Gilreath v. Carbon Hill & L. C. Coal Co.

47 So. 298, 157 Ala. 153, 1908 Ala. LEXIS 159
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 30, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 47 So. 298 (Gilreath v. Carbon Hill & L. C. Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gilreath v. Carbon Hill & L. C. Coal Co., 47 So. 298, 157 Ala. 153, 1908 Ala. LEXIS 159 (Ala. 1908).

Opinion

SIMPSON, J.

— The bill in this case was filed by the appellant against appellees — the Carbon Hill & Lost Creek Coal Company, P. M. Long, as executor of B. M. Long, deceased and Peyton Norvell — seeking to cancel a lease, to require said coal company to deliver up the leased premises, also to recover amounts due by said company for royalties, and to enjoin said company from operating the coal mines on the leased premises. A preliminary injunction was issued, and was dissolved, on the coming in of the answer, and on affidavits filed by both parties. The appeal is from the decree dissolving the injunction.

The parties to the lease were B. M. Long and John W. King, who leased to Evan Bynum and J. W. Shepard. Complainant has* become the owner of the interest of said J. W. King, and said coal company is the successor of said Bynum and Shepard, the second parties. The lease grants to said second parties all the coal in a certain tract of land, with the exclusive right to mine and carry away the same, also the right to use-timber, etc., to have and to hold for 20 years, “for a rent or royalty upon all salable coal and all coal utilized for cooking and other purposes,” for which they were to pay “on all salable coal up to 50 tons per day a royalty of 7 cents per ton, and on all of said coal in excess of 50 tons per [155]*155day a royalty of 5 cents per ton.” After the expiration of 12 months they were to pay at least on 50 tons per working day for 2 months, and afterwards on 100 tons per working day. It is provided in the lease that “if default be made in payment of any portion of said rent or royalty when due, for more than 60 days thereafter, the said parties of the first part, their agent or attorney, may re-enter and take possession, and, at their option, terminate this lease.” There are no stipulations as to how the mining business is to be conducted.

The bill alleges that said coal company is insolvent, that it has not operated said property since March 2, 1894, and, excepting a few small payments, has paid no royalty since that time, but a few months ago said coal company re-entered on said property and commenced to mine, and complainant has refused his consent to such operation. The bill also states, on information and belief (without any allegation that a receiver had been appointed), that said coal company had practically abandoned said lease “upon the appointment of said receiver” ; that in March, 1904, complainant notified said coal company that he elected to declare said lease forfeited, in accordance with the contract, and demanded possession of his undivided half interest; that the amount due complainant exceeds the value of the property of the said coal company; that neither said company nor said P. H. Norvell has the ability to pay the amount due. It also alleges that respondents are not operating the mines in a proper and tenantlike manner, but are exposing it to waste, so that if they are allowed to remain they will eventually consume all of the coal on the land. The bill also alleges that P. M. Long, as the administrator of the estate of B. M. Long, deceased, does not join in this bill, but has made a new contract with said coal company, by which additional rights have accrued to said estate; that Peyton Norvell is the president of said [156]*156coal company and has control thereof; that complainant has commenced an action of unlawful detainer against said coal company for the recovery of said property, but, if the injunction is not granted, irreparable injury will result to complainant before the termination of said suit.

The answer admits the lease, but states that there is a dispute between the heirs of John W. King, as to the ownership of the half-interest in said lands — the heirs of said John W. King denying that the complainant, Belton Gilreath, as trustee, is the owner of the same— and that there is now pending in the circuit court a suit between said heirs and said Gilreath to determine the ownership of said interest, and that said heirs have notified respondent not to pay a royalty or rent to said Gilreath. It denies that said coal company is insolvent, but states that the only debt against it is $1,692.03, due for royalties or rent, to the owner of the half interest formerly belonging to John W. King, and that it is able and willing to pay the same, when it is made known who owns said interest; that said coal company was placed in the hands of a receiver March 2,1894, but that said receiver was discharged October 12, 1903, and the property and assets of said company returned to it, all debts against it having been paid; that during the time of said receivership a smaller amount of coal was mined, and said debts accumulated, but that since that time respondent has been working said mine, and has paid all rents or royalties due, except said $1,692.03. It denies that it is not working said mines in a proper and skilled manner, or in disregard of the life of the property. It admits making the new lease contract with P. M. Long, as executor of B. M. Long, but denies that said Long-will derive any additional rights or benefits from it, and alleges that, as the original lease was made by said King and said B. M. Long (now deceased), said Gilreath, even [157]*157if he owns the half-interest of King, cannot have said contract canceled, unless his complaint is joined in by said P.. M. Long, as executor of B. M. Long, it admits the institution of the unlawful detainer suit, but states that it has been continued from time to time by the plaintiff, and has been practically abandoned by him; denies that, if respondent is allowed to continue the operation of said mines, irreparable injury will accrue to the complainant; but, on the contrary, alleges that since mines are below water level, and kept dry only by heavy pumping machinery used in connection with its mining-business, if said operations cease, said mines would be rapidly flooded, and valuable property of the respondent therein would suffer irreparable injury and probably total loss. The answer incorporates demurrers to the bill.

The appellant filed the affidavit of one Turner, a civil and mining engineer, to the effect that he had examined the mines in question; that they are not being operated with a due regard to the life of the property and according to approved mining- methods, in that the coal is taken too closely, “not enough of pillar being left to properly support the roof and prevent breaks,” and that, in his opinion, the result of such methods will be that “water will collect in said mine, through breaks in the surface, making it difficult to keep the same pumped out, and other falls are liable and likely to occur, which will cause flooding of the mine and make further operation of the mine difficult (if not impossible), and involve great expense; also that there may result loss of coal, and loss to the owners, in that said opening may have to be entirely abandoned and another opening made at great expense;” also that said water might be communicated to adjacent openine-s: also that the “entries therein were not driven on sights,” and the opening, as [158]*158a whole, is a “haphazard affair, as against a model one” and that, as a result of the manner in which said mines are being worked, “a large quantity of the coal adjacent to and ahead of the development as now being made cannot be taken from the mines, but will be lost to the owners.” Gilreath himself, and one J. D. Roper, in their affidavits, in general terms concur with Turner, and the former states that the property of said coal company is assessed for taxation at $1,800, and the latter that said property is not worth over $5,000.

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Bluebook (online)
47 So. 298, 157 Ala. 153, 1908 Ala. LEXIS 159, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gilreath-v-carbon-hill-l-c-coal-co-ala-1908.