J-A12032-15
2015 PA Super 184
ALBERT M. VOSBURG, III, IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
PENNSYLVANIA
Appellee
v.
NBC SEVENTH REALTY CORP., AND
PITTSTON AREA INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT CORP.,
APPEAL OF: NBC SEVENTH REALTY
CORP.
No. 1552 MDA 2014
Appeal from the Order entered June 3, 2014,
in the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County,
Civil Division, at No(s): 91-E-2002
BEFORE: BOWES, DONOHUE, and ALLEN, JJ.
DISSENTING OPINION BY ALLEN, J.: FILED SEPTEMBER 02, 2015
I respectfully dissent from the Majority.
The trial court, in its December 3, 2010 order, recounted the factual
and procedural background of this case as follows:
[] The Complaint was filed [by Vosburg] in Equity to the
above-captioned number on October 11, 2002 as a case in
trespass, and conversion of the mineral rights held by [Vosburg].
[Appellant and PAID] hold title to the surface rights of the parcel
of land located in Pittston Township. However, [Vosburg] claims
the rights to the alleged "Mineral Estate" retained by a
reservation clause contained in Deed dated May 11, 1951 and
recorded in Luzerne County Deed Book 1115, page 221.
Although the title to the property has eventually passed to
[Appellant and PAID], The Mineral Rights Reservation Clause has
remained in [Vosburg’s] family with no subsequent conveyance
by Deed of said reservation. An unrecorded 1976 Bill of Sale
purportedly conveying said Reservation of Minerals Rights has
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been renounced and thus the mineral rights remain in [Vosburg]
by alleged intestate inheritance.
[PAID] received the surface right[s] to the property by
Deed in 1999 [from the Estate of Michael Fritz]. Said Deed
contained a standard subject to all reservations, restrictions …
exceptions, etc. clause which thereby incorporated the Mineral
Right[s] Reservation Clause of the 1951 Deed. On February 27,
2002, [PAID] transferred the property to [NBC] by Deed which
contained the same “subject to” clause. After the 2002,
transfer, [Appellant] initiated a large construction project on the
property for industrial development. The construction
necessitated the excavation, processing and refill and grading of
hundreds of thousands of tons of rock found on the site both on
and under the surface of the property in question to a depth of
approximately fifty (50) feet.
[Vosburg’s] complaint alleges trespass to the Mineral
Rights reserved by [Vosburg] and conversion of the rocks by
[Appellant’s] removal, processing, and use of the processed
rocks and sub-base and fill. The extent of [Vosburg’s] monetary
damages attendant to the alleged trespass and conversion is not
before the court.
Trial Court Opinion, 12/3/10, at 1-2 (underline in original).
The initial 2002 complaint which the trial court referenced provides in
pertinent part:
5. The Abstract of title to the property conveyed to PAID by the
Fritz Estate Deed (the "Fritz Parcel Chain of Title") reveals that
the mineral rights in the Fritz Parcel were previously excepted
out and retained by Albert M. Vosburg and Katherine N. Vosburg,
his wife, by virtue of their deed to Anthony Fritz dated May 11,
1951 and recorded on May 12, 1951 in Luzerne County Deed
Book 1115, page 221 (the "Vosburg to Fritz Deed") which deed
contains the following language: "EXCEPTING AND RESERVING
all coal and other mineral beneath the surface of said described
land, with the right to mine and remove the same by subterrane
mining." []
7. [Vosburg] is the grandson of Albert M. Vosburg and Katherine
N. Vosburg[.]
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8. [PAID] conveyed to [Appellant] a parcel of real estate (the
"PAID Property") which includes a portion of the Fritz Parcel, said
portion being approximately 50 acres in size, along with other
adjacent lands by that certain deed dated February 27, 2002 and
recorded on March 1, 2002 in Luzerne County Deed Book 3002,
page 57046 (the "PAID to [Appellant] Deed")[.]
9. To the best of [Vosburg’s] knowledge, [Appellant] began
excavating hardened shale1 from the Fritz Parcel on or about
January 15, 2002, first under a Right of Entry granted to
[Appellant] by PAID and then as the owner of a portion of the
Fritz Parcel for the purposes of leveling by cutting and filling the
area needed for [Appellant’s] land development project as
approved by the Luzerne County Planning Commission involving
the construction of a 1,010,180 square foot warehouse
distribution facility and offices on 105.12 acres of land (the
"Warehouse Distribution Facility Land Development") and to
provide a suitable sub-base for the buildings, loading docks,
parking areas, and access drives which are part of the
Warehouse Distribution Facility Land Development Project.
10. To the best of [Vosburg’s] knowledge, [PAID] has also
excavated hardened shale from the Fritz Parcel, or plans to do so
in the near future, to use as a suitable sub-base for the
construction of an access road to serve the remainder of the
Fritz Parcel and other lands owned by PAlD.
11. At all times relevant to this complaint [Appellant and PAID]
did not have or obtain the rights to remove minerals from the
Fritz Parcel and the mineral rights in and to all minerals within
the Fritz Parcel remained of record with Albert M. Vosburg and
Katherine N. Vosburg[.]
12. At all times relevant to this complaint [Appellant and PAID]
knew, or should have known from the deeds recorded in the
public records of the Office of the Recorder of Deeds in and for
Luzerne County, Pennsylvania, that they did not own any
mineral rights in the Fritz Parcel and, therefore, had no right to
excavate and use for their own benefit the hardened shale
located in the Fritz Parcel.
____________________________________________
1
The parties have also referred to the disputed material as “rock,” and/or
“sandstone” throughout their pleadings and briefs.
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13. The hardened shale located in the Fritz Parcel and removed
and converted to the use and benefit of [Appellant and PAID]
was at all times and is today a mineral as defined under
Pennsylvania law.
14. The hardened shale had and has a minimum value of in
excess of $3.00 a ton.
15. [Vosburg’s] predecessor in interest, Burr B. Vosburg, sent a
specimen of rock excavated from the Fritz Parcel to the United
States Department of the Interior, Bureau of Mines in 1938 and
received a determination letter stating the mineral composition
of the rock to be hardened shale (the "Bureau of Mines Letter"),
a copy of which letter is attached hereto and incorporated herein
as Exhibit F.
16. [Appellant] has excavated and converted to its use and
benefit well over one million tons of hardened shale with a
minimum approximate value of $3,000,000.00.
17. [PAID] has excavated and converted to its use and benefit
an unknown quantity of hardened shale with a minimum
approximate value of $3.00 per ton.
18. [PAID] has also benefitted from [Appellant’s] excavation
and conversion of hardened shale from the Fritz Parcel as the
presence of the hardened shale on the Fritz Parcel increased the
purchase price received by PAID from [Appellant] for the entire
property sold in so far as [Appellant] took into account in
formulating the purchase price for the PAID real estate the
savings to it of not having to purchase and truck the necessary
minerals to the building site.
19. [Vosburg] and [his] predecessors in interest to the mineral
rights in the Fritz Parcel have in the past, prior to the purchase
of the Fritz Parcel by PAID, excavated and removed hardened
shale from the Fritz Parcel by surface excavation and mining for
resale and for their own use.
Complaint, 10/11/02, at 1-3.
The above-referenced correspondence from the United States
Department of the Interior Bureau of Mines provided in pertinent part:
Dear Mr. [Burr B.] Vosburg:
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In reply to your letter of April 30, with which you sent a
specimen for determination:
The specimen is hardened shale and besides aluminum
silicates contains a little lime carbonate and a little mica.
It probably varies somewhat in composition from place to
place and the lime carbonate especially may vary.
Yours faithfully,
John W. Finch,
Director
Correspondence, 5/18/38.
In preliminary objections to Vosburg’s 2002 complaint, Appellant
averred, inter alia, that “[Appellant], as the owner of the property, owns the
surface of the land and, as the ‘surface owner,’ retains all rights to the
minerals other than coal that are located in the portion of the ground
between the coal seam and the surface.” Preliminary Objection[s] of
[Appellant] to [Vosburg’s] Complaint, 12/2/02, at 2 (unnumbered).
In reply to Appellant’s preliminary objections, Vosburg averred:
6. Denied. [Appellant] went far beyond its legal right to use the
surface of its property when it excavated by blasting hardened
shale, a mineral, to a depth in excess of fifty (50’) feet and
processed the hardened shale by means of a portable rock
crusher brought onto the Fritz Parcel into various products
including but not limited to shot rock, various grades of
manufactured stone such as pipe bedding, 2B gravel, 2B
modified stone, and Nos. 3, 4, and 5 stone used for rock lined
drainage ditches.
***
9. [Vosburg’s] predecessors in title to the mineral rights had
entered into the Fritz Parcel by way of a Township Road which
cut through the Fritz Parcel as shown on the Luzerne County Tax
Maps, a copy of the relevant portion of which is attached hereto
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and incorporated herein as Exhibit ‘A’, and had conducted open
pit quarrying of hardened shale located upon the Fritz Parcel
before and after the conveyance of the surface of the Fritz
Parcel.
[Vosburg’s] Answer to [Appellant’s] Preliminary Objections, 1/15/03, at 2.
Vosburg subsequently filed an amended complaint, which incorporated, inter
alia, the foregoing averments regarding his predecessors’ entry onto the
Fritz Parcel for quarrying purposes using the township road referenced
above. See Amended Complaint, 1/15/03, at 4 (unnumbered). On June 11,
2003, Vosburg filed a third amended complaint, which inter alia, added
additional plaintiffs.
In its answer and new matter to Vosburg’s third amended complaint,
Appellant “denied that it excavated and converted to its use hardened shale
in any significant amount from the Fritz Parcel.” Appellant’s Answer and
New Matter [to Vosburg’s Third Amended Complaint], 7/1/03, at 6.
Appellant further “denied that the hardened shale has a minimum value of in
excess of $3.00 a ton. To the contrary, the value of hardened shale in place
is a small fraction of $3 per ton.” Id.
On June 10, 2010, Vosburg moved for partial summary judgment.
See generally Vosburg’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment, 6/10/10.
In granting summary judgment in Vosburg’s favor and against Appellant, the
trial court explained:
There are two questions presented to the Court[.] The
first centers on the interpretation of the Mineral Rights
Reservation of the 1951 Deed and its relationship, of any, to
‘rock’. Secondly, if the Court finds said ‘mineral’ rights
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applicable to ‘rock,’ is the processing of the rock and refilling and
grading the subsurface of the land with the processed rocks a
‘conversion’[?]
The Mineral Rights Reservation Clause of the 1951 Deed
reads as follows:
‘... all coal and other mineral beneath the surface of said
described land with the right to receive and remove the
same by subterranean mining[.]’ (emphasis added).
A ‘mineral’ is defined as follows:
‘a naturally occurring, inorganic, crystalline solid with
definite chemical composition and characteristic physical
properties.’ Environmental Science, a Global Concern, 9th
Ed., by William C. Cunningham, Mary Ann Cunningham
and Barbara Woodsworth Saigo.
The Courts of the Commonwealth have defined ‘mineral’ in
various cases as including stone and rock [Hendler v. Lehigh
Valley R.R. Co., 58 A. 486 (Pa. 1904)] and everything not of
the mere surface. [Highland v. Commonwealth of Pa., 161
A.2d 390 (Pa. 1960)]. Upon review of these cases and the
geological textbook definition, the Court finds rock to be a
mineral.
Taking the Downey Declaration submitted by [Appellant
and PAID], the … operation included extensive excavation (‘cut
and fill’) of 482,364 cubic yards, embankment work, regarding
and filling. The description clearly was well beyond ‘surface’
work on the parcel. Further, the Downey Declaration confirms
that the ‘rock’ was crushed and processed into a different form
and the new form of rocks was used as fill. [Appellant and
PAID’s] excavation activities even required bringing onsite an
additional 12,800 cubic yards of off-site fill in order to re-
establish the terrain at the surface. The excavation, processing
and refilling of the parcel described by [Appellant and PAID’s]
expert indicates a clear trespass of the Mineral Rights
Reservation by [Vosburg].
As to the question of conversion by [Appellant and PAID],
the term ‘conversion’ has been defined most recently in the
Paves v. Corson case [765 A.2d 1128 (Pa. Super 2000)] as:
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‘the deprivation of another's right of property in, or use or
possession of a chattel without the owner's consent and
without lawful justification.’
[Appellant and PAID] argue that the rock found on site
remains on site albeit displaced and leveled and used as fill.
However, the processing and crushing of the rocks themselves
as described by Downey is a deprivation of [Vosburg’s] use or
possession of the chattel (rock) itself. [Appellant and PAID]
have transformed the nature and species of the various rock
boulders. The rocks in their original non-processed, non-fill
state could have had various other uses for [Vosburg] (e.g.
walls, stabilizing support, etc). [Appellant and PAID] have
completely possessed the rocks transforming them into fill for
[Appellant and PAID’s] uses (industrial site development) and
thereby deprived [Vosburg] of the use or possession of the rocks
themselves.
Trial Court Opinion, 12/3/10 at 2-4.
Following the trial court’s issuance of its December 3, 2010 order, our
Supreme Court published its opinion in Butler v. Charles Powers Estate,
65 A.3d 885, 898 (Pa. 2013), ruling that in interpreting private deed
reservation clauses within the ambit of oil and gas actions, natural gas would
not be considered a mineral because it was “non-metallic [in] nature.” On
March 11, 2014, relying on Butler, Appellant moved to vacate the trial
court’s December 3, 2010 order, and for summary judgment in Appellant’s
favor.
As succinctly summarized by Vosburg:
[A]s part of the briefing in advance of the trial court's 2014
order, [Vosburg] submitted affidavits from … Albert M. Vosburg
Jr. and [Vosburg] stating the following evidence of the parties to
the deeds’ intention that the reservation encompass:
1) that the grantor herein, Albert M. Vosburg, owned a stone
quarry in the immediate neighborhood of the Fritz Parcel and
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sold stone produced from this quarry [FN3: This quarry is
referred to in the chain of title as the ‘Bown quarry,’ see deeds
attached to Albert M. Vosburg Jr. Affidavit at R. 482a-484a.];
See Exhibit A, Second Affidavit of Albert M. Vosburg, Jr. at 114-
12, R. 474a-475a. See also exhibit B thereto, deed establishing
that Albert M. Vosburg owned the Bown Quarry Property from
1913-1969.
2) that Albert M. Vosburg actually employed Anthony Fritz in
this stone quarry and had him sell stone as part of his
employment duties; See ld. at ¶¶ 14-17, R. 476a.
3) that Albert M. Vosburg offered Anthony Fritz the surface of
the Property for $5,000 and the Property with no mineral or rock
reservations for $10,000. See Id. at ¶¶ 14-16, R. 476a.
Because Mr. Fritz sold stone for Albert M. Vosburg, both parties
understood that the same stone found in the neighboring quarry
was likely under the Fritz property. Id.
4) Mr. Fritz and Albert M. Vosburg understood that the stone
had commercial value because they both sold the stone to the
Borough of Avoca. Id. at ¶¶ 12-17, R. 476a.
Vosburg’s Brief at 5-6.
The trial court heard arguments on Appellant’s motion for summary
judgment on May 27, 2014. On June 3, 2014, the trial court denied
Appellant’s motion to vacate its prior order and for summary judgment; the
trial court granted summary judgment to Vosburg. Following this Court’s
September 18, 2014 order granting review of the trial court’s order,
Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal.
Appellant’s issues on appeal concern the trial court’s determination
that the term “mineral” within the private deed reservation clause includes
rock. In reviewing Appellant’s claims, I recognize that:
In construing a deed or a contract, certain general
principles must be kept in mind. First, it is the intention of the
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parties at the time of entering in thereto that governs, and such
intention is to be gathered from a reading of the entire
contract[.] Philip Morris & Co. v. Stephano Bros., 1938, 331 Pa.
278, 200 A.2d 605; Maxwell v. Saylor, 1948, 359 Pa. 94, 58
A.2d 355. In addition, “Contracts must receive a reasonable
interpretation, according to the intention of the parties at the
time of executing them, if that intention can be ascertained from
their language. (Citing cases). Where the language of a
contract is contradictory, obscure, or ambiguous, or where its
meaning is doubtful, so that it is susceptible of two
constructions, one of which makes it fair, customary, and such
as prudent men would naturally execute, while the other makes
it inequitable, unusual, or such as reasonable men would not be
likely to enter into, the interpretation which makes a rational and
probable agreement must be preferred. [FN1: Emphasis ours]
If one construction would make it unreasonable, while another
would do justice to both parties, the latter will be adopted[.]”
Percy A. Brown & Co. v. Raub, 1947, 357 Pa. 271, 287, 54 A.2d
35, 43. It is also beyond controversy, that a written document
must be construed most strongly against the parties drafting it[.]
Cities Service Oil Co. v. Haller, 1958, 393 Pa. 26, 142 A.2d 163.
It is equally well fixed in the law that a doubtful reservation or
exception in a deed will be construed most strongly against the
grantor and in favor of the grantee[.] Bundy v. Myers, 1953,
372 Pa. 583, 94 A.2d 724; Sheffield Water Co. v. Elk T. Co.,
1909, 225 Pa. 614, 74 A. 742. This rule applies with special
force to a reservation or exception which amounts to cutting
down of the grant[.] Klaer v. Ridgway, 1878, 86 Pa. 529.
***
[] Further, the standard of interpretation to be applied is
the meaning that would be attached by a reasonably intelligent
person, acquainted with all operative usages, and knowing all
the circumstances prior to and contemporaneous with the
making of the contract[.] Restatement, Contracts § 320;
Clearfield Development Corp. v. Devonian Co., 1956, 385 Pa.
248, 122 A.2d 718.
Wilkes-Barre Tp. School District v. Corgan, 170 A.2d 97, 98-99 (Pa.
1961).
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Initially, I find that Appellant’s reliance on Butler is misplaced. Butler
addresses private deed reservations of mineral rights, specifically natural
gas, within an oil and gas agreement, which is inapposite to the scenario
before us. The pronouncements of the Supreme Court in Butler reiterated
that under Pennsylvania law, natural gas and oil are presumptively not
minerals due to their non-metallic nature, and are thereby presumptively
excluded from the term “mineral” within private deed reservation clauses.
Specifically, the Supreme Court in Butler explained:
The [trial] court noted that Pennsylvania law has
long recognized a rebuttable presumption that “if, in
connection with a conveyance of land, there is a
reservation or an exception of ‘minerals’ without any
specific mention of natural gas or oil, ... the word
‘minerals’ was not intended by the parties to include
natural gas or oil.” Highland, 161 A.2d at 398 (citing
Dunham, 101 Pa. at 44). This precept, commonly known as
the Dunham Rule, may be rebutted by a challenger
through clear and convincing evidence that the intent of
the parties, at the time of the conveyance, was to include
natural gas and/or oil. Id. at 400. The trial court finally
stated that the notion that natural gas and oil are not, for
purposes of private deed transfers, considered minerals is
“entrenched” within Pennsylvania law. See C.C. Marvel,
Annotation, Oil and gas as “minerals” within deed, lease, or
license, 37 A.L.R.2d 1440, at *3.
***
The [Highland] Court … recognize[ed], as did its
predecessors, that mankind generally divided all known matter
into three categories—animal, vegetable, and mineral—and that
petroleum and natural gas are unquestionably minerals under
that broad categorization. Id. at 398. Nonetheless, we
reaffirmed that for deed reservations we must assume, absent
evidence to the contrary, that mineral is a term of “general
language, and presumably is intended in the ordinary popular
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sense which it bears among English speaking people,” i.e.,
metallic substances and not oil and gas. Id. Thus, the
Dunham Rule, a well-established and relied upon rule of
property, continues to bind all situations in which a deed
reservation does not expressly include oil or natural gas
within the reservation. Id. at 398–99. Indeed, such a
conclusion was demanded by the long-standing jurisprudence of
this Commonwealth concerning property law: “A rule of
property long acquiesced in should not be overthrown except for
compelling reasons of public policy or the imperative demands
of justice.” Id. at 399 n. 5 (quoting, e.g., Smith v. Glen Alden
Coal Co., 347 Pa. 290, 32 A.2d 227, 234 (1943)).
***
We thus turn to the continuing viability of the Dunham
Rule, and we reaffirm that the rule continues to be the law of
Pennsylvania. [] Notwithstanding this Court's recognition that
various statutes, such as the Municipalities Planning Code,
categorize natural gas as a mineral, as [a]ppellants aptly note,
we recently reiterated that “Pennsylvania common law has
applied a rebuttable presumption in the context of a
private deed conveyance that the term ‘mineral’ does not
include oil or gas.” Huntley, 964 A.2d at 858. We see no
reason, nor has any party or court provided us with one,
to depart from this entrenched rule.
***
The Dunham Rule is clear, dating back to Gibson, that the
common, layperson understanding of what is and is not a
mineral is the only acceptable construction of a private deed.
Notwithstanding different interpretations proffered by
other jurisdictions, the rule in Pennsylvania is that natural
gas and oil simply are not minerals because they are not
of a metallic nature, as the common person would
understand minerals. Gibson, 5 Watts at 41–42; see also
Dunham, 101 Pa. at 44. The Highland decision made clear that
the party advocating for the inclusion of natural gas within the
deed reservation (here [a]ppellees) bears the burden of pleading
and proving by clear and convincing evidence that the intent of
the parties who executed the reservation was to include natural
gas. 161 A.2d at 398–99. Critically, however, such intention
may only be shown through parol evidence that indicates the
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intent of the parties at the time the deed was executed—in this
case, 1881. Id.
Of course, in 1881, the law of Pennsylvania was Gibson
and Moore, supra pp. 889–90, which clearly stated two
overarching principles: (1) anything of a non-metallic nature
would not be considered a mineral for private deed purposes;
Gibson, 5 Watts at 41–42; and (2) when interpreting private
deeds and contracts, the “question is to be determined not by
principles of science, but by common experience directed to the
discovery of intention.” Moore, 2 Whart. at 493; see also
Gibson, 5 Watts at 44. Both of these principles have been
adopted and utilized by the courts implementing the Dunham
Rule. Accordingly, to the extent the Superior Court ordered an
evidentiary hearing with expert testimony concerning Marcellus
shale natural gas, and the scientific nature thereof, such an
order violated the Dunham jurisprudence. Simply put, natural
gas is presumptively not a mineral for purposes of private
deeds.
Butler, 65 A.3d 885, 886-898 (Pa. 2013) (footnotes omitted) (emphasis
supplied). Accordingly, Butler is not applicable, and I reject Appellant’s
assertion that a reading of Butler supports vacating the trial court’s
December 3, 2010 order or reversing the trial court’s June 3, 2014 order.
Rather, I find that Butler reiterates the well-settled precept that the
interpretation of the “coal and other mineral” clause within the private deed
at issue here is “to be determined not by principles of science, but by
common experience directed to the discovery of intention.” Butler, 65 A.3d
at 898. In engaging in a “discovery of intention,” I acknowledge that
“[w]hile it is true that a reservation or exception in a deed will be construed
against the grantor, it is equally true that this reservation and exception
must be taken into account when attempting to interpret the deed as a
whole and glean the intention of the parties therefrom.” New Charter Coal
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Co. v. McKee, 191 A.2d 830, 835 (Pa. 1963) citing Wilkes-Barre
Township, 170 A.2d at 99.
In analyzing the phrase “or other mineral” vis á vis sand, our Supreme
Court determined that sand was excluded in the following scenario, and
explained:
The first question presented by this case is whether the
sand, the taking of which is the trespass sued for, is a mineral,
within the meaning of the deed between the parties. In the
broadest sense, as belonging to one of the three great
divisions of matter—animal, vegetable, and mineral—sand,
of course, is a mineral. In the more restricted scientific
sense, sand may or may not be a mineral, according to
what it is composed of. In the language of mineralogists, air
and water are minerals, while granite and similar rocks are not
minerals, but aggregations of minerals. So it is of sand. It may
be wholly of grains of silex or other mineral, or it may be of
several mixed together, and therefore in the technical sense only
grains of rock. It is perfectly clear that the parties here did not
use the word ‘mineral’ in either of the foregoing senses. The
first grantor with whom we are concerned, the Northern Coal &
Iron Company, conveyed the land to Jumper, reserving ‘all coal
and other minerals, in, under and upon said land’; Jumper
conveyed to defendant with a similar reservation; and the
subsequent deed by defendant to plaintiff conveyed the ‘surface’
of the land, ‘excepting and reserving as fully and entirely as in
the said [preceding] indenture is excepted and reserved, and
further excepting and reserving all the gravel necessary for any
fill or ballast for the railroad,’ etc. If the word ‘mineral’ had been
used in either of the senses already mentioned, it would, as a
matter of course, have included gravel, and the additional
special reservation of the gravel shows that the parties did not
consider it as included in the preceding general reservation. But
there is another, and what may be called the commercial
sense, in which the word ‘mineral’ is used, and in which,
having reference to its supposed etymology of anything
mined, it may be defined as any inorganic substance
found in nature, having sufficient value, separated from
its situs as part of the earth, to be mined, quarried, or dug
for its own sake or its own specific uses. That is the
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sense in which it is most commonly used in conveyances
and leases of land, and in which it must be presumed that
it was used by these parties in the deed in question. ‘Coal
and other minerals’—the expression used—indicate
substances which, like coal, have a value of their own,
apart from the rest of the land, sufficient to induce the
expense and labor of severance for their own sakes.
These the grantor intended, and expressed the intention,
to except from his grant and reserve to himself. While
coal was the principal and perhaps the only thing clearly
in view, yet the reservation was not meant to be limited
to that, for then the addition ‘and other minerals’ would
be superfluous and misleading. A vein of fine marble
would clearly be reserved, and so, probably, if near
enough a market to have a value, would be granite or
limestone, or other building material, potter’s or porcelain
clay, and the like. Sand might or might not be in this
category. A vein of pure white quartz sand, valuable for making
glass or other special use, would be within the reservation, while
common mixed sand, merely worth digging and removing as
material for grading, would not be. The referee has found that
the sand which is the subject of the present contention was of
this latter character, and was taken and used, not for any
intrinsic value or use of its own, but as part of earth and other
material to fill up the roadbed to the proper grade. So regarded
and used, it was not within the reservation.
Hendler v. Lehigh Valley R.R. Co., 58 A. 486, 487 (1904) (emphasis
supplied).
Appellant states that Hendler was overruled by Hall v. Delaware, L
& W, R & Co., 113 A. 669, 670-671 (Pa. 1921). See Appellant’s Brief at
20. However, a close reading of Hall reflects that the Supreme Court did
not overrule Hendler’s analysis of the term “mineral,” nor did they overrule
Hendler’s requirement of an examination of the deed’s language, the intent
of the parties as expressed therein, and the attendant circumstances to the
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deed’s execution, prior to including a disputed mineral within a reserved
mineral estate.
Indeed, in Silver v. Bush, 62 A. 832 (Pa. 1906), the Supreme Court
emphasized that “[t]he variations in the scope of the word [mineral] arise
from the connection and application in which it is used,” and the “cardinal
test of the meaning of any word in any particular case is the intent of the
parties using it.” Id. at 833-834. Specifically, the Silver Court explained:
The crucial question here, as in all contracts, is, what was
the sense in which the parties used the word? Mineral is not per
se a term of art or of trade, but of general language, and
presumably is intended in the ordinary popular sense which it
bears among English speaking people. It may in any particular
case have a different meaning, more extensive or more
restricted, but such different meaning should clearly appear as
intended by the parties. A very recent discussion of the subject
was had in Hendler v. Lehigh Valley R. R. Co., 209 Pa. 256, 58
Atl. 486, 103 Am. St. Rep. 1005, where it was shown that while
the word ‘mineral’ has a very broad meaning, already alluded to,
and also a more restricted scientific use, it has also a commercial
sense, in which it is most commonly used in conveyances and
leases of land, and in which it may be presumed to be used in
such instruments. In that sense it may include any inorganic
substance found in nature having sufficient value separated from
its situs as part of the earth to be mined, quarried, or dug for its
own sake or its own specific uses. But, though it may include all
such substances, it does not necessarily do so. Appellant cites
the case as authority for the view that whatever comes within
the terms of that description must necessarily be included under
the word ‘mineral.’ But this is an untenable inference. Th[e]
[Hendler] decision announced no new principle, nor any
departure from the line of previous decisions. As already said,
there is no discrepancy in the cases. The cardinal test of the
meaning of any word in any particular case is the intent of
the parties using it, and all that Hendler v. R. R. Co. did
was to apply that test to the word ‘mineral’ in the deeds
on which the case turned. The substance there in
question was sand, and it was shown that it might or
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might not be within the definition of mineral in the
commercial sense, according to the circumstances and the
intent of the parties.
Silver v. Bush, 62 A. at 833 (Pa. 1906) (emphasis supplied).
Citing Hendler and Silver, the United States District Court in the
Western District of Pennsylvania recently reasoned in PAPCO, Inc. v. U.S.,
814 F.Supp.2d 477 (W.D. Pa. 2011) 2:
In the analysis of whether a substance is a “mineral” within
the scope of a mineral reservation, the crucial question is:
“What was the sense in which the parties used the word?” Silver
v. Bush, 213 Pa. 195, 62 A. 832, 833 (1906); see also Highland
v. Commonwealth, 400 Pa. 261, 161 A.2d 390, 398 (1960). []
A mineral has been defined broadly as “everything not of the
mere surface, which is used for agricultural purposes; the
granite of the mountain as well as metallic ores and fossils, are
comprehended within it.” Griffin v. Fellows, 81 1/2 Pa. 114,
1873 WL 11950, *9 (Pa. 1873). It can also be defined by
evidence of the parties’ knowledge of the type of minerals
present on the land at the time of conveyance. See Gibson,
1836 WL 2957 at *5, 7 (Court stated “it appears ... that both
parties ... came to the knowledge of the fact that the mineral
called chrome ... was found on this tract,” and combined with
the language of the deed, the Court found that chromate was
included within the mineral reservation).
A mineral may also be defined in the commercial sense, in
which a mineral is “any inorganic substance found in nature,
having sufficient value, separated from its situs as part of the
earth, to be mined, quarried, or dug for its own sake or its own
specific use.” Hendler v. Lehigh Valley R.R. Co., 209 Pa. 256, 58
____________________________________________
2
“While ‘federal court decisions do not control the determinations of the
Superior Court,’ whenever possible, Pennsylvania courts ‘follow the Third
Circuit [courts] so that litigants do not improperly ‘walk across the street’ to
achieve a different result in federal court than would be obtained in state
court.” Parr v. Ford Motor Co., 109 A.3d 682, 693 n.8 (Pa. Super. 2014)
(en banc) (internal citations omitted).
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A. 486, 487 (1904) (overruled on other grounds by Hall v.
Delaware, Lackawanna & W. R.R. Co., 270 Pa. 468, 113 A. 669
(1921)). When the parties intend to define minerals by its
commercial sense, substances included within this definition
have their own value that is apart from the rest of the land.
Hendler, 58 A. at 487.
The [Hendler] court went on to further state that such
substances as granite, limestone, clay, and other building
material would also be within a mineral reservation if they had a
commercial value. Id. Therefore, since the sand did not have
any commercial value, the court ruled that the parties did not
intend to include the sand within the mineral reservation. Id.
As in Hendler, the language in the Jamieson Deed indicates
the parties’ intention to include as “minerals” substances that
have their own value apart from the land. Hendler, 58 A. at
487. The Jamieson Deed reserved “all the oil, natural gas, glass
sand and minerals of every kind and description whatsoever.”
Jamieson Deed at 439. The specific reservation of oil, natural
gas, and glass sand indicates that the parties intended that
substances that have commercial value are within the scope of
the reservation. Hendler, 58 A. at 487. Thus, the critical
question is whether “sandstone” has commercial value and is
included within the mineral reservation of the Deed.
Unlike the sand in Hendler, sandstone located in the
Allegheny National Forest has its own commercial value apart
from the land. Sandstone was regarded as a commercially
valuable mineral at the time of the conveyance of the Jamieson
Deed. Pennsylvania's Mineral Heritage: The Commonwealth at
the Economic Crossroads of Her Industrial Development (1944),
Attachment 10 to Ex. A to Pl.'s Br. Supp. (noting longstanding
stone industry in Pennsylvania, including “1.4 million tons of
sandstone ... produced ... for commercial purposes” in 1930, the
same year the Jamieson Deed was executed, at 50–51, and
commercial use of sandstone for highway construction, at 156,
193). The parties of the Jamieson Deed were likely aware of the
commercial value of sandstone, and that sandstone was present
on the Jamieson Tract. As such, we find that since the parties to
the Jamieson Deed intended to include commercially valuable
minerals within the mineral reservation, and because sandstone
was regarded as a commercially valuable mineral at the time of
the Jamieson Deed conveyance, sandstone is within the scope of
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the mineral reservation of the Jamieson Deed. Therefore, the
sandstone at issue in this case belongs to PAPCO.
PAPCO, Inc. v. U.S., 814 F.Supp.2d at 477.
Here, applying the cardinal test emphasized in Silver to the instant
deed, and mindful of the sound rationale espoused in the Hendler and
Papco decisions, I find that the challenged rock was reserved within
Vosburg’s mineral estate, and I would affirm the trial court’s interpretation
of the term “mineral” within the deed’s reservation clause as inclusive of
rock. Hendler, 58 A. at 487 (material would “clearly be reserved” where it
had its own value as “building material,” and “sufficient value separated
from its situs as part of the earth to be mined, quarried or dug for its own
sake or its own specific uses,” and not just as a common material which was
moved superficially to fill and regrade the land); see also Papco, 814
F.Supp.2d at 495 (material was a reserve mineral where the material was “a
commercially valuable mineral at the time,” where parties to the deed “were
likely aware of the commercial value of” the material, that “[t]he challenged
material” was present on the [land,]” and where the “parties to the [deed]
intended to include commercially valuable minerals within the mineral
reservation”). The phrase “coal and other mineral” within the deed’s
reservation clause signifies the intent to reserve commercially valuable
assets. Deed, May 11, 1951, at 1 (emphasis supplied). There was
documented knowledge well before the execution of the 1951 deed that rock
was present on the property’s surface and subterraneously. See
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Correspondence, United States Department of the Interior Bureau of Mines,
5/18/38.
In Hendler, the fact finding referee determined that the disputed sand
was not a reserved mineral because it was “merely worth digging and
removing as material for grading” which was “part of the earth … to fill up
the roadbed to the proper grade” without “any intrinsic value or use of its
own.” Hendler, 58 A at 487. By contrast in this case, and as recognized by
the trial court, the rock has value and use of its own. As pled by Vosburg,
the rock was the subject of open pit quarrying by Vosburg’s predecessors.
See Complaint, 10/11/02 at 3; Amended Complaint, 1/15/03, at 3-4. While
Appellant denied that the rock at issue was hardened shale or even as
valuable as pled by Vosburg, Appellant nonetheless conceded, in the
alternative, that there was some value to the rock. See Appellant’s Answer
and New Matter [to Vosburg’s Third Amended Complaint], 7/1/03, at 6
(Appellant “denied that the hardened shale has a minimum value of in
excess of $3.00 a ton. To the contrary, the value of hardened shale in place
is a small fraction of $3 per ton.”). Moreover, the rock had value as building
material, and was “extensive[ly] excavat[ed]” by Appellant for such purpose
down to approximately 50 feet below the ground. See Trial Court Opinion,
12/3/10, at 3-4; see also Hendler, supra (categorizing a material as a
mineral in the commercial sense, if it had “value” as a “building material …
and the like”). I agree with the trial court that the “rocks in their original
non-processed, non-fill state could have had various other uses for
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[Vosburg] (e.g. walls, stabilizing support, etc).” Trial Court Opinion,
12/3/10, at 4. Therefore, I would affirm the trial court’s determination that
the challenged rock was reserved within Vosburg’s mineral estate.
In sum, I would affirm the trial court’s June 3, 2014 order which
denied summary relief to Appellant and which declined to vacate the
December 3, 2010 order granting summary judgment to Vosburg.
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