Koppers Coal Co. v. Alderson

26 S.E.2d 226, 125 W. Va. 747, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 48
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1943
Docket9438
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 26 S.E.2d 226 (Koppers Coal Co. v. Alderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Koppers Coal Co. v. Alderson, 26 S.E.2d 226, 125 W. Va. 747, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 48 (W. Va. 1943).

Opinions

Rose, Judge:

We have for determination in this case the problem whether the payments stipulated for in a “Deed of Lease” dated July 1, 1938, from The Koppers Coal Company to Imperial Colliery Company, covering four tracts aggregating four thousand acres of coal land in Kanawha and Fayette Counties, constitute income of such character, as to authorize a tax against the Koppers Company under Section 2i of Chapter 86, Acts of the Legislature 1935, under which it has been actually taxed by the authorities of the State since the date of this instrument. The ap-pellee, The Koppers Coal Company, would have us declare that this income is in the nature of payments for the sale of coal and, that therefore, the tax should be levied under section 2c of that chapter.

The. sections of the statute referred to are as follows:

“Section 2c: Upon every person engaging or continuing within this state in the business of selling any tangible property whatsoever, real or personal, * * * there is likewise hereby levied, and shall be collected, a tax equivalent to one-half of one per cent of the gross income of the business, except that in the case of a wholesaler or jobber, the tax shall be equal to fifteen one-hundredths of one per cent of the gross income of the business”.
“Section 2i: Upon every person engaging or continuing within this state in the business .of collecting incomes from the use of real or personal property or of any interest therein, whether by lease, conveyance or otherwise, and whether the return be in the form of rentals, royalties, fees, interest or otherwise, the tax shall be one per cent of the gross income of any such activity: * * '* ”.

The appellee has, from the date of this “lease”, made payments of tax in accordance with the assessments of *749 the state tax commissioner, protesting nevertheless that they were incorrect. For the quarter ending June 30, 1940, it tendered as taxes the sum of $16.51, being the amount which it considered to be due if the assessment were made under Section 2c, but, the tax commissioner, declining to receive this sum as payment in full, the additional sum of $16.51 was paid under protest. This suit was then instituted in the Circuit Court of Ka-nawha County, to compel the tax commissioner to refund the alleged excess of $16.51, to obtain an accounting for excess taxes claimed theretofore to have been paid and the application of such excess as credit on future taxes to become due, to enjoin the tax commissioner from collecting from appellee any further taxes under Section 2i, and to have a decretal pronouncement by the court that the payments under said lease are properly taxable under Section 2c.

The appellant tax commissioner demurred to the bill of complaint on the ground, in substance, that the bill itself showed that the payments in question were properly taxable under Section 2i. This demurrer was overruled, and the cause was then submitted upon the bill, exhibits and certain stipulations, and a final decree was entered substantially in conformity with the prayer of the bill of complaint. We then granted this appeal.

A paragraph in the lease provides that, “It is understood and agreed that all of the coal in all of the veins or seams within the boundaries of the lands subject to this lease, which the lessee is obligated or shall elect to miné and remove hereunder, shall be mined and removed by Lessee”. Another has this provision: “The Lessor hereby covenants to and with the Lessee that it will warrant generally the property, rights, privileges and easements hereby leased”. The payments for coal produced are based upon a stipulated sum for each gross ton of the coal so mined or manufactured into coke. In Bankers Pocahontas Coal Co. v. Central Pocahontas Coal Co., 113 W. Va. 1, 166 S. E. 491, this Court held that an instrument by which the owner of coal lands authorized another to re *750 move coal therefrom and to pay for what is removed or improperly left in the mine, was a lease; and added, as dictum, apparently, that if such an instrument obligated the grantee to mine and pay for all the coal, the transaction would constitute a sale thereof. Numerous decisions from other jurisdictions make the same distinction. But the analysis of the present lease is not so simple, and the mere labeling of the instrument will not necessarily be decisive of the issues involved.

In the present lease, the lessor vested in the lessee the right to mine and remove coal, but is there cast upon the lessee an absolute obligation so to do? It is true that it is provided that all the coal affected by the lease (with certain specific exceptions) “shall be mined and removed by Lessee”; but a subsequent paragraph has this provision: “The Lessee shall at all times energetically open, develop and keep up its operations, in order that, so long as fair prices are obtainable, its capacity for mining and preparing and shipping coal or coke or other products of coal shall be sufficient to meet the demands and requirements of the market to the extent that the same can be reasonably done hereunder”. This is a clear modification of the absolute right and duty to remove all coal. The lessee is only required to mine, prepare and ship coal and coke to meet the demands and requirements of the market, so far as the same can be reasonably done. Suppose that for a period there should be no market, for this coal, or that the market should wholly and permanently cease, what then will be the rights and obligations of the parties? In view of these possibilities, can we say that this lease requires absolutely the removal of all coal and thus becomes a sale?

We note, further, that the instrument speaks of itself as a lease; that the parties are therein called lessor and lessee; that the lessor expressly purports to “let and lease * * all of the coal in all of the veins or seams of coal in, on or underlying” the tracts of land described; that the instrument further provides that the “lessor also lets and leases” to the lessee certain “rights and priv *751

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 S.E.2d 226, 125 W. Va. 747, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koppers-coal-co-v-alderson-wva-1943.