Auxier Coal Co. v. Big Sandy & Millers Creek Coal Co.

238 S.W. 189, 194 Ky. 14, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 110
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 24, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 238 S.W. 189 (Auxier Coal Co. v. Big Sandy & Millers Creek Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Auxier Coal Co. v. Big Sandy & Millers Creek Coal Co., 238 S.W. 189, 194 Ky. 14, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 110 (Ky. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Moorman

Affirming.

On December 18, 1918, appellants, Anxier Coal Company and Anxier Coal and Mining Company, filed this suit in the Floyd circnit court against appellees, the Big Sandy and Millers Creek Coal Company and L. Blenkinsoff, trustee, wherein they sought an injunction restraining and enjoining appellees from selling or disposing -of the mining equipment and materials on a tract of land in Floyd county. Their 'alleged cause of action is based on a lease of June 15, 1911, from J. C. B. Anxier, and the Anxier 'Coal Company to the Mary Luck Coal Company, and also on a contract of sale and lease of June [16]*1621, 1917, between the Auxier Coal and Mining Company and the appellee Blenkinsoff.

Appellees filed answer admitting the sale of a part of the equipment, but justifying it on the ground that all the mineable coal had been taken from the leased property. In a separate paragraph they asserted a counterclaim arising out of the misrepresentation and fraud of appellants, in inducing them to sign the lease of June 21, 1917, by reason of which they alleged damages in the sum of $4,585.00.

Objections to the interposed defense and to the counterclaim were overruled, and thereafter appellants with J. C. B. Auxier filed additional and amended pleadings asking judgments for various sums, representing minimum royalties declared to be due under the leases in controversy. They also sought judgment for $2,050.00, which sum they averred was realized by. appellees from the sale of mining equipment in violation of the contracts of lease. The issues were completed and on the final hearing the temporary injunction was dissolved, the petition of appellants dismissed, and the costs adjudged against them, although they were adjudged to be entitled to the sum of $43.77, balance of royalty due, which sum had theretofore been paid into court.

On June 15, 1911, J. C. B. Auxier and the Auxier Coal Company, joint owners of the land involved in this controversy, approximating 500 acres, leased the same to the Mary Luck Coal -Company fo,r a term of twenty-five years. The lease provided for the payment of tonnage royalties to the lessors of nine cents per ton on all coal mined, with minimum royalties of $750.00 for the second year, $1,000.00 for the third year, $1,500.00 for the fourth year and $2,500.00 for each year thereafter.

After operating or attempting to operate for two or three years the Mary Luck Coal Company.became financially involved and went into the hands of a receiver. The lease was sold and purchased by S. R. Auxier, who assigned his bid to his father, J. C. B. Auxier, both of whom were, officers of the Auxier Coal Company. The Auxier Coal and Mining Company was then organized and became the owner of the lease and the mining equipment on the property, and on June 21, 1917, the latter company sold the lease and leasehold estate to appellee, ■ Blenkinsoff, as trustee. This was an outright sale of the equipment and the original lease for $10,000.00, which [17]*17sum has been paid. The purchaser later transferred his rights thereunder to the appellee, Big Sandy and Millers Creek Coal Company. In many respects the two leases are identical but there are distinguishable features, which form the basis for some of the controversies arising in this action.

The rulings complained of here are: (1) The refusal to strike from the answer and counterclaim the demand of appellees for damages on account of the alleged fraudulent representations made by appellants in inducing appellees to sign the lease; and also the defense that the mineable coal in the land was exhausted. (2) The dis-allowance of the minimum royalty of $2,500.00 for each of the years 1917 and 1918 under the lease of June 15, 1911; the disallowance of $2,000.00 as minimum royalty under the lease of June 21, 1917, $500.00 of which was claimed for the year 1917 and $1,500.00 for the year 1918; and the dismissal of appellants’ claim for $2,050.00, which amount was admittedly realized by appellees from the sale of part of the mining equipments. (3) The refusal to adjudge to appellants ownership of the equipment on the premises at the time appellees ceased operating, or in any event .to require a valuation of the equipment and to accord to appellants the option as provided in the lease of June 15, 1911, of purchasing the same at the valuation made. (4) Adjudging that the mineable coal in the land was exhausted.

The determination of the first three grounds is largely if not wholly dependent upon the decision reached with respect to the last one. If the mineable coal in the land was exhausted at the time this action was instituted and if the existence of that fact terminated the lease, it would inevitably follow that claims for royalties thereafter arising are without merit; and likewise the defense based on that ground was properly interposed, since it assailed the validity and existence of the contract on which the action was founded.

The evidence on .the issue as to whether the mineable coal in the land was exhausted is extensive and contradictory but on the" whole it more than sustains the adjudged fact. Furthermore, there is evidence in the record distinctly indicating that the depleted condition of the land existed when the lease of June 21, 1917, was made, and that ordinary observation of previous mining operations thereon would have conveyed information as to the impracticability of successfully conducting the operation [18]*18undertaken by appellees; also in these circumstances it would have been apparent that profitable mining was not feasible, because there was not sufficient mineable coal for that purpose. Substantial evidence supports the view that the coal theretofore mined was really taken from a pocket which in the earlier operations had been exhausted. But whatever opinion appellants may have entertained at that time, as to these disputed questions, is not of material import since the court below determined and adjudged that the mineable coal was exhausted and on that issue the evidence fully justifies the judgment.

The exhaustion of the mineable coal in the land must, in our view of the law, be held to have the effect of terminating the contract. Any other construction would be unjust and would violate the proclaimed purpose of the lease. It was agreed in the lease of June 15,1911, that the lessee should have the exclusive right and privilege of mining all seams of coal in or under the leased premises, and, further, that the lease was made for the sole and “only purpose of mining and shipping coal and manufacturing and conducting a general merchandise business in connection therewith.” While the term was for twenty-five years and the lessee agreed to pay stipulated minimum, royalties during the term, the intent and purpose of the lease must be read into its provisions, and it having become impossible through no fault of appellees to effectuate that purpose, it necessarily results that the lease is terminated. (Vol. 6, R. C. L., page 1005.) Hence, appellants’ claims to minimum royalties, arising after the minerals were exhausted, are impossible of sustention.

The claim of $2,500.00 for each of the years of 1917 and 1918 is based on the lease of June 15,1911, which provided for varying minimum royalties for the first five years and thereafter for a minimum of $2,500.00 annually. Appellees acquired their lease on June 21, 1917, and this suit was instituted December 28, 1918. It must be considered, however, that the lessors in the lease of June 15, 1911, are in fact, if not in name, the lessors of June 21, 1917.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
238 S.W. 189, 194 Ky. 14, 1922 Ky. LEXIS 110, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/auxier-coal-co-v-big-sandy-millers-creek-coal-co-kyctapp-1922.