Continental Fuel Co. v. Haden

206 S.W. 8, 182 Ky. 8, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 308
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 8, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 206 S.W. 8 (Continental Fuel Co. v. Haden) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Continental Fuel Co. v. Haden, 206 S.W. 8, 182 Ky. 8, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 308 (Ky. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Miller

Reversing.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Muhlenberg circuit court which cancelled a mining lease, restored the leased premises to appellees, and awarded them a writ of possession therefor. The appellees,. J. C. Haden and Sue Haden, his -wife, and Mrs. A. M. Bohannon, were the plaintiffs below and will be called the lessors in this opinion; the appellants, the Continental Fuel Company, J. M. Thompson and Sallie J. Thompson, his wife, are the lessees, and will so be referred to, for brevity.

The facts shown by the record are substantially as follows: On June 17th, 1907, the lessors, Haden and others, executed and delivered to the lessees, Thompson and others, h lease granting the lessees the privilege of opening, developing and operating a coal mine upon [9]*9421 acres of land in Muhlenberg county, for a period of fifty years. It was provided, among other things, that the lessees should pay to the lessors 'a royalty of two cents per ton on all coal taken from the leasehold, but that the lessees should pay at least the sum of $1,200.00 per annum as royalty, whether sufficient coal should be mined to produce that sum at the rate of two cents per ton, or not; and by an amendment to the lease, executed in 1909, the minimum annual royalty was increased to $1,500.00. The lease further gave the lessees the use of 25 acres of the surface of said land, to be thereafter surveyed,-and.also the privilege of cutting such timber as might be necessary to erect their tipple,' and to timber all the shafts of the mine.

Upon their part the lessees agreed to operate the mine, 'at all times, in a workmanlike manner, and continuously during the term; to develop the mine to a daily capacity of 500 tons within 24 months; and, when so developed, to mine not less than sixty thousand tons of coal per annum; and if the lessees should fail, in any year, to produce the fixed minimum tonnage then the difference between the actual tonnage produced and the minimum tonnage should be paid for, as above stated. And, to secure the faithful performance of the contract to develop the mine to the capacity above specified the lease required a bond from the lessees in the sum of $105000.00.

The lease also gave the lessors the right to erect not exceeding 30 tenant houses, which the lessees should rent at such prices as were usually charged for similar houses, and should pay the lessors seventy-five per cent of the rents so received.

And, although the lease is careful to fix the rights of the respective contracting parties, and requires of the lessees the bond above referred to, it contains no forfeiting clause.

The lessees entered upon the leased premises, opened, equipped and developed a large coal mine thereon, and built a railroad spur of more than half a mile in length at a cost of $8,500.00 for use in operating the mine. They installed costly and extensive mining machinery, and developed the mine to a capacity that enabled it to produce from 500 to 800 tons of coal per day. The mining machinery and apparatus installed in the mine cost the lessees [10]*10$82,100.00, thus making a total expenditure by the lessees of nearly $100,000.-00.

The royalties paid to the lessors up to January 1st, 1915, aggregated $11,235.00; and, although during one year the mine was operated at a loss, the minimum royalty called for by the lease was paid.

The lessees experienced many financial hardships in the course of the development of this mining property, due principally to the dullness of the coal market during the greater portion of the time. ■ Pew of'the coal operators in western Kentucky made a profit during the years 1914, 1915 and 1916; and during that period the lessees operated only about one-half of the time. Furthermore, in January, 1913, the mine was threatened with inundation from an unusual rise in Green river, and this inundation was only prevented at a cost of about $6,000.00.

At the time of the execution of the lease in 1907, the fee simple title of the land leased, including the surface and the coal, was worth about $20.00 an acre, or an aggregate of $9,000.00; and, as above stated, it was upon this leasehold that the lessees constructed improvements and installed mining machinery and equipment of the value of about $100,000.00.

On November 26th, 1915, the lessors filed this action in equity in the Muhlenberg circuit court, seeking a forfeiture- and cancellation of the lease, and a recovery of the leased property, upon the ground that the lessees had broken the covenants of the lease by committing waste upon the leased premises; for an injunction restraining the lessees from further operating the mine and committing further injury thereto; for $20,000.00 damages for the waste complained of; and for the further sum of $545.27 claimed to be due for royalties and rent of the. miners’ houses above mentioned.

But the court having required the lessors to elect between the three causes of action set forth in their petition, they elected to prosecute their action for a forfeiture and cancellation of the lease and a recovery of the leased premises.

The answer; and counterclaim traversed every material allegation of the petition; set up many matters in estoppel; claimed damages for the breach of the lease by the lessors in refusing to set aside the 25 acres and to' permit the lessees to cut mining timbers, for which judg[11]*11ment was prayed; and, tlie improvements, machinery and equipment which had been placed upon the property by the lessees were alleged to be worth $75,000.00, for which! judgment was asked, in the event aff orfeiture or cancellation of the lease should be decreed.

Issues having been made and a large amount of proof taken thereon, the chancellor, decreed a forfeiture and cancellation of the lease and the restoration of the leased premises to the lessors; and, although the lessors did not claim the improvements, machinery and mining equipment', the effect of the judgment is to turn over this property to the lessors. From that judgment the defendant lessees have prosecuted this appeal.

From the foregoing .recital, it will be seen that the lessors sought and obtained a cancellation of the lease for!' waste; and, it appears from the pleadings and the proof that the elements relied on as constituting waste were, (1) that the lessees didmot pay the royalties due under the contract; (2) that they were not working the mines properly; (3) that they were not taking sufficient coal therefrom; and, (4) that they were maintaining the mine in an unsafe condition.

The first and third grounds may be disposed of summarily. As above stated, this action was filed on November 26th, 1915. By the terms of the lease the minimum royalty for the year 1915 was not due until January 15th, 1916, and, it is conceded there had been no default in the payment of the annual .royalties at the time the suit’ was filed.- And as the case is to be tried upon the charges set forth in the petition, we are not concerned with what has happened since. The lessees are not to be held accountable for failing or refusing to do anything under the contract after suit was brought for the cancellation. Ross v. Sheldon, 119 S. W. 225.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 S.W. 8, 182 Ky. 8, 1918 Ky. LEXIS 308, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-fuel-co-v-haden-kyctapp-1918.