Hood Industries, Inc. v. King
This text of 255 So. 2d 912 (Hood Industries, Inc. v. King) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
HOOD INDUSTRIES, INC.
v.
H.A. KING and Robert Wales Kiser, Executor of the Estate of L.S. Kiser, Deceased.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
Carter, Mitchell & Robinson, Jackson, for appellant.
Tubb & Stevens, West Point, John P. Fox, Houston, for appellees.
GILLESPIE, Chief Justice:
Suit was filed in the Chancery Court of Noxubee County, Mississippi, by H.W. *913 King and Robert W. Kiser, executor of the estate of L.S. Kiser, deceased, against Hood Industries, Inc., (Hood) to recover royalties on clay used in the manufacture of brick. From a decree in favor of the complainants, this appeal was taken. We affirm.
On November 19, 1955, H.A. King and L.S. Kiser entered into a written memorandum agreement with Paul L. James and Herbert Dickson. This memorandum recited that King and Kiser had located certain strata of clay deposits in Kemper and Noxubee Counties; that James and Dickson were interested in purchasing and manufacturing said clay; and that in consideration for showing said clay deposits to James and Dickson, and in the event James and Dickson desired to lease said clay for the purpose of manufacturing the same, King and Kiser would have the exclusive right to handle the leasing of clay in order that they might make a profit out of it. King and Kiser agreed that if they located any additional clay in said area they would give James and Dickson the refusal of purchasing it.
On December 14, 1955, James and Dickson organized a corporation by the name of Superior Clay and Products Corporation (Superior), and on February 26, 1956, the contract upon which this suit is based was entered into between King and Kiser and Superior. The essential provisions of this contract are as follows.
Paragraph 1 recites that King and Kiser are familiar with the topography and geological aspects of the land areas in Kemper and Noxubee Counties, and all counties contiguous thereto from years of prospecting and exploration. King and Kiser agreed with Superior to engage in the leasing of lands in said counties for the mining of clay, and to assign such leases as they already had to Superior and obtain future leases in the name of Superior.
Paragraph 2 provides as follows:
The party of the second part (Superior) covenants and agrees that it, or its assigns or successors, shall not engage in leasing of such lands for said purposes in the aforementioned counties in competition with the parties of the first part (King and Kiser); however, it is distinctly understood and agreed that in the event the parties of the first part shall be unable, for any reason, to lease any lands which the officers and directors of Superior Clay & Products Corporation find desirable and necessary for its corporate purpose, and which it may lease by direct negotiation with the lessor or his agent, then it shall have the right so to lease, but in such event parties of first part will receive royalty from same at the same per cent as other lands.
Paragraph 3 provides that all leases obtained for Superior shall be assigned to King and Kiser in the event Superior shall determine said leases are unnecessary or of unsuitable nature for its purposes. Superior agreed that neither it nor its officers or employees would disclose to any person any confidential information regarding the location or nature of clay deposits prior to leasing by King and Kiser.
Paragraph 4 provides that Superior agreed to diligently mine all clay deposits so leased insofar as practicable with the market conditions available to it, and such leases, if assigned, shall be made subject to the compensatory provisions hereinafter specified.
Paragraph 5 provides as follows:
[Superior] contracts and agrees that the parties of the first part (King and Kiser) shall be compensated by it as follows: (1) payment of a royalty of fifty cents ($.50) per ton of 2000 pounds on all kolin or high grade clay suitable for chinaware, fine ceramic wall or floor tile or pottery ware, and like products, produced, processed and sold as such; (2) payment of a royalty of twenty-five ($.25) per ton of 2,000 pounds on all clays of every type used, processed or raw, sold as brick clay or its equivalent.
*914 Paragraph 6 provides that Superior shall deduct from the royalty specified in paragraph 5 the royalty due the lessor, paying the same over to the said lessor directly.
Paragraph 7 reads as follows:
This contract shall continue as long as parties of second part or their successors or assigns continue mining operations on the lands covered by this contract; and/or the life of the parties of the first part and their heirs; and in event said mining operations are discontinued for a period of as much as six (6) months, then said leases are to be assigned to parties of first part.
Pursuant to this agreement, Superior secured ten leases for the mining of clay in Noxubee County, embracing about 1100 acres of land. However, no clay was mined and no bricks were manufactured, because Superior was unable to finance the construction of a brick plant.
On December 20, 1956, Atlas Tile and Brick Company, Inc., (Atlas) was chartered by the State of Mississippi with substantially the same management as Superior. All ten tracts of land under lease to Superior were assigned to Atlas in return for the issuance by Atlas to Superior of 6500 shares of Atlas' capital stock. Atlas issued a prospectus for the sale of stock which included a letter to Atlas from a geologist. This letter stated that tests on the ten tracts of land leased by Superior and acquired by Atlas contained clay suitable for the manufacture of tile and brick and of sufficient quantity for the removal of 500,000 tons annually over a period of approximately forty years. Thereafter, Atlas Tile & Brick Company, Inc., changed its name to Atlas Brick Company, and on July 31, 1965, Atlas Brick Company merged with and into Mississippi Industries, Inc. During the pendency of this suit, the corporate name of Mississippi Industries was changed to Hood Industries, Inc.
After procuring the ten leases by assignment from Superior and the assumption of the contract between King and Kiser on the one hand and Superior on the other, Atlas proceeded with a public stock sale and raised funds for the operation of a brick manufacturing plant. Atlas secured the supervision of the plant and began production in 1960, and since that date the plant has operated continuously as a plant engaged in the manufacture of brick.
Atlas and its successors tried on several occasions to negotiate for a cancellation or revision of the contract with King and Kiser, but King and Kiser would not agree to any change. Atlas, and later Mississippi Industries, paid King and Kiser the royalties thereafter for the clay mined from the lands covered by the ten leases originally obtained by King and Kiser, until 1965, when Mississippi Industries entered into an oral agreement to mine clay from the Butler-Hubbard tract adjoining the lands embraced in the original ten leases. Mississippi Industries mined clay from the Butler-Hubbard tract until complaint was made by King and Kiser, after which they resumed mining on the lands embraced within the ten original leases. Negotiations had been going on intermittently between King and Kiser on the one hand and Mississippi Industries on the other for a considerable time with reference to the overriding royalty.
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255 So. 2d 912, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-industries-inc-v-king-miss-1971.