“ For value received, I hereby assign all my right, title and interest, for the term of 99 years, also with privilege of renewal for a like term of years, to all minerals of whatsoever description that may he found on my lands in the county of Augusta, and State of Yirginia, to A. Nicholas, his heirs and assigns, to farm ; the said A. Nicholas, his heirs and assigns, shall have the right of way, that on condition that he or they pay to me one-fourth of all the profits that may he obtained from any mineral that shall be mined on my said land, after deducting legal interest on the cash capital used by the said A. Nicholas, his heirs and assigns.
“ In witness whereof I hereunto set my hand and seal this the 15th day of March, in the year of our Lord eighteen hundred and fifty-three.
_ his
_ William M Sheffer, [Seal.] ”
. mark.
The land of William Sheffer, to which this agreement had reference, consists of a tract of 613 acres lying in North River Gap, Augusta county, and is the same land that was conveyed by Sheffer and wife to Emanuel Hise, appellee, by two deeds, setting forth a full and valuable consideration, the one dated March 1, 1876, and the other dated November 4,1890— both deeds being duly recorded in the clerk’s office of Augusta County Court. On the 17th day of March, 1875, A. Nicholas, by a writing also duly recorded in Augusta county clerk’s office, assigned and transferred all of his rights or interests acquired under the agreement executed by William Sheffer, above set forth, to the Shenandoah Land and Anthracite Coal Company, a corporation of the State of New York, composed of the said Nicholas and four other persons.
In March, 1891,,Hise filed his bill in the Circuit Court of
The first ground seems not to have been pressed in the court below, but upon the hearing of the cause upon the bill of complainant, the answers of the defendants thereto, and the depositions taken for both complainant and defendants, the Circuit Court of Augusta, by its decree of June 23, 1892, set aside and annulled both the agreement made by Sheffer with Nicholas in 1853, and the assignment executed by Nicholas to the Shenandoah Land and Anthracite Coal Company March 17, 1875; and, in order to make stable and quiet the title of Hise to the lands in question, and to show that the cloud upon the title had been removed, directed its commissioner to execute and place upon the record of the County Court of Augusta, at the costs of the defendants, a deed releasing and discharging said deed of the 15th of March, 1853, and all rights in any wise thereby granted, or intended to be granted, and conveying to Emanuel Hise all right, title, interest, and estate whatsoever of the defendants in and to the lands in question. Erom this decree an appeal was allowed the Shenandoah Land and Anthracite Coal Company to this court.
The question to be considered is, what is the true construction of this agreement of March 15, 1853?
•The contention of appellant is that by this agreement Nicholas. acquired title to all the minerals on the lands of Sheffer
Judge Lacy, in delivering the opinion of this court, construing the contract under consideration in the case of Cowan v. Radford Iron Co., supra, says : “Regard should be had to the intention of the parties, and such intention should be
In that case the language used in the contract or agreement between Cowan and the Badford Iron Company was, £t Said Geo. W. Cowan has this day sold,” &c., and the court held the agreement to be a ££ mining lease,” by which the lessee was invested with the usual mining rights; and, although the lessee had mined some of the minerals from Cowan’s property, and paid him a royalty thereon, it appearing that the lessee had ceased to mine for an unreasonable time, and announced “ that they did not propose to mine iron ore at a loss, nor would they allow others to operate this iron ore at a profit,” the lease was set aside and annulled.
In the case at bar, the language used in the agreement provides that the minerals, &c., are assigned to Nicholas “to farm.” Here we have an assignment of the minerals on Sheffer’s lands to Nicholas “ to farm,” which term “ to farm,” in the sense used, is synonymous with the term “ to mine,” and can have no other meaning or import than that Nicholas was to mine the minerals to be found upon Sheffer’s lands, and render to Sheffer one-fourth of the profits arising therefrom, as stipulated in the agreement, and this to be done within a reasonable time. The evidence shows that from the date of the agreement, March 15, 1853, down to 1875, a period of over twenty years, Nicholas did little or nothing toward mining the minerals on the lands in question, certainly
Having due regard, as we must, for the intentions of the parties, their situation, the subject-matter of the agreement, the object which they had in view at the time, and intended to accomplish, the agreement of March 15, 1853, cannot be denominated other than a “ mining lease,” by virtue of which Nicholas acquired only the usual mining rights, which it was his duty to exercise within a reasonable time, and in a way calculated to benefit the lessor as well as himself. This he failed to do for a most unreasonable time, and his assignment or conveyance to appellant conferred upon the latter no other or greater rights than those possessed by him. Hodgson v. Perkins, 84 Va. 711.
For nearly forty years, these parties, claiming under the agreement of 1853, had done nothing whatever in furtherance of its object, or whereby Sheffer or the appellee have been benefitted; but, on the contrary, have, in violation of their just rights, held on to this unreleased and uncancelled lease upon the records, whereby the full enjoyment of the property has been hindered. With this state of facts, coupled with the further fact that there is on the part of the appellant no present intention to mine the minerals on this property, as declared by Nicholas, it would have been unjust and inequitable to have withheld from the present owner of the property the relief sought by his bill in this cause.
It follows that we are of opinion that the decree complained of is right, and must be affirmed.
Affirmed.