CTC Inv. Co. v. Daniel Boone Coal Corporation

58 F.2d 305, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2045
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Kentucky
DecidedJuly 31, 1931
Docket2:05-misc-00033
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 305 (CTC Inv. Co. v. Daniel Boone Coal Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
CTC Inv. Co. v. Daniel Boone Coal Corporation, 58 F.2d 305, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2045 (E.D. Ky. 1931).

Opinion

ANDREW M. J. COCHRAN, District Judge.

This suit is before me on the petition of L. D. Crawford, Austin Fields, Martha Grigsby, and Louie Couch for an order directing the receiver herein to turn over or to pay, as hereinafter more fully set forth. The facts upon which this petition is based are these:

April 29,1913, the petitioner L. D. Crawford and wife, and the petitioner Austin Fields and wife, Joseph Fields and wife, Callie Fields, the petitioner Martha Grigsby and husband, and the petitioner Louie Couch executed to the North Fork Coal Company a coal mining lease for the term of 25 years on a tract of 150 acres of land in Perry county in this district. It is likely that the land was jointly owned by the lessors, one-half by the petitioner Crawford, and the other half by the other lessors, but it is possible that separate portion or portions thereof were owned by the lessors respectively. However this may be, the lease was a joint lease of this one body of land for coal mining purposes. By it the lessee covenanted and agreed to pay to the lessors a rent or royalty of ten cents per ton, and to mine and remove from the premises beginning May 1, 1914, sufficient tonnage of coal to amount to a minimum rent or royalty of $208.33, and $2,500 per year to be paid to the lessors from month to month whether the lessee removed enough coal to pay or amount to the minimal rental or not. A lien was retained to secure payment thereof on all mining machinery and mining property of the lessee placed on the leased premises, including mines, roads, tramways, railroad tracks, which should attach to all property placed on the leased premises. It was further agreed therein that one-half of the minimum rent and one-half of all the royalties should be payable monthly to the lessor Crawford, and one-half to the other lessors, or as they might direct.

The right to this lease passed by assignment to the Daniel Boone Coal Company, whose name was subsequently changed to Boone Mining Company. This happened pri- or to May 1, 1924, and prior to that date the defendant Daniel Boone Coal Corporation took possession and operated the leasehold under some arrangement with that company which continued until after May 1,1928. The lessors claimed that, by reason thereof, defendant had become liable to them for the minimum rent or royalty which was denied by it. On September 4, 1925, the lessors, except Callie Fields, who likely had died and whose interest likely had passed to others of that group, brought suit in equity in the. circuit court of Perry, county against the Daniel Boone Coal Corporation to recover $2,500, the minimum royalty for the year ending May 1, 1925, which was unpaid, and interest thereon from that date, and for the enforcement of the lien to secure same. In August, 1926, an amended petition was filed setting up the maturity of the minimum rent due May 1, 1926, and its nonpayment, and seeking judgment for it as well as that due May 1, 1925. A second amended petition was thereafter filed setting up the provision of the lease that one-half of the minimum royalty was payable to lessor Crawford and the other half to the other lessors. A third amended petition was filed after May 1,1928, setting up the maturity and nonpayment of the installments of rent due May 1,1927, and *307 May 1, 1928, and sought judgment for them and interest from date of maturity as well as the other two installments. The prayer of this pleading was for judgment against the two defendants, Daniel Boone Mining Corporation and Boone Mining Company, for the sum of $2,500, subject to a credit of $71.-80, with interest on same from May 5, 1925, and the further sum of $2,500, with interest thereon from May 1, 1926, and the further sum of $2,500, with interest thereon from May 1, 1927, and the further sum of $2,500 with interest thereon from May 1, 1928; and in their petition prayed “for all proper and equitable relief to which they may be entitled.”

The question as to the defendant Daniel Boone Coal Corporation’s liability for these four installments of minimum rent was litigated in that suit and decided adversely to it. On March 13,1929, the circuit court of Perry county rendered a judgment therein against the two defendants in favor of the petitioners herein. One of the plaintiffs therein, Joseph Fields, had died, and the suit had not been revived in time as to his interest. By that judgment the suit as to his interest, which was one-fourth of one-half, was dismissed without prejudice. It was adjudged therein that the plaintiffs named in the caption, i. e., all the plaintiffs including Joseph Fields, recovered of both' defendants “the minimum royalty actually shown-by the evidence to be due to the plaintiffs by reason of the said lease contract from May 1, 1924 to May 1, 1928, inclusive, to be divided among the plaintiffs as their interest in and as set forth hereinafter.” It was further provided that the plaintiff Crawford so recover “the sum of $1250 with interest thereon from the first day of May 1925, subject to a credit of $112.-25, one half of the amount of the coal actually mined and paid for as claimed by the defendants, to be credited ¿s of the first day of May 1925 and * * * the sum of $1250 with interest thereon from May 1, 1926 and the further sum of $1250 with interest thereon from May 1, 1927, and the further sum of $1250 with interest thereon from May 1, 1928 and his costs herein expended,” and that the plaintiffs Austin Fields, Louie Couch and Martha Grigsby so recover “the sum of $937.-50 with interest thereon from May 1, 1925 subject to a credit of $84.26 representing their three fourths of the money actually paid to them as contended by the defendants for coal actually- mined from the leased premises to be credited as of May 1,1925 and * * * the further sum of $937.50 with interest thereon from May 1, 1926, and the further sum of $937.50 and interest thereon from May 1,1927, and the further sum of $937.50 with interest thereon from May 1, 1928 and their costs herein expended, this not representing any part of the royalties which are provided in the lease to be paid to Joseph Fields, but represents three fourths of the minimum royalty, for which each and all of the plaintiffs may have execution against both the defendants * * * without prejudice to their lien hereinafter adjudged.” Concerning the lien, it was adjudged therein that plaintiffs had a lien “upon all of the property of every kind, class and character belonging to or claimed by either of the defendants * " * consisting of houses, steel mine cars, ties, mining equipment, motors, copper wire and every other class or kind of property on or used on or in connection with the mining of the coal upon the hereinafter described tract of land, whether specifically mentioned or described herein or not and * 16 * upon the said lease contract and all the rights and privileges of the defendants— to secure to them the payment of the sum herein adjudged to each of the plaintiffs.”

On the 15th of June, 1929, a writ of execution issued from the office of the clerk of the circuit court of Perry county, and on the 17th of June, 1929, it was delivered to the sheriff thereof for collection. It commanded him “of the estate of the Daniel Boone Coal Corporation and the Boone Mining Company that he cause to be made the sum of $1250 with interest from May 1, 1925 subject to a credit of $112.35 as of May 1, 1925 * * * and the further sum of $1250 with interest from May 1, 1926, and the further sum of $1250 with interest from May 1,1927 and the further sum of $1250 with interest from May 1,1928, which L. D.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 305, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2045, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ctc-inv-co-v-daniel-boone-coal-corporation-kyed-1931.