Blackberry, Ky. W. v. C. C. Co. v. K'ntl'd C. C.

8 S.W.2d 425, 225 Ky. 346, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 783
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedJune 27, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 8 S.W.2d 425 (Blackberry, Ky. W. v. C. C. Co. v. K'ntl'd C. C.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blackberry, Ky. W. v. C. C. Co. v. K'ntl'd C. C., 8 S.W.2d 425, 225 Ky. 346, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 783 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

This is the second appeal of this case, the first opinion appearing in 212 Ky. at p. 64, 278 S.W. 173. Chloe A. Hatfield and eleven others were the joint owners of a *Page 347 boundary of land containing about 1,400 acres. They leased it and the coal underlying it unto appellant, Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Company. The latter company assigned its lease or subleased it unto appellee Alma Thacker Fuel Company. The latter company mined coal from the leased premises. Appellee Kentland Coal Coke Company instituted this action against the other parties named, claiming to own a tract of land and the coal underlying it, including 80 acres, which, it was alleged, the defendants also claimed to own. It sought to have its title to the 80 acres quieted of the claims of the defendants and to recover the damages for the coal removed therefrom by Alma Thacker Fuel Company. The owners of the 1,400-acre boundary of land and their lessee, Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Company, and its sublessee, Alma Thacker Fuel Company, filed separate answers, all of which, however, interposed the same defense to the cause of action set out in the petition. The owners of the land denied ownership of the 80 acres in the plaintiff, and by way of counterclaim set up ownership in themselves and sought to have their title quieted. The lessee of the owners and its sublessee likewise denied ownership in the plaintiff, set up ownership in their lessor, and claimed the right to mine the coal in question under the lease from defendants Chloe A. Hatfield and others. The parties agreed to prepare and try the action, first on the question of ownership of the 80 acres of land in dispute; it being agreed that, if plaintiff Kentland Coal Coke Company succeeded in having it adjudged that it owned the 80 acres, the parties thereafter might prepare the action and have it tried on the question how much coal had been taken therefrom and how much plaintiff had been damaged thereby. It was further understood, of course, that, if the plaintiff failed to establish its ownership of the 80 acres involved, the action would be terminated and the petition dismissed. On the trial of the question of ownership, the chancellor adjudged that the 80 acres in dispute was the property of plaintiff Kentland Coal Coke Company. The defendants prosecuted an appeal to this court, and the judgment of the chancellor was affirmed. See Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Co. v. Kentland Coal Coke Co., supra.

The detailed statement of the steps leading to the judgment above and its affirmance by this court is made necessary by the steps taken upon the filing of this *Page 348 court's mandate in the court below. When that was done, the owners of the land, Chloe A. Hatfield and others, filed an amended answer and counterclaim by which they sought to be relieved of liability to appellee Kentland Coal Coke Company for the coal taken from the 80 acres, upon the theory that the lease which they gave to Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Company did not embrace the 80 acres of land in dispute, and consequently that they were not responsible for the trespass committed by their lessee and its sublessee who trespassed by going outside of the boundary of the lease which they gave. Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal and Coke Company filed a separate amended answer and counterclaim, by which it sought to be relieved of liability for the coal taken from the 80 acres in dispute for the same reason. It pleaded that the lease from Chloe A. Hatfield and others to it and the instrument by which it subleased the same tract of land to the Alma Thacker Fuel Company did not embrace the 80 acres of land in dispute, and for that reason it was not responsible if its sublessee, Alma Thacker Fuel Company, went beyond the boundary of the lease and trespassed upon the lands of the Kentland Coal Coke Company.

In so far at least as this defense was sought to be interposed by appellant, Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Company, the chancellor disagreed with it and adjudged that that company was liable for the trespass; the damage assessed against it being fixed at $12,232.5. That company prosecutes this appeal from that judgment.

Appellant urges that the chancellor erred in not holding and adjudging that the lease from Chloe A. Hatfield and others to it and its lease to Alma Thacker Fuel Company did not embrace the 80 acres of land in dispute, and consequently that it was not liable for the coal taken and removed therefrom by Alma Thacker Fuel Company. But little need be said to this contention. Appellants had their day in court on this question upon the first submission hereof to the chancellor for judgment. When appellee Kentland Coal Coke Company, by its petition herein, charged that the owners of the land, Chloe A. Hatfield and others, and their lessee, Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Company, and its sublessee, Alma Thacker Fuel Company, were responsible in damages to it for entering upon and taking and *Page 349 removing coal from the 80 acres of land in question, it was incumbent upon the defendants, before submitting the question of liability for taking the coal to the chancellor for judgment, to interpose all of their defenses. When that question was submitted they had interposed no defense save a denial that Kentland Coal Coke Company owned the 80 acres of land, and an affirmative plea that Chloe A. Hatfield and others did own it and had leased it to Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Company, and it in turn had leased it to Alma Thacker Fuel Company. Hence, they claimed to own the disputed 80 acres of land and to possess the right to take the coal therefrom; and the question whether defendants were liable to plaintiff because of the coal taken was submitted to and tried by the court under the issues so made and adjudged adversely to appellant thereunder.

After having had its day in court on this question its efforts by the amended answer and counterclaim to have the same issue tried anew and to interpose another defense cannot be entertained. The only questions reserved and not adjudicated upon the first submission hereof were how much coal had been taken and how much appellee Kentland Coal Coke Company had been damaged thereby; and those questions remained to be determined only in the event Kentland Coal Coke Company succeeded in having it adjudged that it owned the 80 acres of land in dispute. The first judgment herein, which was affirmed by this court, is conclusive of the issue sought to be raised by appellant, Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Company, by the amended answer and counterclaim which it filed herein when the mandate of this court affirming the original judgment was filed in the court below.

This appeal was prosecuted by Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Company. The owners of the land, Chloe A. Hatfield and others, were made parties appellee. A brief in their behalf has been filed herein, by which, for the same reason urged by appellant, they seek to have it held that they are not responsible to the Kentland Coal Coke Company for the coal taken from the 80 acres of land by the Alma Thacker Fuel Company. They also, after the filing of the mandate in the trial court, filed an amended answer and counterclaim pleading that the lease which they gave Blackberry, Kentucky West Virginia Coal Coke Company *Page 350 did not embrace the 80 acres of land in dispute; and hence that they are not liable even though a sublessee of their lessee took coal from the 80 acres.

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Bluebook (online)
8 S.W.2d 425, 225 Ky. 346, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 783, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blackberry-ky-w-v-c-c-co-v-kntld-c-c-kyctapphigh-1928.