Bond v. Jackson County Coal Co.

106 F. Supp. 247, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3979
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedAugust 7, 1952
DocketNo. 843
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 F. Supp. 247 (Bond v. Jackson County Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bond v. Jackson County Coal Co., 106 F. Supp. 247, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3979 (E.D. Ky. 1952).

Opinion

FORD, Chief Judge.

The plaintiffs seek to recover amounts alleged to be due them from defendant on account of minimum royalties under a coal mining lease of October 3, 1938. Title to the lands embraced in the lease and all rights of the lessors thereunder were acquired by the plaintiffs on April 11, 1940.

The lease granted to the defendant thé sole and exclusive right of mining and removing “all of the mineable and merchantable coal in, upon and under” a large. [249]*249body of land, specifically described therein, lying on the waters tributary to Rock-castle River in Jackson County, Kentucky.

Provisions of the lease which appear pertinent in considering the questions presented are the following:

“All of the rights and privileges, and each and all of the covenants, agreements and conditions herein set oüt, shall continue and extend for a term of sufficient years as may be necessary for the mining and removal of all of the mineable and merchantable coal from said leasehold; and the second party hereby covenants, promises and agrees to pay to first party, its successors or assigns, fifteen cents (15^) per ton for each and every ton of 2000 lbs. ■of coal, including every grade, mined and removed from mine tipples or storage on said leasehold, and for this purpose the said sum.of 15 cents per ton shall be paid monthly on or about the 25th day of each calendar month for all coal so mined and removed from ■said coal tipples or storage on said premises in the calendar month next preceding, * * *.
“Second party further covenants and agrees to pay each year after one year from the date of the lease, during its use and occupancy of the leasehold, a minimum amount of not less than 15 cents per ton on 100,000 tons per year, beginning one year from the date of this lease, whether the actual tonnage produced in said year shall, at said 15 ■cents per ton, amount to said sum or not. But it is stipulated and agreed, that in the event the coal produced and removed from said tipples and storage during any year, at 15 cents per ton, does not amount to as much as the minimum payment for said year, .and that the amount of coal produced ■during the subsequent years at 15 cents per ton, amounts to more than the minimum payment, such excess of minimum payments over the coal actually produced shall be applied as a credit against excess coal produced above the minimum for such years as the coal pro■duced at 15 cents per ton shall amount to more than the minimum payment required' hereunder; and provided further that in any period when the second party shall, through casualty, riots, strikes, market conditions, or acts of ■God, be1 prevented from producing coal, the payment of the minimum amount hereinabove provided shall be suspended during such time as second party is so prevented from producing,, mining or removing coal from said leasehold; and there shall be no charge of any sort made above the actual 15 cents per ton of coal actually produced, mined and removed from said tipple and storage during such period as such conditions exist or continue. * * *
“And it is hereby stipulated and agreed that second party may not abandon or terminate said lease so long as merchantable and mineable coal may be produced therefrom at a profit; and for these purposes second party covenants and agrees to prosecute and pursue its mining operations upon said leasehold in such a way as to produce therefrom the greatest amount of merchantable and mineable coal, * *

The several grounds upon which the defendant seeks to avoid payment of the balance alleged to be due on., account of annual minimum royalties may be briefly summarized as- follows:

Defendant claims that N. U. Bond, Sr., agent for the lessor, went upon' the land with defendant’s president, M. K. Marlowe, and, after showing him several outcroppings and seams of coal which were of mineable quality and thickness, represented to him “that prospecting, already done, had disclosed that there was mineable and merchantable coal under the entire boundary” of 12,728 acres; that relying upon said representations, and by reason thereof, the defendant was induced to execute the contract but that mining operations on the leased premises disclosed “that there was not over 320 acres of such coal on the property”; that the provision set out in the contract for annual payment of a minimum royalty was based upon the mutual understanding of all parties, thereto, both plaintiffs and defendant, that there was sufficient [250]*250coal upon the leased property to make the mining of the minimum tonnage possible by skillful and customary methods; that the sole consideration moving from the plaintiffs to defendant for this provision of .the lease was the presence on the property of that amount of mineable and merchantable coal; that “by reason of the absence of sufficient mineable and merchantable coal on the leased premises it was impossible, by skillful and customary methods, to obtain enough tonnage from said lease to comply with its terms as to minimum tonnage, or to obtain from said lease any larger tonnage per year than was actually mined and paid for”; and that “by reason of the aforesaid facts there was a total failure of consideration for defendant executing the clause in said lease calling for a minimum royalty * * *.”

Defendant further claims that by their authorized agent N. U. Bond, Sr., the plaintiffs expressly waived and relinquished all claim to the minimum royalties which accrued in the year 1943 and thereafter, and, by their conduct in failing to demand payment of any of the accrued balances due for annual minimum royalties until June 10, 1949, the plaintiffs were guilty of such lach-es that they are equitably estopped and precluded from now recovering the claims herein asserted.

The Court, without the intervention of a jury, heard the testimony introduced by the parties bearing upon the factual issues thus presented. The burden of proof concededly rested upon defendant. In compliance with Rule 52 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, as amended, 28 U.S.C.A., the following findings of fact and conclusions of law express the views of the Court.

The defendant’s claims that N. U. Bond, Sr., induced the execution of the lease by making representations to its president, M. K. Marlowe, to the effect that the entire boundary of land covered by the lease was underlaid with mineable and merchantable coal and that the consideration for the minimum royalty was an understanding on the part of both parties that the coal underlying the entire boundary was sufficient to enable the defendant to mine and produce at least 100,000 tons of coal per year, are not sustained by the preponderance of the evidence. The latter claim is in conflict with the words of the contract. The testimony of M. K. Marlowe, in reference to the negotiations with N. U. Bond, Sr., and as to the alleged representations is positively denied by Mr. Bond. Substantial support of his denial is found in the testimony of Ed Scrivner, with whom Mr. Marlowe appears to have carried on most of the negotiations in reference to the lease. It appears from the testimony that Mr. Marlowe had been a mine operator in the coal fields of Eastern Kentucky for more than forty years and for several years before the execution of the lease he had been engaged in mining upon lands adjacent to the lands covered by the lease.

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106 F. Supp. 247, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bond-v-jackson-county-coal-co-kyed-1952.