Flavelle v. Red Jacket Consolidated Coal & Coke Co.

96 S.E. 600, 82 W. Va. 295, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 87
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 96 S.E. 600 (Flavelle v. Red Jacket Consolidated Coal & Coke 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
Flavelle v. Red Jacket Consolidated Coal & Coke Co., 96 S.E. 600, 82 W. Va. 295, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 87 (W. Va. 1918).

Opinion

Lynch, Judge :

Plaintiffs owned two tracts of land in Mingo County containing several seams of coal deposits, one of which known as the Upper Seam they leased to W. R. Hughes and Joseph S. Lipton November 1, 1897, “for coal mining and coal coking purposes only” for a period of twenty-seven years, or until all the workable coal of that seam is mined and removed from the leased premises. For the coal so mined and removed the lessees contracted to pay the lessors quarterly nine cents a ton of 2240 pounds, and for “slack” coal five cents a ton in the event only that the lessees find a market therefor, and any coal mined and used upon the premises by the lessees or furnished by them to' their employes and not weighed, to be accounted for and paid for at the same time at ninety cents for every, one thousand tons of coal mined during the three calendar months preceding the said quarterly payments.

The lights conferred by the lease passed by mesne assignments to the defendant and appellant, Red Jacket Consolidated Coal & Coke Company, June 21, 1904, and it assumed the obligations imposed by the lease upon the original lessees, [297]*297Hughes and Lipton, and thereafter went upon the land and began to prepare for mining operations thereon, and when these were completed also entered actively upon the performance of the lease covenants, which being performed fully, as it claims, appellant proposed to retire from and abandon the premises and of that purpose notified the lessors by letter dated July 30, 1912, to which notification the lessors through C. B. Taylor, agent for himself and co-plaintiffs, replied August 6, 1912, and after acknowledging' the receipt of the letter used this language: “Our engineers report to us that you have left at least 50,000 tons of available, merchantable coal standing which ought to be mined and taken away, and I do now, on behalf of myself and my co-lessors, demand that you at onc.e proceed to mine and take away said coal according to the directions and provisions of said lease, and I do hereby notify you that if the work of mining said coal is not commenced within one week after receipt of this letter, which you are to take in lieu of the formal notice provided by the clause of said lease above quoted, I shall demand that the matter be arbitrated, as in said lease provided.”

Disregarding the demand to proceed with mining operations for the removal of the residue of the seam of coal leased and the invocation of the arbitration provision of the lease, the appellant did not resume mining operations but abandoned the enterprise. The lessors then brought this suit and obtained a decree ascertaining 200,318 tons of the leased seam as the quantity of coal remaining unmined and unremoved therefrom, though minable, available and maiketable according to the requirements of the lease; fixing the value thereof at $18,028.62, computing the tonnage at the greater rate stipulated in the lease; apportioning the amount among the lessors pursuant to an agreement among them, $6,760.73 to John Dundas Flavelle and Mary Ann Flavelle, and $11,-267.89 to R. N. Taylor, administrator of Charles B. Taylor, deceased, and Barbara J. Taylor; and the operating lessee has appealed.

A preliminary question, one that strikes at the very foundation of the right of the plaintiffs to maintain the suit, is presented. It involves that provision of the contract whereby [298]*298they promised and agreed to provide and furnish the lessees with an accurate map or plat based upon an actual survey of the tract and' showing its corners and the calls of the deed to enable them to avoid encroaching upon the coal of the same seam within adjacent tracts, and vjdth greater caution and facility to effectuate their mining operations, and concluding with the express declaration: “And no forfeiture or penalty shall be incurred (by the lessees) under the provisions of this lease, unless the lessors furnish said map and description of said lands above specified. ’ ’

With this requirement, it is said, the lessors made no attempt to comply; but, so far as we can discover fi-om the voluminous record, the lessees did not' at any time during the mining operations conducted by them on the leased premises demand such survey and map. There Avas of course no real necessity for such demand since the contract does not require it, but if the survey and map were indispensable to the proper mining of the coal or to enable them to guard against the danger of incurring the statutory penalty for mining coal Avithin the boundary area forbidden by statute, and protection seems to have been the real reason for the requirement, such, a demand; though not expressly required, would doubtless have been heeded and the map produced. At least, compliance therewith Avould haAe aided the lessees to avoid encroachments upon the rights of coal owners and operators of the same seam on adjacent lands and also to prevent a violation of the express mandate of the statute. But Avhether the survey was or Avas not made or the map or plat furnished, no proof shows Avith certainty. The original brief of the appellant does not point to any positive testimony upon that subject, as our rules necessitate, nor does the reply brief respond to that of the appellees AAdierein it calls attention to the inconclusive nature of the testimony introduced by the appellant to show failure to furnish these papers. The testimony is only that the witnesses do not remember seeing them. Nor is there any serious attempt to show such failure, and the entire eight or nine years of active mining operations continued Avithout their production, if indeed neither was furnished, and during that time no complaint Avas made that this [299]*299requirement was disregarded until this controversy arose. Besides, as appellees contend, their failure ought not now to be permitted to excuse performance of the obligation assumed by the appellant to mine and remove all the available, workable, minable and merchantable coal of the upper seam contained within the leased premises, if it be true that appellant has left unmined large areas of coal identifiable by these descriptive terms. It prosecuted the work it engaged to do just as if the map were spread out before it; nor was it necessary in the prosecution of the work except as the operations approached the statutory five-foot boundary lines of the tract, within which coal could not lawfully be mined by any operator. The only apparent injury that resulted from the omission was a negligent encroachment upon adjacent coal lands during these operations.

The next three assignments for convenience are considered and determined together since they involve the same clause of the lease, the clause that provides'for notice and arbitration. After the covenant and agreement of the lessees to work the mine and mine the coal according to the most approved and suitable methods of modern mining and to submit for approval as soon as practical to Charles B.

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Bluebook (online)
96 S.E. 600, 82 W. Va. 295, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 87, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flavelle-v-red-jacket-consolidated-coal-coke-co-wva-1918.