Harlan Coal & Land Co. v. King Harlan Mining Co.

232 S.W. 650, 192 Ky. 111, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 47
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 21, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 232 S.W. 650 (Harlan Coal & Land Co. v. King Harlan Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harlan Coal & Land Co. v. King Harlan Mining Co., 232 S.W. 650, 192 Ky. 111, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 47 (Ky. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Sampson

— Affirming.

The Harlan Coal and Land 'Company, incorporated, is the grantee and successor in title of the New York and Pennsylvania Coal & Coke Co., incorporated, to a large boundary of coal land in Harlan county, Kentucky, which is covered by the coal lease out of which this litigation grew and is the real party in interest on the side of the plaintiff-appellant, and shall ble hereinafter called appellant or lessor.

Appellee, King Harlan Company, incorporated, is the lessee by assignment from King Harlan Mining Company, incorporated, of the said coal lands of appellant, on a 10 cent royalty basis, and will be referred to hereinafter as the lessee and appellee.

By this action lessor seeks to recover of lessee several named sums, due, it is charged, at different times for [112]*112royalty-, amounting in the aggregate to $2,601. The answer of the lessee denied its indebtedness to lessor in any -sum, and by counterclaim, in a second paragraph, asks judgment over against the plaintiff, lessor, for $2,-625.32 alleged to be the balance due lessee on the cost of the construction of the bridge piers which is the basis of this controversy. At the conclusion of the- evidence for the plaintiff-lessor the court, on motion, directed á verdict for the defendant-lessee upon the whole case, including the counterclaim 'for $2,625.32. Judgment being entered accordingly the plaintiff appeals.

After the execution and acceptance of the said coal lease in 1913, all parties engaged themselves in trying to get rights of way for a spur railroad to be projected from the main line of the L. & N. E. E. situated on the north side of Cumberland river to the river’s edge, at which point it was- proposed to erect a coal tipple and other loading equipment, to which would be carried by aerial tram the coal from the leased property located on the south side of the river, where it would be loaded into railroad gons for shipment to market. Some time was spent in an unsuccessful effort to -obtain rights of way on the north side of the river. Finally Dotson, the president of the lessor company, by letter, proposed to the lessee that a plan be worked out by which the railroad could be carried across- the river five-eighths- of a mil-e to the leased premises and thus- obviate the necessity of obtaining so much space for rights of way on the north side of the river, as well as the expíense of erecting and maintaining the proposed aerial tramway from the leased property on the south -side of the river to the tipple on the- north -side of the river. This suggestion was carried out, but in order to do so the railroad company required the lessor and lessee to aid in the construction of the bridge across the river by paying the -costs of the piers and ctertain other necessary work. As- the lessor -company owned other coal land up- Yocum creek, the direction in which the proposed railroad was to be built, it was anxious to have the bridge and railroad cross the river and to induce the lessee company to do a certain' part of the work, proposed to the lessee that it, lessor, would pay the cost of the bridge piers by either advancing -the money to pay for the construction work or by allowing less-ee to retain a -certain per dent, of royalties for coal mined from the lease until the cos-t of the piers was restored to -the lessee. This agreement was reached by correspon[113]*113dence. A number of letters and telegrams which passed between tbe lessor and lessee were introduced in evidence at the trial by the plaintiff, and are relied upon by it to prove that the money which lessor agreed to advance for the construction of the bridge piers was merely a loan which lessee was to repay with interest within a reasonable time when its necessities for ready money were less importunate. The lessee, however, insists that lessor agreed, in consideration of lessee doing certain other things to the advantage of lessor, to build or cause the .said bridge piers to be built at its ¡exclusive expense and without hope of reimbursement from lessee.

This litigation, therefore, may be determined by gathering from the correspondence between tbe parties the contract into which they voluntarily entered and enforcing the same according to its term and the law governing such agreements. In order that the contract may be understood we copy the letters which ¡evidence it, beginning with the first one by Dotson, April 6, 1915, suggesting that the bridge be built:

“Wise, Virginia, April 6th, 1915.
“Mr. A. H. Wood,
Petros, Tenn.
“Diear Sir: — I wrote you Saturday relative to completing rights of way. Mr. Lewis tells me the Ages creek people were to have a meeting in Knoxville today and he hoped they would then be in a position to grant you a satisfactory tipple site, which I hope they will. It has occurred to m¡e that some arrangements advantageous to us all might be made to build a bridge across the river, to your plant j-ointly, and you could locate your tipple on that side of the river. If the L. & N. would furnish the steel, we could build it jointly and it would not cost you much more, if any,- than to put in ¡a conveyor across the river. Will be glad to know what you think of it, but don’t let this interfere with the present negotiations for tipple site from Mr. Lewis.
“When do you expept to go to Harlan again? I expect to go over there again in a 'few days to complete the right of way.
“Yours truly, N. B. Dotson.”

[114]*114Following’ the foregoing letter by Dotson negotiations were begun between lessor and lessee looking to the construction of the bridge and railroad across the river. The railroad company had not agreed to the plan and both the lessor and lessee undertook to enlist it in the enterprise. As showing how the negotiations with the railroad were carried on we copy a letter from Wood, acting for th© lessee, addressed to Dotson, who represented the lessor, dated June 8,1915. It reads:

“Louisville, Ky., 6/8, 1915.
“Mr. N. B. Dotson,
Wise, Ya.
‘ ‘ Dear Mr. Dotson:
“We had an extended conference with Mr. Smith today, the result being set out in letter addressed to you and I which Mr. Williams is sending you copy of. I will write you 'tomorrow from Petros in detail in reference to same.
“Yours truly, A. H. Wood.”

From a letter of May 22, 1915, written by Dotson for the lessor we take the following:

“P. S. — Since writing the above I have yours of the 20th inst. I would be glad to meet-you and the L. & N. chief engineer in Harlan as you suggest, but I have a bad attack o'f rumatis and can hardly get around and can not make the trip. In my letter to Mr. Smith I quoted your letter to me in reference to putting the road across the river for us and offered further inducements, which I infer from the wire you have from the engineer in chief to you is satisfactory to them and the engineer I presume will have the location across the river made while he is there. I think it much to your interest as well as ours to have the road built across the river, and hope yon can meet him on the ground at an early date, and show him just what you want, which I hope will be satisfactory to him.

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Bluebook (online)
232 S.W. 650, 192 Ky. 111, 1921 Ky. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harlan-coal-land-co-v-king-harlan-mining-co-kyctapp-1921.