Cole v. Ellwood Power Co.
Cole v. Ellwood Power Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion bv
Three questions are raised by this appeal, first, had appellee such an interest in the rocks and bowlders as to entitle him to compensation when appropriated; second, if his right to quarry was limited as to time, had notice to terminate the lease been served before the entry of appellant, and third, what was the proper measure of damages ? It is contended for appellant that the right claimed by appellee in the quarry, is an interest in land, without limit as to time and within the statute of frauds. If this principle can be successfully invoked there can be no recovery, because the contract relied on to assert an interest is in parol. Yeakle v. Jacob, 33 Pa. 376 ; Neumoyer v. Andreas, 57 Pa. 446 ; Pattison’s Appeal, 61 Pa. 294 ; Bowers v. Bowers, 95 Pa. 477 and Miller v. Zufall, 113 Pa. 317 are cited in support of this contention. These cases all relate to contracts for the sale of standing timber and the rule deducible therefrom is, that when the grant is for a perpetual right to cut, or for an indefinite period in which to remove, or at the discretion of the vendee, without a view to immediate severance, it is within
The court below held that the proper measure of damages was, not the value of stone in place, but the value of the stone after it had been manufactured into curbstone, and sold in the market, less the cost of preparation, transportation and royalty. With this rule as to the measure of damages, witnesses were permitted to testify how much curbstone could be cut from the bowlders and how much it would sell for in the market, what the cost of manufacturing and transporting the same would be, the difference being the measure of damages to the appellee. Ege v. Kille, 84 Pa. 333 is relied on as ruling the case. It is true that such a measure of damages was sustained in that case, but that was an action of trespass for mesne profits between private parties, each of whom claimed title to the land in dispute, and, the title of Ege having been sustained, he brought an action against Kille to recover the mesne profits during the time that Kille had possession of the land and had actually taken the ore from the mines. Coleman’s Appeal, 62 Pa. 252, and Oak Ridge Coal Co. v. Rogers, 108 Pa. 147, belong to this class of cases. In Graham v. Railroad Co., 145 Pa. 504, the distinction between the measure of damages arising out of a trespass and the assessment of damages accruing to the owner of property, taken under the right of eminent domain, was clearly pointed out. The learned counsel for appellee earnestly contends that the case at bar is an action to recover damages for a trespass. In this is the vice of his argument. This is not an action for trespass in the sense of the owner of land instituting proceedings against a person who had entered upon his property without authority of law. The appellant here had
The fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth assignments of error are sustained.
Judgment reversed with a venire.
Reference
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- Cole v. Ellwood Power Company
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- Syllabus
- Statute of frauds — Parol license — Lease—Equity—Contract. If a license, or privilege to do something on the land of the licensor, is given by parol, then followed by the expenditure of money, on the faith of the parol agreement, it is irrevocable and is to be treated as a binding contract. Equity treats the license thus executed as a contract giving absolute rights, and protects the licensee in the enjoyment of those rights. A parol lease of a quarry reserving royalties confers upon the lessee a property right, and if the quarry is taken in condemnation proceedings he is entitled to damages for his loss. If in such a case the testimony is conflicting as to whether the right had been terminated by notice to quit before the property was taken, the case is for the jury. Evidence — Writings—Duplicates. Where an exact carbon copy of an original paper is made on a typewriter at the same time as the original, signed by the same persons, executed in the same manner, and in every respect is an exact duplicate, -one being delivered, the other preserved, both may be considered originals, and the one preserved may be offered in evidence without notice to produce the one delivered. Eminent domain — Condemnation of quarry — Damages—Measure of damages. In a proceeding to assess damages for the loss of a quarry condemned for public use, the measure of damages is the actual value of the stone in place, not the prospective and speculative value of that stone when cut and sold in the market. Any stone actually severed- from the ledge is personal property, and the measure of damages as to it, is its value at the place where appropriated.