Cornett-Lewis Coal Co. v. Eversole

190 S.W.2d 873, 301 Ky. 70, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 696
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 30, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 190 S.W.2d 873 (Cornett-Lewis Coal Co. v. Eversole) 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
Cornett-Lewis Coal Co. v. Eversole, 190 S.W.2d 873, 301 Ky. 70, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 696 (Ky. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

A contract was made on November 12, 1940, between Virgil Eversole and tbe Cornett-Lewis Coal Company, reciting that the company contemplated leasing from the U. S. Coal & Coke Company a certain boundary of coal land and agreeing that it would haul coal from it over or through certain property of Eversole which had been leased to the company in January, 1935, and pay him for the privilege a sum equivalent to the difference between the actual royalty to be paid the Coal & Coke Company and 15% cents per ton. But the contract was not to become effective unless the proposed lease from the U. S. Coal & Coke Company should be executed within twelve months. Other provisions of the contract are not material here. Eversole has prosecuted this suit for a breach of that contract and an accounting, and also asked for a declaration of rights. This judgment being in his favor, the defendant appeals.

The plaintiff alleged in his petition that the true consideration of and for the agreement of the Cornett-Lewis Coal Company to pay him as stipulated in the contract was his agreement to procure the lease of the Coal & Coke Company’s land for the defendant; that within six months he had procured the agreement of that company to lease the land upon terms acceptable to the defendant and he had submitted the form of lease, but the defendant had, in short, wilfully procrastinated the execution or consummation of the lease until after the expiration of twelve months from the date of his contract with it; that thereafter, namely, in January, 1942, it had leased the land from the Coal & Coke Company for a royalty of 14 cents upon substantially the same terms provided in the draft for a lease which he had obtained and submitted. *72 The plaintiff claimed in his suit that he was entitled to-1% cents per ton for coal mined and removed from that property or hanled over or through his land.

The defendant admitted the execution of the contract and the lease, hut denied all the other allegations of the-petition and any obligation to the plaintiff. It affirmatively pleaded that sometime prior to September 24,1940, Eversole had made certain representations to it with respect to procuring the lease and alleged its reliance on them. They included the understanding that the royalty to be paid the Coal & Coke Company plus Eversole’scompensation would not together exceed 15 cents per ton. It pleaded that Eversole had in fact been able to obtain the lease according to the stipulation, conditions and terms agreed upon, but thereafter he had made other representations which were false. One of them was that the-lease could not be procured for a royalty of less than 15 cents per ton, and it was then agreed to pay the plaintiff one-half cent per ton as full compensation for hauling the coal over and through the plaintiff’s property, which was then under lease and being operated by the defendant. It pleaded that the plaintiff’s representations were false- and fraudulent and made with the intent to deceive the defendant, his principal, and that the contract of November 12, 1940, sued on, was made in reliance upon those false and fraudulent representations. The answer also-recites that on March 11, 1941, by direct negotiation the Coal & Coke Company had proposed to lease the coal to the defendant for a royalty of 14 cents per ton, and that the defendant then for the first time learned of -the false representations of the plaintiff, and that after it confronted him with the fact, all negotiations with respect to the lease were conducted without his assistance or intervention. Many of the provisions of the draft of the lease which had been previously tendered by the plaintiff' were unacceptable, and because of the extended negotiations for the lease with the Coal & Coke Company, as well as time for the examination of the title, the lease was not ready for execution until after November 12, 1941, which was more than 12 months after the contract made with the plaintiff; thus there was no obligation to the plaintiff. It was further alleged that because of the refusal of the plaintiff to accept one-half cent per ton for the privilege-of hauling coal over his land, the defendant had made other arrangements and none of the coal had been or is. *73 Leing hauled over or through the plaintiff’s property, so that he is not entitled to anything under his contract. A reply joined the issues. Much testimony was heard. The trial court found in effect that there had been no misrepresentation by the plaintiff that the Coal & Coke Company would not lease its land for less than 15 cents per ton net; that the plaintiff had never agreed to accept only one-half cent per ton compensation for the hauling privilege; that after the defendant had learned all the facts alleged to have been misrepresented it had elected to execute its contract with the plaintiff of November 12, 1940. The court further found that plaintiff’s agreement to leave or permit the defendant operating company to leave sufficient coal for support of a haulway through the property longer than necessary to mine his tract was a sufficient consideration for the contract; also that plaintiff had submitted a lease with the Coal & Coke Company which the defendant had been willing to make, and that, although the defendant may not have been required in fact to use the haulway, so far as plaintiff’s compensation was concerned the defendant was bound to pay it. It was further found that the defendant had unreasonably delayed and postponed the negotiation and execution of the final draft of the lease beyond 12 months from November 12,1940, and cannot rely on that limitation in the contract. Judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for a sum equal to 1% cents per ton of coal mined and hauled by the defendant from the land leased from the U. S. Coal & Coke Company. The amount to June 30, 1944, was $2,531.04, for which sum with interest judgment was awarded, and the right of the plaintiff to collect future sums was declared.

Concerning the issue of misrepresentation. The evidence of the defendant was in substance that following its lease of 280 acres of coal from the plaintiff on January 17, 1935, Eversole endeavored to acquire the adjacent 500 acres owned by the U. S. Coal & Coke Company in order that he might also lease it to the defendant. Failing to do so, he began negotiations as an intermediary or as agent of the defendant to obtain a lease from the Coal • & Coke Company to the defendant. There is conflict in the testimony as to whether Eversole disclosed to the Coal & Coke Company that he was representing the de1 fendant or that he was acting for himself; also whether mr not the officers or agents of the Coal & Coke Company *74 ever agreed to accept less than 15 cents per ton royalty. These negotiations culminated in ,a contract between the plaintiff and defendant of date September 24, 1940, which is exactly like that sued on, namely, that dated November 12, 1940, except that the haulage fee to be paid Eversole was the difference between the actual royalty to be paid and 15 cents instead of 15% cents per ton, stipulated in the later lease; and a provision in the later lease in regard to leaving coal pillars in the plaintiff’s property being mined as a support for the haulway.

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Widick v. Ralston
197 S.W.2d 261 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1946)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
190 S.W.2d 873, 301 Ky. 70, 1945 Ky. LEXIS 696, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cornett-lewis-coal-co-v-eversole-kyctapphigh-1945.