Gorman v. Lusk

109 S.W.2d 625, 270 Ky. 350, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 65
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 25, 1937
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 109 S.W.2d 625 (Gorman v. Lusk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gorman v. Lusk, 109 S.W.2d 625, 270 Ky. 350, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 65 (Ky. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Stanley, Commissioner

Affirming.

The appeal is from a judgment cancelling a coal lease made on October 12, 1933, jointly, 'by Joseph Lusk and W. B. Lusk, and their respective wives, to Perry F. Gorman. The Klenekole Mining Company joined in the lease as the owner of the mining equipment on the premises. The rent for it was to be paid to the Lusks until a certain debt that company owed them should be satisfied. The property is described as two adjoining* tracts, one being owned by Joseph Lusk and wife, and the other by W. B. Lusk and wife. They were leased for mining as one tract. The issue was whether the lessee had forfeited the lease because: (1) He had failed to pay the stipulated royalties; or (2) had failed to work-the mine according to the mining laws of the state and modern and efficient methods; or (3) had failed to keep an experienced engineer to lay out the work of the mine and to keep a map showing what coal had been mined. The mine had not been operated for more than sixty days before the filing of the suit. The plaintiff Joseph Lusk further claimed $1,500 in damages for coal lost by *351 the improper operations' of the lessee. The issue as to the Klenekole Mining Company was the right to cancel because of a failure to pay 5 cents per ton rental for its equipment. Denying material allegations of the petition, the defendant pleaded that he had been prevented from operating the mine during March, April, and May, 1931, on account of riots and strikes and was released from paying rentals during the period by the terms of the lease. He further alleged that the Joseph Lusk tract was exhausted and there was no coal on it that could have been mined at a profit or without a loss. The attachment of the coal in railroad cars and refusal to consent to its prompt shipment necessarily caused the defendant, he alleged, to close the operations. These things were set up as justification for the grounds of forfeiture and cancellation of the lease pleaded by the plaintiffs.

As cause for a counterclaim, the defendant alleged ■that when he took over the property the mine had not been operated for a year or more and had become out of repair, and unsafe, and had an accumulation of water. The leased machinery was also in bad repair. He had necessarily expended $7,000 and three months’ time in reconditioning the mine when he discovered the exhausted condition of the Joseph Lusk tract. He had removed all the coal that he could when the suit was filed against him by Joseph Lusk and wife, wrongfully attaching twelve cars of coal of the value of $950. This was charged to have been done by collusion of all the parties and to have resulted in the defendant’s inability to conclude negotiations with other coal landowners from whose property he had the right, under the terms of the lease with the plaintiffs, to transport coal over the property leased from them. Other items of lost profits of $11,200 and attorneys’ fees of $1,500 incurred in defending the attachment made an aggregate of $20,650, for which the defendant asked judgment over ag’ainst the plaintiffs. In adjudging that the lease be canceled on account of its breach by the defendant, his counterclaim was dismissed without prejudice.

The lease provided for the monthly payment of royalty of 10 cents per ton, with the further provision:

“The said lessee shall pay to the lessors the sum of Six Hundred ($600.00) Dollars each per year from the date of this lease as a minimum *352 royalty for the coal mined from said land until said lessors’ coal is exhausted, said sums to be paid monthly on the 25th day of the month for the preceding month. This minimum royalty shall be paid regardless of whether the amount of coal produced in any one month shall amount in royalties at ten cents per ton to the installment for that month and said royalty, whether it be ten cents per ton for the coal mined or the minimum royalty, shall be paid to each of the lessors herein, j. E. Lusk and W. B. Lusk, according to the number of tons taken from his respective tract of land and the minimum royalty shall be paid to each of the lessors herein $50.00 per month each. It is- provided, however, that if the lessee should fail in any one month, after -operations are begun, to mine sufficient quantity of coal to pay said minimum royalty, although the same shall have been paid, then the lessee shall have the right in any succeeding month for one year thereafter, after the minimum for such succeeding months shall have been mined and paid for, to mine sufficient coal free from any royalty or rent to reimburse itself for the rents and royalties paid in ,such preceding month or months in excess of the coal actually mined in such preceding month or months.”

It is also provided:

“Should the lessee herein fail for thirty consecutive days to pay the rents, royalties and other payments therein agreed to be paid, this lease shall be forfeited; and it is hereby agreed that the lessee will surrender the possession of same to the lessors or their agents without notice.”

The only contingencies excusing the payment of the minimum royalty are that the lessee was prevented from operating the mine by reason of fire, flood, or riots, or insufficient railroad cars, or the exhaustion of the coal without lessee’s fault. But the right to a release from the payment because of these interruptions is protanto and is conditioned upon the lessee furnishing monthly reports to the lessors of the sums thereby lost for which credit shall be claimed. Written notice was given the lessee on August 2, 1934, that a forfeiture of the lease was claimed upon several stated grounds as provided therein, effective sixty days later.

The lease called for the two separately owned *353 tracts to be treated as one for operation, but in the matter of ^royalties, both minimum and those based upon tonnage, the two owners were to be regarded individually. The lessee so regarded the contract. Koppers Company v. Asher Coal Mining Company, 226 Ky. 492, 11 S. W. (2d) 114. For the five months ending March 31st, he was in arrears $132.50 in minimum royalties due Joseph Lusk. He had paid him only $17.50 since the beginning. In July, when suit was filed by that lessor to collect the royalties, Gorman was owing him $387.50, unless it could be said he was relieved of the obligation by the exhaustion of the coal on that portion of the mine owned by Joseph Lusk, or was excused from liability for the months of April, May, and June on account of a strike. It appears that operations ceased shortly after the coal on the railroad siding was attached in that suit. This cessation, it was claimed by the lessee, was made necessary because the railroad siding would not hold any more cars than those tied up and he had no other facilities for taking care of the coal which he might have had extracted.

We.may first consider the evidence relating to the exhaustion of the profitable coal from Joseph Lusk’s property. If as a matter of fact there was no workable seam that could be mined with profit when the lessee began operations, or if the coal became exhausted at any time during the continuance of the lease, he was relieved of the payment of the minimum royalty. Barney v. Sword, 226 Ky. 728, 11 S. W. (2d) 920; Laurence E. Tierney Land Company v. Kingston-Pocahontas Coal Company, 241 Ky. 101, 43 S. W. (2d) 517.

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Related

Hixson v. Parker
307 S.W.2d 210 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1957)
Gorman v. Lusk
134 S.W.2d 598 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1939)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 S.W.2d 625, 270 Ky. 350, 1937 Ky. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorman-v-lusk-kyctapphigh-1937.