Bruce Coal Co. v. Bibby
This text of 77 So. 545 (Bruce Coal Co. v. Bibby) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
“The party of the second part guarantees unto the party of the first part that royalty shall be paid for not less than fifty tons per day after four (4) months from date, whether such amount' of coal be mined or not, and at the end of each month, from date of this lease, if an amount equal to the royalty of fifty tons per day, at seven (7) cents per ton, has not been paid, then the party of the second part agrees to make good such shortage.”
It is manifest from this clause of the contract that the parties contemplated active mining operation after the expiration of four months, and the lessee undertook to guarantee a daily output of a minimum amount of 50 tons per working day, during the life of the lease, 13 years, unless sooner terminated by exhausting the merchantable, minable coal. In other words, this was a guaranty that the lessor should receive an income monthly equal to the royalty of seven cents upon 50 tons per day, whether so much coal was mined during said month or not, and which was to continue, either until the term of the lease expired or the coal was sooner exhausted. It may be that this construction of the contract might operate to charge the respondents with royalty upon more tons than there were in the mine, but with this the court is not concerned, as the parties make contracts and not the courts. Moreover, this clause of the contract was of considerable importance to the complainant Bib-by; he was holding the mineral right under a lease which expired shortly after the lease in question; he was making a profit of two cents upon the royalty, and he evidently contracted against any delay in mining, which would deprive him of the benefit of said profit. Again, the respondents would have been amply protected against such a contingency by complying with the lease in getting out the requisite number of tons until the coal was all mined, for as soon as it was exhausted the lease would have terminated. This holding in no wise conflicts with the case of Brooks v. Cook, 135 Ala. 219, 34 South. 960, and other cases cited by appellant’s counsel, and there is no need for an application of said cases to the present contract, as it, by its own terms, relieves the lessee of liability for a royalty if the coal was not there and if the proof showed there was no coal to mine, the respondents would not be liable for the royalty, or if it was there, they would *123 not be liable for any period after the same had been exhausted. Here there was coal, and the lessee undertook to guarantee the mining of same to the extent of 50 to.ns per day until the expiration of the lease unless the supply was sooner consumed. We think that the lower court, in its decree, had the proper conception of the contract, but as the cause was submitted upon the proof it should have determined the period at which the payment of the royalty should cease and not left it to the register; and we think that the coal, under the weight of the evidence, was practically exhausted so as to prevent a profitable continuation of the mining operations when the Gayóse. Company abandoned said mine during the year 1906, and that the royalty should be charged as up to that date and not to the end of the lease.
The decree of the lower court is modified, and, as modified, is affirmed.
Affirmed.'
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
77 So. 545, 201 Ala. 121, 1917 Ala. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bruce-coal-co-v-bibby-ala-1917.