Evangelinos v. Ohio Division of Reclamation

691 N.E.2d 365, 117 Ohio App. 3d 720
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 27, 1997
DocketNo. 95-BA-27.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 691 N.E.2d 365 (Evangelinos v. Ohio Division of Reclamation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Evangelinos v. Ohio Division of Reclamation, 691 N.E.2d 365, 117 Ohio App. 3d 720 (Ohio Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

Gene Donofrio, Judge.

Appellant, Ohio Division of Reclamation, and intervenor-appellant, R & F Coal Company (“intervenor”), appeal on grounds of res judicata an April 20, 1995 decision of the Reclamation Board of Review, wherein the board reversed the decision of appellant and denied intervenor’s application for renewal of a permit to mine coal within three hundred feet of appellees Constantine and Toula Evangelinos’s dwelling, based upon a determination that a recorded waiver attached to appellees’ deed was invalid.

The record reveals that prior to April 21, 1961, the property was owned by Ruth A. Trimmer. Trimmer conveyed the property to Seaway Coal on April 21, 1961. On February 23, 1965 Seaway severed surface and mineral rights to this property in a conveyance of surface rights to Walton and Winnie Skaggs, while retaining mineral rights through a reservation in the deed. This reservation provided, in part:

*722 “EXCEPTING from the hereinbefore described premises all, each, and every vein, seam, or strata of coal in, or underlying said premises; TOGETHER with the right, easement, privilege and permission to mine, remove, * * * or to utilize any or all of the coal hereby excepted, * * * by the open-pit, stripping, underground or any other method or practice * * * the right to enter into, upon, under, over and across said lands and premises hereinbefore described, at any and all times, * * * for the mining, removal * * * or utilization of any other coal now owned, leased or hereafter acquired by GRANTOR, * * * the right to construct, maintain, replace and remove any structures, roads, tramroads, power lines, dams, drains, machinery, equipment, appliances, or other facilities in or upon said lands and premises necessary, usual or required for treating, preparing, processing, or utilization of the coal hereby excepted ■* * * all without liability to the GRANTEES, their heirs and assigns, for damages resulting directly or remotely therefrom or compensation therefor, including any damages to crops, buildings, or structures now or hereafter placed thereon, * * * whether caused by the mining and removal of the coal hereby excepted, or other coal now owned or hereafter acquired by GRANTOR, its successors or assigns * * *.
“By the acceptance of this deed, GRANTEES, for themselves, their successors and assigns, hereby expressly waive and release the GRANTOR, its successors and assigns, from any and all liability, claims, demands, damages, actions or causes of action, present or future, in any manner arising or directly or remotely resulting from the stripping, mining, removal, draining, ventilating, transporting, treating, preparing, processing or utilization of any or all of the coal hereby excepted, or other coal now owned or hereafter acquired by GRANTOR, its successors or assigns, or the use or possession of said lands and premises, or the exercise or enjoyment by the GRANTOR, its successors and assigns, of any or all of the rights, privileges, easements and permissions herein excepted.”

On March 8, 1977, Skaggs transferred the surface rights to Thomas J. Gibson. A specific exception regarding Seaway’s mineral rights reservation was contained in this deed. Gibson subsequently transferred these surface rights to appellees on November 23, 1984. The mineral rights reservation was specifically noted in the deed as follows:

“EXCEPTING the coal and mining rights waiver of liability as set forth in the deed recorded at Vol. 567, page 486, Belmont County Deed Records, and being the reservations for the benefit of Seaway Coal Company, its successors and assigns.”

The record also provides that Seaway transferred all rights and ownership in the mineral rights associated with the property to Shell Mining Company on August 30, 1985. Shell Mining Company executed a coal lease and assignment with R & F Coal Company, intervenor herein, on December 10, 1986. This lease *723 included mining rights for minerals associated with the property. Intervenor is a wholly owned subsidiary of Shell Mining Company.

On June 18, 1987, appellant issued a fixed-term permit, effective until June 17, 1992, for intervenor to mine coal on the property. This court overruled appellees’ appeal in Evangelinos v. Div. of Reclamation (Sept. 20, 1989), Belmont App. No. 88-B-12, unreported, 1989 WL 109497 (“Evangelinos /”), holding that the mineral rights exception contained in appellees’ surface rights deed was a valid waiver under Ohio Adm.Code 1501:13-3-04(D). Due to a downturn in the coal industry and subsequent litigation, intervenor did not commence mining upon issuance of the permit. Since R.C. 1513.07(A)(3) states that a permit shall expire if mining is not commenced within three years of issuance, appellant granted extensions, upon application by intervenor, on May 7, 1990, May 9, 1991 and May 4, 1992, staying expiration of the permit until its scheduled expiration in June 1992.

On December 16, 1992, appellant approved intervenor’s application for a renewal permit. This permit was issued retroactive to June 17, 1992 and was to expire June 16, 1997. The board subsequently reversed appellant’s decision, entering its findings, conclusions, and order on April 20, 1995, wherein the board determined that a 1988 amendment to Ohio Adm.Code 1501:13-3-04(D) required that a waiver satisfy a higher standard of specificity than had been required under the unamended Ohio Administrative Code provision applied in deciding appellees’ prior appeal of the 1987 permit application. In reaching this decision, the board concluded that it had also misconstrued the waiver language in the prior appeal as being sufficiently broad to encompass a valid waiver of the three-hundred-foot restriction by appellees herein. The board also overruled appellant’s assertion that the prior rulings of the board and of this court in Evangelinos I should have preclusive effect on relitigation of the present matter. Pursuant to R.C. 1513.14 and App.R. 4(A), intervenor and appellant filed these timely appeals on May 18,1995 and May 22,1995, respectively.

Intervenor-appellant presents one assignment of error, which provides:

“The board erred as a matter of law when it failed to give preclusive effect to a prior judgment involving the same issue and the same parties.”

Appellant also presents one assignment of error, which provides:

“The board erred as a matter of law when it failed to give preclusive effect to an appellate court’s judgment involving the same issue and same parties.”

As the assignments of error address the same issue of law, they will be addressed together. Since the parties involved in Evangelinos I and the present appeal are the same, the sole issue presented is whether the issues decided by *724 this court in Evangelinos I were sufficiently similar to the issues presented in appellees’ current appeal to bar relitigation by reason of res judicata.

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691 N.E.2d 365, 117 Ohio App. 3d 720, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/evangelinos-v-ohio-division-of-reclamation-ohioctapp-1997.