Frenchak v. Sunbeam Coal Corp.

495 A.2d 1385, 344 Pa. Super. 37, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7580
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 19, 1985
Docket01440
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 495 A.2d 1385 (Frenchak v. Sunbeam Coal Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frenchak v. Sunbeam Coal Corp., 495 A.2d 1385, 344 Pa. Super. 37, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7580 (Pa. 1985).

Opinions

BROSKY, Judge:

This appeal is from judgment on the pleadings in an action to quiet title. Appellant contends that the instant coal lease is no longer in effect. We agree and, accordingly, reverse.

The lease provision in question provides that:
This lease shall continue for a period of five (5) years from the effective date hereof or until all of the coal which the coal operator determines can be mined, removed and sold with economy and profit has been or so long as minimum advance royalties are being tendered by the Coal Operator.

The court below interpreted this clause to mean that appellee could continue to have the lease in effect indefinitely into the future by virtue of paying minimum advance royalties. Indeed, the instant lease has been in effect for ten years and no coal has ever been mined. We cannot accept this contraction of the lease.

The lease provides for termination upon the happening of three events: (1) Passage of five years; (2) Determination by the coal operator that no more coal can be mined, removed, and sold profitably; (3) Cessation of payment of [40]*40minimum advance royalties by the coal operator. By providing, however, for termination upon the happening of (1) “or” (2) “or” (3), the lease must be interpreted as meaning that it shall terminate upon the happening of any one of the three conditions.

Words are to be given their obvious and plain meaning unless the intention is clear that a different meaning is required. Davis v. City of Philadelphia, 153 Pa.Super. 645, 650, 35 A.2d 77, 80 (1943). The pertinent dictionary definition of “or” is “choice between alternative things, states, or courses.” Webster’s Unabridged Third New International Dictionary.

In Davis, the appellant argued that the word “or” in a statute should be interpreted in the conjunctive in the phrase “occupied by ... or under his control,” making both control and occupancy necessary. The court held otherwise, giving the word “or” its ordinary disjunctive meaning. The same reasoning applies in the case before us. To find otherwise would require interpreting the lease in a manner which would require absurd and unconscionable results in different factual situations. For example, construing the lease as continuing in effect until all three of the conditions have been met (as the lower court evidently construed it in order to reach the result it reached), a coal operator might never pay any royalty, yet the lease would continue in effect until at least five years had passed and the coal operator had made a determination that coal could no longer be mined, removed and sold profitably — a determination that might never be made by the coal operator. Another example would be if the coal operator made the determination that coal could no longer be mined, removed and sold profitably at the end of six months, and also quit paying the royalties; under the lower court’s construction, the lease would nevertheless remain in effect for the balance of the five years.

Giving the word “or” its ordinary meaning, we find that the lease provides for termination upon the happening [41]*41of any one of the three conditions. Since five years have passed since the effective date of the agreement, the lease is no longer in effect, and the action to quiet title should have terminated in appellant’s favor.

Another, independent, consideration leads to the same conclusion. Under the lease as interpreted by the trial court, appellee could commence strip mining operations at his discretion as long as he had paid the minimum advance royalties. As a consequence, appellant would be financially unable to use the land for anything but certain types of agricultural purposes. The land could only be utilized as fields to grow crops. Even this limited use could not include irrigation or the planting of delayed harvest crops such as orchards, vines, etc. The reason for this is clear. Any investment in the use or development of the land — including buildings, irrigation systems, trees — could be scooped up by appellee’s giant coal shovel at any time. With this possibility always present, appellant could not develop his land or utilize it in any but a very limited fashion. This position is not favored in law. “It is against the policy of the law to unduly restrict the use of land so that the owner is deprived of the usual rights, privileges, and incidents of ownership and possession.” Mahrt v. First Church of Christ, Scientist, 142 N.E.2d 567, 578, 75 O.L.A. 5, 19 (1955).

The Supreme Court of Oregon has also spoken on this point: “[B]ut the rule is that, because of the public policy favoring untrammeled land use, such restrictions are construed most strongly against the covenant and will not be enlarged by construction.” Aldridge et ux. v. Saxey et ux., 242 Or. 238, 242, 409 P.2d 184, 186 (1965). Construing the lease as appellee would have us do results in this severely circumscribed useability of the land. Thus, for this additional reason, we find the lease properly interpreted as appellant suggests. A third related reason also favors this interpretation.

[42]*42Under certain circumstances, the law will imply a duty to mine, even in the face of minimum advance royalties.1 In Pennsylvania law, a presumption is created by this form of contract.

When this contract was entered into, the defendants were the owners of the coal under seventy-five acres of land; the coal was in place; they wanted to get and enjoy the value of it; if plaintiff had wanted to buy and indefinitely leave it in place for future operation, each party would have dealt on the basis of a lump sum for the coal under the tract, or at so much per acre for it, and would have arranged for payment, just as they would have done if the subject of the contract had been land. Each might, as preliminary to the contract, have sought by surveys to ascertain the proximate quantity in place, and thus have fixed in their judgment the value, but the number of tons and value per ton would have been no express part of the written contract; a round sum for the whole or per acre would have represented the price the sellers were willing to accept and the buyers to give. But although the contract was a sale of the coal in place, they did not bargain on the basis of a lump sum. Why? Because the plaintiff was not a purchaser of coal or coal lands to hold for appreciation in price, in view of a future sale for a round sum or a lease to others at a profit; it was an operator who desired to mine and market the coal at a profit, intending to operate immediately; therefore, as in all such operations, it is more convenient to pay while the operation is going on, for it involves an expenditure of far less capital, consequently a less fixed charge.

The Lehigh & Wilkes-Barre Coal Co. v. Wright et al., 177 Pa. 387, 397-8, 35 A. 919, 921 (1896). See also Powell v. Burroughs, 54 Pa. 329 (1867).

This implied duty to mine is dependent upon the amount of the minimum advance royalty vis-a-vis the potential in[43]*43come to be produced if the property is mined.2

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Frenchak v. Sunbeam Coal Corp.
495 A.2d 1385 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
495 A.2d 1385, 344 Pa. Super. 37, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frenchak-v-sunbeam-coal-corp-pa-1985.