Opinion by
The plaintiffs, Mike Sustrik and wife, are the owners by entireties, of coal bearing property in West Pike Run Township, Washington County. Their land adjoins similar property of Jones & Laughlin Steel Corporation on which the company had conducted a mining operation. The subsurface boundary line between the two properties however had not been located on the vein of coal. In this action of trespass (quare clausum fregit for the taking of coal, brought under §6 of the Act of April 20, 1846, P. L. 411, 12 PS §1442) the evidence was that the defendant by careless mining procedures had removed 1768 tons of coal from the land of the plaintiffs; on the other hand the testimony also indicated that plaintiffs had mined 803 tons of coal from the defendant’s land. During the course of the trial, negotiations for the settlement of the controversy were carried on between the parties to the action, and their counsel. The discussion principally dealt with the value of the coal removed. The difference in tonnage, in plaintiffs’ favor, of the coal negligently mined, by each of the parties on the other’s land, was 965 tons. The plaintiffs were represented at the trial by Palmer J. McCloskey, Esquire, of the Washington County Bar. He, under a settlement agreement with defendant’s counsel, accepted the defendant’s check for f>750' in full
The general rule is that an attorney engaged to press a claim or prosecute an action at law has no implied power by virtue of his general retainer to settle, by compromise, his client’s claim or cause of action; (5 Am. Jur., Attorneys at Law, §98) ; ordinarily, prior specific authority or subsequent ratification is necessary to make such compromise valid and binding on his client.
Although plaintiffs knew on the second day of the trial that their case had been settled they did not file the present petition until seven months after the action had been “marked settled and discontinued” on the record. But while the general rule is that a principal must promptly repudiate his agent’s unauthorized acts (Baumgartner v. Whinney,
Order affirmed.
