158 Pa. 606 | Pa. | 1893
Opinion by
Timlin, the plaintiff, was the owner of fifteen acres of land. Brown, one of defendants, was mining coal on land adjoining, and believed the seam extended under the fifteen acres; he opened negotiations with Timlin, which resulted in a parol agreement giving him the right to mine. A written agreement was entered into between Timlin and Brown and Hunter, which, although dated April 1, 1882, does not appear to have been formally executed until the close of the year.
The contract, as first agreed upon with Brown alone, was for the right to mine for a term of five years from April 1,1882, at a royalty of one cent per bushel, witli a minimum of 6000 bushels annually; after sinking the shaft, Brown took Hunter in partnership with him; the first contract was then canceled, the one sued on executed, and dated the same as the first, the royalty being reduced to half a cent per bushel, the term extended from five years to ten, and the minimum annual output raised from 6000 to 10,000 bushels. It provides: (1) That Brown & Hunter shall have the right to mine under the whole fifteen acres for ten years from the first of April, 1882. (2) They shall pay monthly to Timlin a half cent per bushel royalty. (3) Timlin to have coal for use in his own house at cost of digging, but to be paid no royalty on that coal. (4) Timlin to get 200 bushels slack coal annually free of charge, but to be paid no royalty on the slack. (6) Brown & Hunter, as a minimum, to mine 10,000 bushels each year, but to have the right to mine as much more as they choose. (6) In case they fail to mine 10,000 bushels, they agree to pay for 10,000 bushels. (7) Brown & Hunter agree to give up the mine at the end of the term in good workmanlike condition.
In June, 1882, Brown sank a shaft about twenty-four feet, and struck about twenty-seven inches of coal; he drifted off
The plaintiff’s demand was for the minimum royalty, $50.00 per yeai’, for the three years from April 1,1889, the date of last settlement, up to April 1,1892, the end of the ten years term; also for 450 bushels of slack not delivered, worth three cents per bushel; in addition, daxnages for removirxg the derrick at the shaft, and sufferixig the shaft itself to fall in, were demanded.
The court instructed the jury, that, under their contract, defeixdaxxts were liable for the minimum royalty, $50.00 per year, for the last three years of the term. This instruction is the error alleged in appellants’ 2d, 3d, 4th axid 5th assignmexrts. It is argued that, under the contract, if defendants prosecuted their xnixiing operations until the seam had become so thin it could no longer be mined at a profit, they were released from their covenant to pay. This brings us to a construction of the contract.
It was a sale of the coal ixr place under the fifteen acres, at the price of a half cent per bushel, to be paid monthly as the coal was mined, with right to a term of texi years in which to mine and remove it; they further agreed to mixxe at least 10,000 bushels each year, but, in case they failed to do so, then they agreed to pay a royalty on 10,000 bushels. That is, the contract was a sale of a.11 the coal under the fifteen acres for the xninixnum price of $500; if there were xxxore thaxi 100,000 bushels mined withixx the texi years, half a cent a bushel was to be paid on the excess in addition to the $500.
The grant is absolute of all the coal oxi the tract; the minimum and maximum prices are fixed absolutely. It is not a
The cases of Kemble Iron Co. v. Scott, 15 W. N. 220; McCahan v. Wharton, 121 Pa. 424; and Muhlenberg v. Henning,
In Muhlenberg v. Henning, supra, the covenant was to mine clean, merchantable iron ore; the lessees for nine months made diligent search and expended a large amount of money, and failed to find either tire quantity or quality of ore specified; they alleged, that, on report of their failure to the lessor, a suspension of the work was consented to by him. The late Justice Clark, delivering the opinion of this court, said: “ The lessees were bound to prosecute the work without delay. . . . If, however, it was established by actual effort, that at the time of the contract there was no ore in the land of the kind contracted for, it cannot be pretended upon any fair and reasonable construction of the contract that the lessees, nevertheless, were bound for the royalty, for the payment of the royalty was undoubtedly based on the assumption of the parties that ore of the quality existed there.”
In all these cases, the existence of the subject of the contract was unknown or uncertain, or, if it existed, the quality could only be determined by actual use. In the case before us, at the date of the contract the quantity was as well known as it could be at that time, — no man ever yet knew how many bushels or tons of coal were under a tract of land until he mined it out; faults and clay veins may exist, which cut out the seam for sonm
We think the learned judge of the court below put upon this part of the contract the proper construction, and defendants’ assignments of error to this portion of the charge are overruled.
The court further instructed the jury as follows: “Then as to the derrick that was there; we think that whatever the cost of the derrick itself is, and the putting of that shaft in repair by taking the débris out, is about all the plaintiff should be entitled to — whatever the evidence shows that to be.” This constitutes the subject of appellants’ first assignment of error. The undisputed evidence is, that defendants, when they commenced work, put up a small derrick to raise the coal from the bottom of the shaft; this method was continued for two years, when it was abandoned and the slope adopted. The shaft was of no further use except as an air shaft; the derrick, then, was wholly useless, and defendants had a right to remove it. While, to a certain extent, the preservation of this opening for ventilation was probably necessary to operating the mine, and would be covered by their covenant to “ give up the mine in a good workmanlike condition,” under no reasonable construction were they obliged to leave there a derrick which had been abandoned more than five years before, and a wholly different method of. raising the coal substituted. A derrick in no way affected the “ workmanlike condition ” of a slope mine, and therefore plaintiff had no well-founded claim for its value. It was error to submit this evidence to the jury.
It is argued by appellee’s counsel that the jury did not allow plaintiff for this item, and consequently the instruction did de
For that reason, the first assignment of error is sustained, the judgment is reversed, and á v. d. n. awarded.