Kingston Coal Co. v. Glen Alden Coal Co.

168 A. 677, 312 Pa. 546, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 749
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 12, 1933
DocketAppeal, 131
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 168 A. 677 (Kingston Coal Co. v. Glen Alden Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kingston Coal Co. v. Glen Alden Coal Co., 168 A. 677, 312 Pa. 546, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 749 (Pa. 1933).

Opinion

*549 Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Frazer,

September 25, 1933:

Defendant appeals from judgment entered for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense in an action of assumpsit upon an arbitrator’s award. The amount of the judgment was $521,755.79 with interest, Avhich represented payments due for coal mined and delivered by plaintiff to defendant during six years preceding 1929, together with interest thereon. Arbitration was had under the provisions of a contract executed in 1916 between appellee and appellant’s predecessor, the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad Company, hereinafter referred to as Railroad. By the terms of this agreement, appellee was to mine and deliver to Railroad coal owned by the latter underlying specified tracts of land, upon terms and conditions more particularly set forth in the instrument itself. The fifth paragraph of the contract provided as follows: “The Railroad Company shall pay to the Coal Company [appellee] for all the coal delivered to it the same prices per ton (less forty-five cents per ton for each and every size so delivered, doAvn to and including barley coal), size for size, as the Railroad Company obtains from the sale of its coal at its breakers in the Wyoming and Scranton Regions for the months then being, provided said prices at its said breakers shall not be less than” designated minimums for each size of coal. It was further recited in the fourteenth paragraph: “If any dispute shall arise between the parties hereto touching this contract or its fulfillment, or any right claimed by either party because thereof or because of their relation to each other,......on notice from either party the matter shall be heard by the Hon. Henry A. Fuller ......and the decision of the arbitrator shall be final and binding.”

In 1920 the Kingston Coal Company complained that it was not receiving adequate payment for coal mined under the provisions of the contract, inasmuch as the Railroad, instead of paying the current market prices, *550 was paying only tlie price at which it was selling coal at its breakers to its controlled subsidiary, the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Coal Company, hereinafter called Lackawanna Company. Payments after this date were received only on account and subject to the protest already made. All attempts to reach an amicable settlement having failed, the matter was finally heard by the arbitrator named in the contract, although from the beginning appellant insisted there was no arbitrable dispute pending and that the arbitrator was without jurisdiction in the premises. This objection was overruled and after an exhaustive hearing the arbitrator made his award, as stated above, basing his conclusion on the ground that the payments made by Bailroad Company, although within the letter of the contract, were not within its spirit, inasmuch as the prices paid were above the stipulated minimums but not equivalent to the current circular rates, at which coal companies in general marketed their product. The arbitrator found as a fact that contemporaneous circumstances indicated that the parties contemplated payment on the basis of the so-called circular prices. “Circular prices,” as used by the arbitrator, appellee contended, at argument before this court, to mean current market prices at mine-mouth or breaker, and both sides agree that they are distinguishable from tidewater prices in that the latter include transportation charges. Because of the community of interest between Bailroad Company, Lackawanna Company and the Glen Alden Coal Company, appellant, (which latter company was organized in 1921 by Bailroad to take over all its interest in its coal lands and which in 1925 acquired approximately all the stock of Lackawanna Company), it was profitable to the shareholders of the three companies to make payment to Kingston Coal Company at prices lower than the prevailing market prices. The arbitrator found that the close corporate intimacy of the three companies discredited the good faith of their dealings with appellee. In making his award, the arbitrator, *551 although recognizing that the statute of limitations technically did not apply, nevertheless limited recovery to the six years immediately preceding submission of the controversy to arbitration.

The Glen Alden Company steadfastly refused to acknowledge the validity of the award, and suit was accordingly brought in the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County by the Kingston Company to recover the sum designated by the arbitrator. Plaintiff attached as exhibits to its statement of claim, copies of the contract of 1916 and of the arbitrator’s decision. Defendant moved to strike off the statement of claim alleging the copy of the award was incomplete (a) in that it failed to include the requests for findings of fact and conclusions of law submitted to the arbitrator and the answers thereto made by him, and (b) in that it failed to set forth exceptions to the award nisi. At the same time defendant petitioned for a rule to show cause why a more specific statement of claim should not be filed, alleging practically the same reasons as set forth in its motion to strike off. Both rules were discharged and defendant ordered to file an affidavit of defense, which order was complied with, whereupon plaintiff moved for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit, and after argument thereon the rule was made absolute and judgment entered accordingly. Defendant appealed. Appellant’s assignments of error relating to the overruling of its motion to strike off and the rule for a more specific statement will be considered before proceeding to the main issues of the case.

The motion to strike off the statement of claim, as well as the rule for a more specific statement, was properly dismissed. The statement of claim did not infringe the provisions of the Practice Act (1915, P. L. 483), as averred by defendant, so as to make proper a motion to strike off, nor was it lacking in specification. The basis of the action was the arbitrator’s award and a copy of that decision was attached as an exhibit. Neither the requests of counsel for findings of fact and conclusions *552 of law, together with the answers made thereto, nor the exceptions filed to the award nisi were material to the statement of claim. Defendant was entitled to know the precise nature of plaintiff’s claim and the basis upon which it rested before making a defense, but this right was not violated by plaintiff’s statement and the attached exhibits. The arbitrator’s award was founded upon his own findings of fact and conclusions of law and not upon the requests of counsel, as appears from the last paragraph of the award which states: “Counsel have submitted sundry requests for findings of fact and law, too voluminous for transcription herein, but with our answers are bodily attached hereto, and substantially covered by our findings supra.” Defendant’s objections were highly technical and entirely lacking in substance. The first and second assignments of error are overruled.

All other arguments of appellant necessarily relate to the third assignment of error, i. e., the granting of plaintiff’s motion for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense.

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Bluebook (online)
168 A. 677, 312 Pa. 546, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 749, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kingston-coal-co-v-glen-alden-coal-co-pa-1933.