Colony Coal Coke Corporation v. Combs

44 S.W.2d 296, 241 Ky. 436, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 100
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 11, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 44 S.W.2d 296 (Colony Coal Coke Corporation v. Combs) 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
Colony Coal Coke Corporation v. Combs, 44 S.W.2d 296, 241 Ky. 436, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 100 (Ky. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Thomas

Reversing.

The Defiance Coal Mining Company was the lessee under the Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Company of a tract *437 of land in Perry county containing about 500 acres in which the right to mine coal from the land was granted to it for a period of 25 years from and after November 1, 1920. After the execution of that lease, the lessor therein, Virginia Iron, Coal & Coke Company, conveyed all of its holdings in Perry county, including the lease mentioned, to the appellant and one of the defendants below, Colony Coal. & Coke Corporation. At that time the defendant and one of the appellants, Defiance Coal Mining Company, was operating under its lease and continued to do so until some time in 1929, when it became insolvent and bankrupt. Before it suspended business it crossed the boundaries of its lease and mined coal from adjoining land belonging to the appellee and plaintiff below, McKinley Combs, to the extent of 1.1 acres, but in doing so, as alleged in the petition, it destroyed the coal on as much as 3.1 acres. There is some dispute in the testimony as to the correct date of such trespass, but the only bearing it has on the case is as to the time when the trespassing lessee and its lessor became aware that the trespass had been committed.

Plaintiff, more than a year after he claims to have discovered the trespass, filed this action in the Perry circuit ¡court against the lessor, Colony Coal & Coke Corporation, and its lessee, Defiance Coal Mining Company, and the general manager of the latter, alleging the facts as above outlined, and charging that the coa.1 from under his land was taken by the lessee intentionally and with the knowledge that the boundaries of the lease had been crossed, and that the coal so taken was not embraced therein, and that such knowledge was also possessed by the other two defendants, and judgment was prayed against them for the value of the coal so taken as measured by its market value at the mouth of the mine, and not by its royalty value if the trespasses were innocently committed, and which are the well-settled rules in this jurisdiction for the measurement of the recovery in such character of wrongs. As based upon his claim of willful and intentional trespass, he fixed his damages at $52,-312.50.

The answers admitted the trespass, but denied the amount of coal taken from plaintiff’s land by reason thereof, and averred that the boundaries of the lease were crossed by the lessee innocently and through a mistake, and that at most plaintiff was entitled to recover *438 only the royalty value of the coal so taken, which, as alleged, was 10 cents per ton. It was also pleaded, in defense, that, after the trespass was discovered, and as a result of negotiations of settlement, plaintiff addressed to the lessee, Defiance Coal Mining Company, at its principal office in Lexington, Ky., this proposition in writing:

“Dear Sirs: Subject to your acceptance in writing on or before May 1st, 1928, we hereby offer to lease to you the No. 7 coal on the South side of Acup Creek, on Tract No. 8, division of Remine Combs estate in the case of R. L. Thomas, etc., vs. Mary Combs, etc. Said lease is to be at the rate of ten cents per ton of 2,000 pounds, and the lease in all respect is to be on the same terms as the lease from Colony Coal & Coke Corporation to Defiance Coal Mining .Company, except as to minimum royalty. If you accept this offer to lease you must agree to mine the No. 7 coal on said boundary within two. years from date of acceptance. Any coal that may have already been mined from this tract is to be measured up and paid for within 60 days from date of acceptance of this lease contract. If you desire to accept this offer of lease, written notice of acceptance mailed to McKinley C. Combs, Yicco, Kentucky, by registered mail, shall be.deemed sufficient.”

It was signed by him and his wife, and witnessed by the signatures of two attesting witnesses; that within seven days thereafter and on April 20,1928, the lessee to whom that communication was sent accepted its terms in writing and according to its stipulation, and mailed its acceptance to plaintiff, and which was and is in these words:

“Dear Sir: This will advise you that we will accept the proposition from you and Margaret Combs made to us on April 13th, to lease us No. 7 coal on South of Acup Creek on Tract No. 8 Division. Yours very truly. Defiance Coal Mining Company.”

In July following, a written lease to the Defiance Coal Mining Company in conformity with such accepted proposition was prepared and submitted to plaintiff for execution, which he declined to do, and all of which negotiations and transactions were relied on as a compromise and settlement of the matters complained of in the *439 petition. Following pleadings made the issues and upon trial before a jury, it returned a verdict against defendants in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $5,000, on which judgment was rendered, and, defendants ’ motion for a new trial having been overruled, they prosecute this appeal, urging by their counsel a number of alleged errors, but we deem it necessary to consider only those hereinafter discussed.

In his reply plaintiff denied executing the written proposition to defendant Defiance Coal Mining Company, hereinbefore inserted, but in giving his evidence at the trial he admitted he did so, but denied having received the acceptance executed by that company and which it says it mailed to him in conformity with his written proposition, and for which reason he declined to execute the drafted lease which had been prepared in accordance with the proposition, if it had been accepted according to its terms.

The evidence strongly points to the conclusion that plaintiff did receive the acceptance of his proposition from the Defiance Coal Mining Company, since a carbon copy of it was produced at the trial by the local manager of that company; but he was not the one.who prepared and mailed it. Those acts were done in the general office of the Defiance Coal Mining Company at Lexington and from which the local manager of that company, who testified in the case, obtained the carbon copy that he produced while on the stand. But for some reason, not explained in the record, no witness from the general office of the lessee defendant in Lexington, and who possessed knowledge with reference to that matter, was introduced at the trial, and for which reason the acceptance of plaintiff’s compromise proposition' according to its terms, was not established. If it had been proven that the acceptance was executed and mailed to plaintiff from the general office at Lexington, it seems to be conceded by his counsel that there would exist no grounds to maintain this action, since in that event the cause of action, if any, would have to be based upon a claim for unpaid royalties accruing from the compromise settlement. We do not conclude that it was essential to the effectiveness of the compromise agreement, as contained in plaintiff’s written proposition, that a formally executed lease should follow it, since there is no provision to that effect in the proposition made by plaintiff. However, such a course is in con- *440

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Jim Thompson Coal Co. v. Dentzell
287 S.W. 548 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.W.2d 296, 241 Ky. 436, 1931 Ky. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colony-coal-coke-corporation-v-combs-kyctapphigh-1931.