Indian Creek Coal Mining Co. v. Home Savings & Merchants Bank

249 P. 499, 80 Colo. 96
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 20, 1926
DocketNo. 11,340.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 249 P. 499 (Indian Creek Coal Mining Co. v. Home Savings & Merchants Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indian Creek Coal Mining Co. v. Home Savings & Merchants Bank, 249 P. 499, 80 Colo. 96 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Denison

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant in error bank, trustee in a corporate trust deed given bys the defendant in error, the RouttPinnacle Company, to secure its bonds, brought suit to foreclose and had a decree which directed a sale, marshaled the liens and directed their payment. The court gave the American Company a judgment for $3,000, the bank $100,000, Morris $16,000, Hendrie & Bolthoff $1,800, the Indian Creek Company, $6,000, and after quieting title in the American Company to six forty-acre tracts, hereinafter mentioned, ordered certain real estate, with which we are not concerned, to be.sold, also a large amount of coal mining equipment and personal property, including the coal mining equipment and personal property on the so-called McDowell forty, and the proceeds, after costs, expenses and taxes, to be paid on the claims in the above order. The defendant, the Indian Creek Coal Mining Company, brings error, and other defendants below assign cross error.

The following are the facts essential to a general comprehension of the case. We will later add such as are necessary to the particular understanding of each point in dispute. We abbreviate names and omit many facts which we regard as without consequence.

Mary E. and F. E. Johnson owned six forty-acre tracts of coal land or near coal land in Routt county, to-wit: the S. E. % of N. E. %, the S. W. % of N. E. %, the S. E. % of N. W. %, the N. E. % of S. W. %, the N. W. % of S. E. Vé, and the N. E. 14 of S. E. all in section 23, Tp. 6 N. R. 87 W, Routt county. April 5, 1915, they *99 leased them to the Allen Coal Company. The lease provided for royalties on coal mined, with a fixed minimum and forfeiture for nonpayment. This lease provided that machinery, buildings and equipment might be removed within 90 days after the termination of the lease in any way; that no machinery, buildings, improvements or equipment should be removed till all due to lessors was paid.

September 27,1915, the Allen Company leased the first mentioned five of these six forties to one Miller, and December 9,1915, Miller assigned his lease to the RouttPinnacle Company.

Under date of December 1, 1915, the Routt-Pinnacle Company issued its bonds secured by the mortgage above mentioned, which was the ordinary corporate mortgage, covering personal as well as real property to be acquired.

The remaining forty, the N. E. % of S. E. %, called the McDowell forty, the Allen Company let to John McDowell by lease dated February 5, 1916, but before accepting this lease, in order to protect himself from loss of the improvements he was going to make on this forty, he obtained from the Johnsons the following agreement:

“Colorado Springs, Colorado,
2-7-1916.
“John McDowell,
Dear Sir—
We the undersigned, agree to allow you to retain NE% SE%, Sec. 23, Tp. 6, N. R. 87 W., Routt Co., Colo., being 40 acres, for your use in mining your coal at a monthly rental of $100.00 @ Mo — payable monthly. To retain same as long as rent is paid & no longer.
“The above is in case our lease on our 240 acres (of which above 40 acres is part) with the Allen Coal Co. is forfeited and cancelled.”

This lease with said agreement attached was assigned by McDowell to the Indian Creek Company, plaintiff in error, and was recorded February 23, 1916.

*100 November 13,1918, the Indian Creek Company leased the McDowell forty to the Routt-Pinnacle Company with royalties, minimum and forfeiture conditions and a reservation of the personal property to secure payment and at the same time in consideration of $20,000 then and there paid, gave the latter company a bill of sale of the plant and improvement and all personal property now owned by it at said coal mine to be inventoried. The inventory was made and appears in evidence. The Routt-Pinnacle Company took possession and mingled the personal property so purchased with its other like property.

May 3, 1919, the Indian Creek Company agreed in writing to sell a cutting machine to the Routt-Pinnacle Company, retaining title until paid. The machine was delivered.

The Routt-Pinnacle Company failed to pay the Indian Creek Company its minimum royalties, and February 15, 1924, the latter company gave notice of its intention to cancel the lease, of which the bank had notice.

April 6, 1924, Morris delivered an execution against the Routt-Pinnacle Company to the sheriff. April 15, 1924, the Indian Creek Company took possession of the McDowell forty under claim of forfeiture and notified the Home Bank. The sufficiency of this possession is disputed. May 17,1924, the Morris execution was levied. May 12, 1924, Hendrie & Bolthoff delivered an execution against the Routt-Pinnacle Company to the sheriff, which was levied August 4th, following.

In March, 1924, through one Brown Cannon, the American Coal and Power Company purchased the six forties from the Johnsons. The deed was delivered in July, 1924. The American Company, July 14, 1924, served sixty days ’ notice of intent to cancel the lease to the Allen Company for nonpayment of minimum royalties. Brown Cannon did not, however, contract to purchase the unpaid royalties till July.

*101 The decree quieted the title to the six forties in the American Company on the ground that the Johnson lease to the Allen Company had been forfeited. In our former opinion we said that this was an error because it was the use of an equity power'to enforce a forfeiture. It was then and is now argued that the forfeiture had been consummated by the American Company by taking possession, and that therefore the decree did not enforce it, but merely recognized the title thereby obtained. This state of affairs seems now to be conceded in the briefs as to all but the McDowell forty, and it is also now conceded by the trustee that this leasehold except as to the McDowell tract is worthless and has been cancelled, and we shall not consider them further.

As to the forfeiture of the lease of the Johnsons to the Allen Company on the McDowell tract, the plaintiff in error challenges its validity and we think rightly. Plaintiff in error has the rights which McDowell had including the agreement against forfeiture signed by the John-sons and quoted above. The Johnsons could not wholly forfeit this lease and so their grantees could not. This contract was recorded with McDowell’s lease, so all had notice of it and the American Company bought with notice. The American Company could not forfeit for defaults in rents or royalties made before its purchase. A purchaser of the reversion after condition broken cannot forfeit for such breach. Vermont v. Soc. Prop. Gospel, 2 Paine, 545, 28 Fed. Cas. No. 16,920. Again the evidence is undisputed that the Johnsons accepted a reduced rent after the breach which waives the forfeiture. If there were later breaches the contract controls so far as plaintiff in error and the bank are concerned.

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Bluebook (online)
249 P. 499, 80 Colo. 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indian-creek-coal-mining-co-v-home-savings-merchants-bank-colo-1926.