| New Jersey. Court of Chancery - Law reports, digests, etc - 1887 - 812 pages
...lands v. Fletcher, LR (3 H. of L.) 330, as correct expositions of the law. The first declares that it is the natural right of each of the owners of two...subject to any servitude to the other, to work his own in the manner most convenient and beneficial to himself, although the natural consequence may be that... | |
| Great Britain. Court of Common Pleas, James Manning, Thomas Colpitts Granger, John Scott - Law reports, digests, etc - 1846 - 1124 pages
...distinguishable, — it would seem to be the natural right of each of the owners of two adjoining coalmines, — neither being subject to any servitude to the other, — to work his own in the manner most convenient and beneficial to himself, although the natural consequence may be, that... | |
| Robert Porrett COLLIER (Baron Monkswell.) - Mining law - 1849 - 238 pages
...said by the Court, " It would seem to be the natural right of each of the owners of two adjoining coal mines, neither being subject to any servitude to the other, to work his own in the manner most convenient and beneficial to himself, although the E 2 natural consequence may be... | |
| Francis Towers Streeten, Henry John Hodgson - Law reports, digests, etc - 1852 - 818 pages
...owners of two adjoining coal mines, neither being subject to any servitude to the other, has a right to work his own mine in the manner most convenient and beneficial to himself, although the natural consequences may be that some prejojudice will accrue to the owner of the adjoining... | |
| Conway Robinson - Actions and defenses - 1855 - 884 pages
...may maintain an action against the owner of the minerals for the damage sustained by the subsidence." It is the natural right of each of the owners of two adjacent coal mines — neither being subject to any servitude to the other — to work his own in the manner... | |
| William Bainbridge - Mining law - 1856 - 774 pages
...as a new question, it would seem to be the natural right of each of the owners of two adjoining coal mines, neither being subject to any servitude to the other, to work his own in the manner most convenient and beneficial to himself, although the natural consequence might be... | |
| Great Britain. Courts - Law reports, digests, etc - 1865 - 664 pages
...that it is the right of each of the owners of adjoining mines, — where neither mine is suh. ject to any servitude to the other, — to work his own mine in the manner which he decms most convenient and beneficial to himself, although the natural consequence may be thnt... | |
| Periodicals - 1865 - 420 pages
...is the right of each of the owners of adjoining mines where neither mine is subject to any (express) servitude to the other, to work his own mine in the manner which he deems most convenient and beneficial to himself, although the natural consequence will accrue... | |
| Henry Edward Wallace - Law reports, digests, etc - 1875 - 676 pages
...Eng. CL, 564, that it would seem to bj3 the natural right of each of the owners of two adjoining coal mines — neither being subject to any servitude to the other — to work his own in the manner most convenient and beneficial to himself, although the natural consequence may be that... | |
| John Coke Fowler - Coal mines and mining - 1872 - 512 pages
...decided case, it would seem to be the natural right of each of the owners of two adjoining collieries, neither being subject to any servitude to the other, to work his own in the manner most convenient and beneficial to himself, although the natural consequence may be that... | |
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