Carmichael v. Old Straight Creek Coal Corp.

22 S.W.2d 572, 232 Ky. 133, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 407
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 13, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 22 S.W.2d 572 (Carmichael v. Old Straight Creek Coal Corp.) 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
Carmichael v. Old Straight Creek Coal Corp., 22 S.W.2d 572, 232 Ky. 133, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 407 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Commissioner Tinsley

Affirming in part and reversing in part.

Daniel Howard, a resident of Bell county, Kentucky, died in September, 1900, the owner of a large boundary of land on Straight creek in that county. He left surviving him a widow and 13 children. In 1901, by a proceeding in the Bell county court, the major portion of the land was partitioned, dower allotted to the widow, a portion allotted to each of the children, and deeds executed to them by a commissioner. On July 31, 1905, the widow and all the children executed a lease of the entire boundary to E. N. Ingram for the purpose of mining and removing the coal therefrom, and to this end granted to Ingram the right to use such portions of the surface and such of the standing timber as was necessary to be used in the mining and removal of the coal. That lease and the rights under it, by mesne assignments, have now vested in appellee Cary-G-lendon Coal Company, under which the appellee Old Straight Creek Coal Corporation is now, and has been for some years, mining and removing the coal. The lease to Ingram was made without any mention of, or regard to, the partition made in 1901. It was a joint lease of the entire boundary, as a single tract, under a general description of the whole, in which the boundary was described by reference to the lands or lines of abutting proprietors. On August 23, 1905, less than a month after its execution, Ingram assigned the lease to Straight Creek Coal Mining Company, a corporation. That company opened the mines, built the railroad switch to the land, erected tipples, inclines, commissary and other buildings, including dwelling houses for miners. The boundary covered by the lease *135 lay on a branch of Straight creek, called “Howard’s Branch, ’ ’ and it was believed by the parties to the lease and by the corporations to which the lease was assigned that the boundary extended to the tops of the dividing ridges on both sides of the branch and around the head of the branch, including all the watershed of Howard’s branch. However, some time after mining operations on the land commenced, a suit which had been pending for more than 20 years in the Bell circuit court, wherein J. J. Gibson et al. were plaintiffs and Daniel Howard was defendant, and which involved about 430 acres of the Howards’ land on Howard’s branch, was determined by way of a compromise, and the Gibsons, under a patent superior to any title held by Daniel Howard, took about 430 acres of the Howard land embraced in the Ingram lease. See Howard v. Straight Creek Coal Co., 140 Ky. 700, 131 S. W. 804, 807. In 1906 a predecessor in title of appellees purchased this 430 acres in fee from the Gibsons, and about 1922 appellee, or a predecessor in title, began to mine and remove coal from it, bringing the coal out over the Howard land.

On January 30, 1928, the appellant Lucy Carmichael instituted this action against Old Straight Creek Coal Corporation to recover damages in the sum of $5,000 on the ground that the coal from the Gibson land is brought over, and the refuse material and water from it are dumped on, that portion of the Howard land allotted to her in the partition proceeding, and for an injunction to prevent the continuation of those practices. The other appellants, Noah Howárd and others, her brothers and sisters, who had been brought into the action by an amended answer and cross-petition of the appellee Old Straight Creek Coal Corporation, filed an answer, counterclaim, and cross-petition, by which they denied the right of Lucy Carmichael to recover for herself alone on the cause of action asserted in her petition, and then by an independent action styled “Noah Howard, etc., v. Cary-Glendon Coal Company, Old Straight Creek Coal Corporation, and Lucy Carmichael,” sought to recover damages upon the same grounds asserted by Lucy Carmichael in her suit, and, in addition thereto, to recover for unpaid royalties for coal mined and removed from the Howard land, to recover for timber cut and removed from the Howard land and used oh the Gibson land, and to recover damages by way of rents for the use and occupancy of houses on the Howard land by miners working *136 on the Gibson land, and for an injunction to prevent a continuance of such acts by appellees, and, in addition, asserted that any recovery, in either or both actions, should be for the joint benefit of all the heirs, in the proportion to the interests of each in the leased boundary, and in this connection alleged that the interest of Lucy Carmichael was one-third interest in the entire boundary which had 'been allotted to her as lot No. 9 in the partition proceedings, two-elevenths interest in lot No. - allotted to Wilson Howard, two-elevenths interest in lot No. - allotted to Abigale Howard, one-seventh and two-elevenths of one-seventh' of lot No. - allotted to America Howard, and two-elevenths of one-fifth interest in lot No.-allotted to Katherine Howard.

The two actions were consolidated in the court below and were referred to a commissioner, to hear proof and report upon the issues made by the pleadings in accordance with the proof heard. The report subsequently made by the commissioner was confirmed, and a judgment rendered in accordance with the commissioner’s report, by which it was adjudged that appellants were not entitled to injunctive relief; adjudging that appellants recover 90 per cent, of $633.33 back royalties for coal mined from the Howard land; adjudging to appellants 90 per cent, of $6,230.58 for 462,265 tons of coal mined from the Gibson land and transported over the Howard land, at the rate of 1% cents per ton; adjudging that sum in satisfaction of all damages sustained and to be sustained by the dumping of refuse material and draining water from the Gibson lánd on the Howard land, and for timber taken hereafter, from the Howard land and used on the Gibson land, and for the use and occupancy of the miners’ houses on the Howard land by miners working on the Gibson land; further adjudging that appellee should continue to pay 90 per cent, of 1% cents per ton for all coal thereafter transported from the Gibson land over the Howard land, and adjudging to Lucy Carmichael one-sixth and to the other appellants jointly five-sixths of this recovery. The judgment limiting appellants to 90 per cent, of the sums recovered is based upon a contract between the parties, growing out of appellees’ purchase of certain interests in the leased premises, and because of which it was agreed they might retain 10 per cent, of all royalties arising under the lease. Complaining of that judgment, the plaintiffs in each action have prosecuted separate appeals.

*137

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 S.W.2d 572, 232 Ky. 133, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 407, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carmichael-v-old-straight-creek-coal-corp-kyctapphigh-1929.