Clyborne v. McNeil

113 S.E.2d 672, 201 Va. 765, 83 A.L.R. 2d 656, 1960 Va. LEXIS 158
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedApril 25, 1960
DocketRecord 5059
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 113 S.E.2d 672 (Clyborne v. McNeil) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clyborne v. McNeil, 113 S.E.2d 672, 201 Va. 765, 83 A.L.R. 2d 656, 1960 Va. LEXIS 158 (Va. 1960).

Opinion

Buchanan, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a declaratory judgment proceeding brought by the appellees to have interpreted a coal mining lease made by them as lessors to the predecessors of the appellants as lessees, dated August 1, 1948'. By the lease the lessors demised and leased to the lessees, their heirs, successors and assigns, the exclusive right to mine and remove “by deep mining or strip mining methods, or both,” all the merchantable and mineable coal on a tract of land on Dismal River in Buchanan county containing 750 acres, for which the lessees agreed to pay to the lessors 15 cents a ton, to be “determined by actual weight.”

This tract of land had been owned by John G. McNeil, who devised 30 acres of it to his wife, Mary R. McNeil, for life, then to his daughter Stella McNeil, and to his daughters Virgie Clifton and Macie Salyers jointly “the fields and flats in front of Whitewood Post Office,” which contained 15 acres lying on the north side of the tract along the river. These two daughters later by deed divided the 15-acre tract between them and built homes thereon. The rest of the 750 acres was devised to the wife and three daughters jointly. These four and the husbands of Virgie Clifton and Macie Salyers were the lessors, and are now the appellees. The lessees were J. H. Frank, W. M. Culbertson, Jr., and C. A. Clyborne. The first two assigned their interests to Clyborne. Clyborne assigned to Paragon Jewell Coal Company, Inc., of which he is an officer and principal stockholder, and these two are the appellants and herein called the lessees.

The pleadings and the evidence related primarily to these two questions: (1) Whether the lessees had the right to transport by trucks over the surface of the demised premises to their tipple and processing plant thereon coal mined from mines belonging to others (referred to herein as “outside coal”) without paying for that privilege; (2) Whether the lessees had the right to make a deduction of 2 V2 per cent from the 15 cents per ton royalty provided for in the *767 lease, because of impurities in the coal mined from the leased premises and delivered to the tipple.

The first question involves the proper construction of Articles IV, X, and part of XIX of the lease contract. *

*768 The lessors contended that the Clifton and Salyers 15-acre tract was excepted from the lease (the Mary R. McNeil 30 acres was not involved in the controversy because no hauling was done on that tract); that the lessees were not entitled to haul outside coal over the surface of this tract or over the rest of the jointly-owned and undivided 750 acres; that in doing so they were trespassers and liable for damages in the sum of at least 5 cents a ton; that the owners of the Clifton and Salyers land were entitled to be paid separately for the hauling done over their respective tracts apart from the wheelage, or payment for hauling, over the undivided land.

The lessees contended that the Clifton-Salyers tracts were included in the lease; that all of their hauling over the surface of the leased premises was to be free of charge; that the only wheelage charge it was required to pay was for underground hauling provided for in Article X of the lease, which should be paid jointly to all the lessors.

From the evidence submitted by depositions it was shown that the Norfolk and Western Railway right of way runs along the north front of the Salyers-Clifton tract and immediately north of the right of way is Dismal River. Immediately north of the river is the State highway, following the river. After the lease was assigned by Clyborne to Paragon, the latter constructed a tipple and large processing plant on the east end of the Salyers tract, as permitted by Article IV, paragraph 1, of the lease, and built a new bridge from the highway across the river. From the end of the bridge it built a road across the Clifton and Salyers land to the tipple and processing plant, following the general course of a road already on the premises, but at points several feet distant from the old road. It also constructed a road southwardly past the tipple toward the undivided land following generally the old road to near the Salyers line and then continuing as a new road into the undivided land. A short distance north of the end of the old road Paragon constructed a new road westwardly several hundred feet toward a tract of 889 acres owned by the Brown heirs and under lease to Paragon. This road followed generally the outcrop of the Red Ash coal seam on the demised premises with side roads toward the outcrop. A map was filed in evidence showing in different colors the old road and the new construction.

In addition to the coal on the McNeil property, Paragon leased or bought the coal on a number of other tracts of land in the sur *769 rounding area, including the Brown property mentioned, the owners of which were in no way connected with the McNeil property. It did not itself mine the coal so owned by it, but contracted with others to mine it, load it on trucks and haul it to the tipple, for which they were paid by Paragon on a per ton basis.

Some of this outside coal was hauled through the underground passages in the McNeil property, for which Paragon paid the lessors 2l/z cents a ton as provided in Article X of the lease. Most of the outside coal however was hauled by the contractors in trucks over the roads built by Paragon on the surface of the leased premises as above described. There were 32 of these contractors at the time of the depositions and they operated 75 to 100 trucks a day over these surface roads, or some of them, carrying an average of ten tons per truck. In the period from October, 1951, when operations began, to August, 1955, more than a million tons of coal were hauled in this fashion over the leased premises to the tipple and processing plant. This is the hauling for which lessors say they should be paid.

After the cause was submitted the court rendered a written opinion dealing with the points in dispute and in accordance therewith entered the decree appealed from adjudicating: (1) That the leased premises included all the McNeil land; i.e.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 S.E.2d 672, 201 Va. 765, 83 A.L.R. 2d 656, 1960 Va. LEXIS 158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clyborne-v-mcneil-va-1960.