Carter v. Certain-Teed Products Corp.

200 F.2d 754
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 1953
Docket14577_1
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 200 F.2d 754 (Carter v. Certain-Teed Products Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Certain-Teed Products Corp., 200 F.2d 754 (8th Cir. 1953).

Opinion

On petition for rehearing, original opinion withdrawn and modified as follows.

COLLET, Circuit Judge.

This action involved the construction of a lease given by plaintiffs-appellants 1 to defendant-appellee 2 for the quarrying and mining of gypsum rock on plaintiffs’ land near Fort Dodge, Iowa. The details of the transaction, many pertinent provisions of the lease, and the respective contentions of the parties concerning its meaning and proper construction are set out in the memorandum opinion of the trial court, Carter v. Certain-Teed Products Corp., D.C., 102 F.Supp. 280. We will repeat here only so much' as may be necessary to an understanding of our conclusion.

At the outset it should be stated, in explanation of our consideration of many facts and circumstances detailed in the evidence which occurred both before its execution and during the continuation of the lease, that its meaning is sufficiently ambiguous to justify the consideration of parol evidence and extraneous circumstances in determining its meaning.

Defendant owned a plant near Fort Dodge, Iowa, where it manufactured gypsum products from gypsum rock. Plaintiffs owned 80 acres of land near Fort Dodge, underlaid with extensive gypsum rock deposits. Defendant had no source of gypsum in 1945 for the operation of its plant. *755 Plaintiffs approached defendant concerning the lease of its land to defendant for the extraction of gypsum rock. Negotiations resulted in the execution of an option and soon thereafter in the lease now in question, dated September 24, 1945. In the preliminary negotiations plaintiffs undertook to obtain a royalty agreement which would provide for a minimum annual royalty of $15,000, payable monthly. They were represented by competent counsel and defendant was represented by its president. Defendant demurred from such an arrangement on the ground that the future of its plant at Fort Dodge was not certain and that it should not obligate itself to pay a guaranteed annual minimum sum regardless of the actual needs of its plant. The result was that the lease, when executed, provided for the payment of an advance cash royalty of $25,000 and a royalty of 10 cents per ton for all gypsum quarried and removed. The payments of 10 cents per ton were not to- begin until enough gypsum had been quarried for the royalty thereon at that rate to. equal the $25,000 advance payment. The lease further provided that:

“(a) Defendant * * * ‘will quarry * * * the real estate in a workmanlike manner * * * so1 long as quarrying operations can be done on an economical basis;’
“(b) Defendant must ‘as rapidly * * * as conditions permit, and in any event not later than January 1, 1947, extract not less than 60% of the gypsum * * * rock requirements for * * * (its) gypsum plant in Fort Dodge, Iowa, from said real estate; and will continue to do so as long as there is sufficient gypsum * * * to supply said 60% of said requirements.’
“(c) When defendant commences to quarry, it must ‘do so. and continue to do so’ by customary methods; these may destroy the surface of the ground, ‘in consideration of the royalty payments provided for herein.’
“(d) ‘All royalty payments * * * shall be made on or before the 15th day of each month during the term of this agreement * * * based on the quantity of gypsum * * * quarried and removed during the previous period of one month.’
“(e) Defendant must keep complete records of gypsum quarried and removed, which shall be available to us for inspection, for two expressed purposes: (1) ‘to. determine the amount of said royalty payments’ (i. e., the monthly payments in clause 6); and (2) to ‘determine whether at least sixty per cent of lessee’s gypsum * * * requirements, as herein set forth, are being extracted from said real estate.’ ”

Equipment to quarry the gypsum was not available to defendant at that time because of the war. It employed a contractor who had the necessary equipment and heavy machinery. Production began in March, 1946, and continued at a rapid pace until September, 1947, when the contractor’s services were terminated. During that time 464,542 tons had been quarried and paid for. One hundred per cent of the requirements of defendant’s plant during that period was 270,255 tons, leaving a very substantial stock pile for future use at the plant. Equipment was still not available and the plant’s requirements were met from the stock pile for 17 months, until March, 1949.

In 1947 defendant leased an 80-acre tract known as the Steiner property, which adjoined plaintiffs’ land on the north. This lease provided for a . guaranteed annual royalty of $1,200.00, 10 cents per ton on all gypsum removed and that at least 20% of the requirements of the Fort Dodge plant would be taken from the Steiner property during the term of the lease which was, like plaintiffs’ lease, for a period of ten years with an option of renewal for successive ten-year periods. The $1,200.00 guaranteed annual royalty was to be applied to the 10-cent royalty until enough gypsum had been removed at 10 cents per ton to equal all guaranteed annual royalty payments which had theretofore been made during the entire term of the lease.

In February, 1949, defendant obtained proper equipment and renewed quarrying operations on plaintiffs’ property in March, 1949, which were continued through September and part of October, 1949. In October, 1949, it began production from the *756 Steiner tract. From that time on until this suit was filed in September, 1951, quarrying operations were carried on intermittently on plaintiffs’ tract and the Steiner tract. The Fort Dodge plant was operating steadily and continuously during all this time. The result was that either on a monthly or annual basis during much of the period from the date the contractor discontinued operations less than 60% of the gypsum requirements of the Fort Dodge plant was taken from plaintiffs’ tract. But at no time since the commencement of quarrying operations in March, 1946, did the overall amount taken from plaintiffs’ property drop below 60% of the previous total requirements, on any given date, of the Fort Dodge plant.

It is plaintiffs’ construction of the lease that defendant must take each month 60% of the requirements of the Fort Dodge plant for that month, and if it does- not take that much each month it must nevertheless pay for that much. Their present action seeks a declaratory judgment and prays for that construction. They further seek an accounting and payment for such part of 60% of the amounts used at the plant during each month which was not taken from plaintiffs’ tract. They further seek a cancellation of the lease because of its breach by defendant. -The trial court found there had been no breach of the lease by defendant, that defendant had taken approximately 75% of all gypsum used at the Fort Dodge plant up to the time this suit was filed from plaintiffs’ tract and paid for it, 3 and consequently owed plaintiffs nothing. It thereupon dismissed plaintiffs’ complaint.

Plaintiffs’ contention that defendant is required to take from their property and pay for each month

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Bluebook (online)
200 F.2d 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-certain-teed-products-corp-ca8-1953.