Browning v. Mountain States Coal Corp.

338 S.W.2d 220, 1960 Ky. LEXIS 377
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 10, 1960
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 338 S.W.2d 220 (Browning v. Mountain States Coal Corp.) 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
Browning v. Mountain States Coal Corp., 338 S.W.2d 220, 1960 Ky. LEXIS 377 (Ky. Ct. App. 1960).

Opinion

MOREMEN, Judge.

Appellants sought to recover from ap-pellee annual minimum royalties under two coal mining leases of land in Floyd County. They have appealed from a judgment denying recovery.

On November 1, 1947, appellants, who are heirs at law of W. S. Harkins, Sr., executed to Pike Elkhorn Coal Company a lease embracing six tracts of land. For the privilege of mining, lessee agreed to pay a royalty of 15 cents per ton for all coal mined. In addition it agreed to pay a mimimum royalty during the year 1949 of $2,000. For following years, the amount was gradually increased.

On May 1, 1948, the appellants and Mrs. John C. C. Mayo Company executed a similar lease to the same lessee covering three tracts of land.

In July 1949, the Pike Elkhorn Coal Company was, by court action, placed tinder receivership and on December 27, 1949, all the property of that company was sold at public auction. The successful purchaser assigned his bid to appellee, Mountain States Coal Corporation. The receiver conveyed the property, which included these leases, to appellee.

In 1950, the successor corporation mined a small'amount of coal, and in 1955, 1956, and 1957, a further attempt to merchandise this coal was made. In all about 49,250 tons of coal were taken from one tract. The other tract was not mined at all, but the record indicates that it was of the same quality as that which was mined. Appellee paid the royalty of 15 cents per ton for the coal mined, but no minimum royalties were paid under the terms of the contract.

. In August 1956, appellants filed suit to recover minimum royalties which they alleged were due for the years 1950 through 1954.

Appellee, by answer as amended, defended on two grounds: (1) It was excused from payment of the minimum royalties because the coal was not mineable nor merchantable; and (2) after appellee company had purchased the leases under the general receivership sale, appellants had terminated each of the coal leases and had permitted appellee to mine the coal without a lease under an agreement that the only payment would be the sum of 15 cents per ton. These defenses are somewhat inconsistent; however each involves separate provisions of the original leases.

In connection with the first defense these clauses are pertinent:

“To promptly begin work under this lease, and to push developments and operations thereunder as rapidly as the conditions of the market, railroad and labor conditions will reasonably permit.”

and

“By the term ‘mineable and merchantable’ coal as used in this lease is meant coal, which when reached in the prosecution of Lessee’s operation hereunder could be mined at a reasonable profit by the use of machinery and methods which at the time are modern and efficient. But this clause is not intended to exempt, nor shall it be construed as exempting Lessee from mining coal which by reason of the local conditions, or thickness of seam or character of coal, temporary labor costs or market conditions, cannot be mined at a reasonable profit, when the general condition of the seam of coal outside or beyond this local situation shall be normal * * *

Appellee insists that under the yardstick contained in the above excerpts there was no mineable and merchantable coal under-this land at the time it purchased the [222]*222leases, because it was impossible to mine and sell the coal at a profit. (There is no contention that appellee failed to use efficient methods of mining.) In other words, it contends that since all parties knew the coal was of inferior quality at the time of the lease and its marketability was extremely uncertain, it was the intention of the parties to terminate the leases if reasonable effort to sell the coal at a profit was, in fact, unsuccessful.

Appellants contend that under the law the operator assumes the risk of the market when he accepts a lease, and rely on Lawrence E. Tierney Land Company v. Kingston-Pocahontas Coal Company, 241 Ky. 101, 43 S.W.2d 517, 519, to support this position. The clause which was construed in that case reads:

“The lessee * * * covenants and agrees that it will work and mine the Freeburn seams of merchantable coal that can be mined at a reasonable profit * *

The court held that the lessee was obligated to pay minimum royalties so long as the seams leased existed in quantity and quality as known at the date of the lease, notwithstanding the fact that a falling market made mining the coal unprofitable.

It is uncontroverted in the case at bar that practically all the coal (less about 1000 carloads) remains undisturbed. Its quality is unchanged. The quantity is only slightly diminished. Everyone knew that the coal was of inferior grade and salable only on an extraordinary market. It seems plain that the parties executed the lease with those facts in mind and the “profit” clause was inserted not as a guage to mark the time when the coal seams had petered out, but in order to terminate the contract when an earnest attempt to mine and sell the coal had failed.

We think the provision should be construed in the light of-the purposes it sought to accomplish. It seems to us the parties knew that the sale of this coal on a normal market was unlikely and the clause was placed in the lease to act as a safety hatch in the event the attempt to mine it at a profit was futile. The conditions here are quite different from those presented by the execution of the lease in the Tierney Land Company case because there the provision was directed toward compelling the lessee to continue mining so long as the Freeburn seam existed in quantity and quality. By its terms the lessee was forced to mine the coal completely. Another distinction may be found in Martin’s Fork Coal Company v. Harlan-Wallins Coal Corporation, D. C., 14 F.Supp. 902, 909, where it was said:

“The only other decision which plaintiff cites and which can be claimed to be pertinent is that in case of Tierney Land Co. v. Kingston-Pocahontas Coal Co., 241 Ky. 101, 43 S.W.2d 517, 522. This case, however, does not support plaintiff’s position. The contract of the lessee there was to mine and pay royalty on a certain specific seam of coal, to wit, the Free-burn seam. It was held that the lessee was obliged to comply with its contract ‘so long as the Freeburn seam exists in quantity and quality as known at the date of the lease,’" and that it was not relieved from its obligation because by reason of falling prices the coal in that seam could not be mined and sold at a profit. The implication of the discussion is that if the contract had been to mine and pay royalty on all merchantable coal in the premises, the result would have been different.”

We agree with appellants that the rule stated in most of the cases decided by this court involving the usual provisions contained in coal leases is that a plea of practical exhaustion of coal is unavailable so long as coal remains in substantial quantity and, of the quality known and to be expected at the time of the lease, and that generally the lessee takes the risk of the market. But under the peculiar circum[223]

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Bluebook (online)
338 S.W.2d 220, 1960 Ky. LEXIS 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/browning-v-mountain-states-coal-corp-kyctapp-1960.