Continental Coal Co. v. Connellsville By-Product Coal Co.

138 S.E. 737, 104 W. Va. 44, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 149
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 1927
Docket5795
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 138 S.E. 737 (Continental Coal Co. v. Connellsville By-Product Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Coal Co. v. Connellsville By-Product Coal Co., 138 S.E. 737, 104 W. Va. 44, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 149 (W. Va. 1927).

Opinion

Lively, Judge :

The appellants, the Connellsville- By-Product Company (hereinafter referred to as the By-Product Co.) and the Cochran Coal & Coke Company (referred to herein as the Coal & Coke Company), appeal from an injunction order prohibiting them from mining the seam of Pittsburgh coal underlying a part of 153 acres in Monongalia County, in such a way as to unnecessarily injure the appellee, the Continental Coal Company, and its employees, in the latter Company’s operation of the Sewickley vein of coal overlying the 153-acre tract just mentioned.

On the west side of the Monongahela River, in Monongalia County, there is a coal field containing about 180 square miles of coal lands. The Scotts Run district is a part of this field. The Sewickley and Pittsburgh seams extend over this area with almost equal persistency, the latter seam lying about •90 feet below the former. In this region the Pittsburgh seam has an average thickness of about 8 feet and the Sewickley an average thickness of about 6 feet. The Pittsburgh seam has about 13,000 tons of recoverable coal per acre; the Se- *46 wickley 10,000 tons per acre. Both coals now command good prices, and at present there are a large number of companies operating these veins of coal in this field. In 1902, before the Sewiekley seam had attained a commercial value, the defendant Coal and Coke Company became the owner of .about 12,000 acres of the Pittsburgh coal in this district, including the Pittsburgh coal underlying a part of the 153-acre Sewiekley tract of the plaintiff. The lack of railroad facilities prevented the development of coal property in this section until 1916 or 1917, when a railroad was built on Seotts Run. In the meantime, in 1918, the Diamond Coal Company, the predecessor in title of the plaintiff, acquired 125 acres of the Sewiekley vein of coal, and later, in August, 1921, an additional tract of the same coal was obtained, which two tracts taken together make up the 153 acres mentioned above. The 125-acre tract had been opened by the Liberty Fuel Company in 1917 as the Liberty Mine, but no intensive development of the operation was attempted until 1919, after the Diamond Coal Company obtained the property. From that time until 1921, when the peak of production (1200 tons daily) was reached, the capacity of the mine was gradually increased. In January, 1925, the plaintiff Continental Coal Company and the Diamond Coal Company were merged, and the property of the latter was conveyed to the former, the present owner.

By writing of Sept. 30, 1920, the defendant Coal & Coke Company leased to the defendant By-Product Company 2100 acres of Pittsburgh coal on Seotts Run, about 110 acres of which was under a part of the 153-acre Sewiekley tract of the plaintiff Coal Company.

In the title papers by which the Cochran Coal & Coke Company was granted that part of its Pittsburgh coal underlying a part of the 153-acre Sewiekley tract of the plaintiff, there is contained the following provision to the effect that besides the coal thus granted, the Coal & Coke Company should have, “ . . . the right to mine and remove all of said coal, and with the free and uninterrupted right-of-way into, upon, over and under the said lands, at such points and in such manner for such ways, tracks and roads as may be *47 necessary and proper for the purpose of ventilating, draining, digging, mining, operating and carrying away said coal, or other coal or coke, without any liability for damages that may arise from the removal of any or all of said coal, or the manufacture of coke, without being required to provide or leave support for the overlying strata or surface, and without being liable for any injury to the same, or anything therein or thereon, or to the streams or water courses thereof; ...”

In 1920, the By-Product Company laid out its mine (Con-nellsville No. 1) and projections under the 2100-acre tract, and began developing it. The first' coal was shipped April 8, 1921. The mine openings of the plaintiff’s Liberty Mine and Connellsville No. 1 were about 3,000 feet apart. In about two years and a half after the opening of its mine, the mining operations of the defendant By-Product Company were extended until they reached the 153-acre tract of the plaintiff. And in conformance .with its room and pillar system, in 1923 the defendant company began to draw pillars from under a part of the Liberty Mine. This continued until 1924, when plaintiff says it learned that defendant By-Product Company was drawing pillars from under its (plaintiff’s) mine in such a manner as to endanger its main haulway and air-course. In an endeavor to adjust this situation negotiations were entered into between the representatives of the respective companies, but after several months had passed, their efforts to reach an agreement failed, the plaintiff refusing to pay the $19,000.00 demanded by the defendant By-Product ■Company for the coal (6 and a fraction acres) which, for a period of ten years, was to be left in place, in the form of pillars and barrier pillars, to protect the main haulway and air-course of the plaintiff. The defendant By-Product Company claimed that this sum represented the royalty it was required to pay the Coal & Coke Company for the coal so left, under its lease with the latter Company, and that as most of the ■coal left in these pillars would be a total loss to it, as far as the By-Product Company was concerned, it would not be .gaining anything by this agreement, but would in fact be suffering a loss because of the coal lost and the change in *48 mining operations which would be necessary to meet the changed conditions. The plaintiff Company contended that as the title to the coal would remain in the defendants, it would be beyond reason to expect the plaintiff to pay such a sum for the desired protection.

By reason of the defendant By-Product Company drawing its pillars from beneath the plaintiff’s Sewickley mine, a subsidence was caused in 1924, in the north-east part of the Liberty Mine. The damage sustained by the plaintiff in this instance was not great; but on August 1, 1925, a subsidence occurred under the main heading and air-course of the Liberty Mine, covering a space about 300 feet long. The plaintiff had to abandon its Third Left Section until another haul-way (a secondary one) was cut; and the coal affected by the subsidence is a total loss (amounting to about $8,100.00). According to plaintiff’s evidence, it is doubtful if any coal south of this cave-in can be removed.

On August 22, 1925, the plaintiff secured a preliminary injunction restraining the defendant By-Product Company from mining and removing the Pittsburgh coal of the defendant under the 153 acres of Sewickley coal, in such a manner as to unnecessarily injure the plaintiff and destroy its mine and endanger the lives of its employees. Bond of $12,-500.00 was required of the plaintiff. On December 9th, the defendants appeared and moved to dissolve the temporary injunction, and filed their joint and several demurrer and answer thereto. On January 25, 1926, the plaintiffs filed an amended and supplemental bill. January 30, 1926, defendants moved the court to dissolve the injunction as to a portion of the mine, which motion was overruled, but at this time ■ a motion to increase the plaintiff’s bond by $7,500.00 was sustained. On April 29, 1926, the joint and several demuxvrer and answer of defendants to the amended and supplemental bill were filed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 S.E. 737, 104 W. Va. 44, 1927 W. Va. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-coal-co-v-connellsville-by-product-coal-co-wva-1927.