Lawhon v. American Cyanamid & Chemical Corp.

223 S.W.2d 806, 216 Ark. 23, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 859
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedOctober 31, 1949
Docket4-8936
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 223 S.W.2d 806 (Lawhon v. American Cyanamid & Chemical Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lawhon v. American Cyanamid & Chemical Corp., 223 S.W.2d 806, 216 Ark. 23, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 859 (Ark. 1949).

Opinion

George Rose Smith, J.

This suit was brought by the appellants, Cullen and Willie Jane Lawhon, against the appellees, American Cyanamid & Chemical Corporation (herein called the Corporation) and American Cyanamid Company (called the Company). In the trial court the case was decided on demurrer to the complaint.

It is alleged that in 1943 the appellants bought 400 acres of land in Pulaski County, subject to outstanding mineral ownerships and to a twenty-five year bauxite lease. (We interpret the complaint to mean that appellants acquired no interest in the bauxite, and this opinion is written on that assumption.) The lease, a copy of which is attached to complaint, was executed in 1933 by the former owners of the land to the appellee Corporation. It is averred that in 1944, after appellants had bought the surface interest, the appellees entered the premises and began mining bauxite. Four grounds for relief are stated in the complaint:

(1) The appellees in their mining operations have drained Rauch Lake, the water supply for appellants’ livestock;

(2) The appellees have deprived appellants of the use of specified parts of their property by depositing thereon huge and unsightly piles of overburden;

(3) The appellees have failed to supply appellants with a plat and log of each test for bauxite, as required by the lease;

(4) The appellees have failed to release to appellants all lands upon which no bauxite has been found, as required by the lease.

In response to the-complaint the appellees filed a combined motion to dismiss and demurrer.' The Corporation moved to dismiss, on the ground that it has transferred its lessee interest to the Company, withdrawn from the State and surrendered its corporate charter. The Company in the same pleading demurred to the complaint, upon the ground that a cause of action is not stated and that the complaint is barred by limitations and laches.

The chancellor sustained the demurrer as to the first and second counts in the complaint and overruled it as to the third and fourth. All parties refusing to plead further, a decree was entered dismissing the first two counts and directing the appellees to comply with the •lease provisions described in the remaining two counts. The entire case is brought to us by appeal and cross-appeal.

We turn first to the fourth count in the complaint. The lease provides that “as soon as lessee has explored the above described land, in conformity to the terms of this lease, it will release to lessors all of said premises upon which it finds no bauxite and/or such as it does not desire to mine.” The appellees- contend that only the lessors can enforce this clause of the lease; the appellants construe it as a covenant running with the land.

Pew questions have given rise to greater conflict in the decisions than that of what covenants run with the land. In spite of the widely divergent views that have been expressed as to some types of covenant, there is fairly general agreement upon the principles applicable to the covenants involved in this ease. If a covenant is of value to the covenantee by reason of his occupation of the land, ordinarily it is regarded as running with the land. Tiffany on Eeal Property (3rd Ed.), § 854. Our own cases have defined a covenant running with the land as one that benefits the land itself. St. L., I. M. & S. Ry. Co. v. O’Baugh, 49 Ark. 418, 5 S.W. 711; Bank of Hoxie v. Meriwether, 166 Ark. 39, 265 S.W. 642. The two viéws just stated are entirely harmonious, for a covenant that may be said to benefit the land itself is of value to the covenantee primarily because he is entitled to occupy the land and enj.oy the benefit.

The covenant now under consideration requires the lessee to release lands upon which no bauxite has been found or which it does not desire to mine. The intent is manifestly to benefit the surface owner in his occupancy of the property, since the release enables him to cultivate or make other use of the released land without fear of being interfered with by mining operations. Under the rules stated above this covenant runs with the surface ownership and may therefore be enforced by the appellants. The demurrer was properly overruled as to the fourth count.

The covenant relied upon in the third count provides that the lessee shall furnish to' the lessors a log of each test made upon the premises, a chemical analysis of all samples taken, and a plat showing the location of all tests made. These provisions of the lease are of no concern to the surface owner, their purpose being to supply the lessors with information about the lessee’s development of the leasehold and the progress of mining operations. This covenant is enforceable by the lessors and their successors, not by the surface owners. The demurrer to this count must be sustained.

The first count alleges that in violation of the terms of the lease the appellees drained a lake on appellants’ cattle lot. The phrase “in violation of terms of the lease” is a conclusion of law, not admitted by the demurrer. Wood v. King, 57 Ark. 284, 21 S.W. 471. We must therefore examine the lease to see whether the facts that are stated — the draining of the lake on the cattle lot — show a violation of the lease. There is no specific prohibition against the draining of surface water. The lessee is given power to open and maintain mines, to remove bauxite, to remove overburden, and to do various other acts in connection with the powers granted. This authority is broad enough to include the draining of a lake if necessary in the. course of removing the bauxite.

Appellants insist, however, that these powers do not extend to interference with the cattle lot, because of this clause in the lease: “The premises surrounding the present homestead of lessors, such as yards, gardens and lot for cattle, shall not be disturbed by lessee during the lifetime of lessors, unless by mutual consent.” Ordinarily this covenant would run with the land, under the principles already stated. But the authorities agree that the parties to a covenant, by indicating their intention to that effect, may prevent a covenant from running-even though it would otherwise do so. Tiffany, supra, § 854. We think this clause does show an intention to make the covenant personal to the lessors. It refers to their present homestead and is to be effective only during their lives. While the. covenant is of value to the lessors because of their occupancy of the land, the benefit is intended to be peculiar to them and not to extend to succeeding- owners of the property. Since the right to enforce this covenant did not pass to appellants, the first count does not state a cause of action.

The remaining count concerns interference with appellants’ occupancy of the premises, occasioned by the piling of overburden upon the property. As we have seen, this is the type- of covenant they may enforce if a violation of the lease is stated in the complaint. The lease has two clauses with reference to the disposition of the overburden that accompanies strip-mining.

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W.2d 806, 216 Ark. 23, 1949 Ark. LEXIS 859, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lawhon-v-american-cyanamid-chemical-corp-ark-1949.