DocketNumber: Appeal, 337
Judges: Steen, Stearns, Jones, Bell, Chidsey, Musmanno, Arnold
Filed Date: 1/4/1955
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
Opinion by
The questions of law raised on this appeal are both procedural and substantive. Logically, we shall treat first with the matter of procedure. However, a recital of material facts is essential to an understanding of all of the problems presented.
Joseph M. Boron, the plaintiff, became the lessee of certain coal lands of the defendants under written lease executed on January 7, 1942, for a term of ten years. The lease conferred on the lessee the right to mine and remove the coal at either of two fixed royalty prices (depending upon whether the coal was mined by the stripping method or by the drift method) with a prescribed annual minimum royalty payable in monthly installments. The lease also conferred on the lessee “the right and privilege ... to renew the same for a further term of ten (10) years at the expiration of the ten year term herein provided for. Providing [the lessee] . . '. shall give the lessors, or their agent, Alta L. Smith, six (6) months’ written notice prior. to the expiration of the term herein provided for of his desire and' intention to renew this lease.”
The term of the lease having expired without written notice being given the lessors of the lessee’s desire and intention to renew the lease for anothr ten-year term, the lessors repossessed themselves of the coal property and made a lease thereof to other persons. More than a year after the expiration date of the
The defendants filed preliminary objections to the complaint, principally on the grounds that the plaintiff did not plead a written notice for the alleged renewal of the lease of January 7, 1942, or authority from the lessors to anyone to renew the lease by parol and that the check for $50 which the defendants’ agent received from the plaintiff in January, 1952, was actually in payment of the minimum royalty due for December, 1951, the last month of the expired lease, as shown by the plaintiff’s own letter of transmittal. The court overruled the preliminary objections with leave to the defendants to answer over. In their answer to the merits, the defendants denied, inter alia, that the
The plaintiff moved for judgment on the pleadings. After argument on the motion, the learned judge of the court below, in a thorough and well-reasoned opinion, entered judgment for the defendants. This appeal by the plaintiff followed.
The appellant contends that the court lacked power to enter judgment for the defendants on the plaintiff’s motion for judgment in his favor on the pleadings. The contention is without merit. Under Eule 1034 of the Pennsylvania Eules of Civil Procedure, after the pleadings are closed, any party may move for judgment on the pleadings. And, if there are no unresolved issues of material fact, the court may proceed to the entry of a final judgment on the basis of the pleadings. Nolis it important to the ultimate decision which party moved for judgment. Subsection (b) of Eule 1034 provides that “The court shall enter such- judgment or order as shall be proper ón the pleadings”? This has beén interpreted to mean that “The judgment may be entered for or against any party without regard to whether he was the moving party”: 2 Anderson, Pennsylvania Civil Practice, p. 549. We approve that conclusion. It would be irrational to deny judgment on the pleadings' to the party' rightly- entitled thereto-simply because hé happened not to be the party who made the motion -'-for judgment;- -'-Moreover,. ;the pres
Coming to the substantive questions, the appellant argues that (1) the lessors waived written notice of the lessee’s desire and intention to renew the lease and (2) the lease constituted a sale of the coal in place for all of which the plaintiff fully paid in royalties during the term and was, therefore, entitled to remove the i'emaining unmined coal after the expiration of the lease. Neither of these contentions is tenable. Not only did the complaint not aver any authority in Lewis Smith to consent in behalf of all ten lessors to a waiver of the written notice of the lessee’s desire and intention to renew, which the lease required, but there is no averment that Lewis Smith assumed to do so. The lease provided that the written notice to renew should be served on Alta Smith, the specifically named agent of the lessors, and the complaint does not aver any change whatsoever in that provision. The |50 check in payment of the monthly minimum royalty which the plaintiff mailed to Alta Smith on January 19, 1952, was for the month of December, 1951, as the plaintiff’s letter of transmittal expressly stated and was, therefore, for the last month of the expired lease and not for the first month of a renewal term.
Even if the plaintiff paid royalties (including the monthly mínimums) during the term in an amount in excess of the total royalties due or to become due for all of the mineable coal in the leased propei*ty, still it
The cases cited by the appellant are readily distinguishable. In Robinson v. Pierce, 278 Pa. 372, 123 A. 324, the agreement fixed no time limit for the mining and removal of the coal, while in Smith v. Glen Alden Coal Company, 347 Pa. 290, 32 A. 2d 227, the demise extended until all the mineable and merchantable coal was removed. The case of Penn-Ohio Gas Company v. Frank’s Heirs, 322 Pa. 233, 185 A. 280, involved a forfeiture of an oil and gas lease during its term because of the lessee’s failure to pay royalties promptly. There was no question of forfeiture in the instant case —the lessee enjoyed the full term provided by the lease.
The decree is affirmed at the appellant’s costs.