Legal Coal Co. v. G.M.P. Land Co. (In Re G.M.P. Land Co.)

33 B.R. 729, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5253
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 13, 1983
Docket19-10661
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 33 B.R. 729 (Legal Coal Co. v. G.M.P. Land Co. (In Re G.M.P. Land Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Legal Coal Co. v. G.M.P. Land Co. (In Re G.M.P. Land Co.), 33 B.R. 729, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5253 (Pa. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

THOMAS M. TWARDOWSKI, Bankruptcy Judge.

In this adversary proceeding, Legal Coal Company, Inc. (hereinafter “Legal Coal”) seeks to permanently enjoin G.M.P. Land Company (hereinafter “GMP”) from interfering in any way with Legal Coal’s alleged rights to an estimated 30,000 tons of coal silt located on GMP’s property. We shall, however, deny Legal Coal’s request for in-junctive relief because, for the reasons hereinafter stated, we find that Legal Coal has abandoned its ownership interests in the silt in question. 1

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Legal Coal operated an anthracite coal preparation plant from 1940 to 1970.

2. In the plant’s coal preparation process, silt was produced as a by-product.

3. Silt is a very fine, moist material that contains limited amounts of coal.

4. From 1954 or earlier until 1970, Legal Coal deposited upon its own property some of the silt which it produced.

*730 5. From approximately 1954 until 1970, Legal Coal deposited some of the silt which it produced upon two different sites upon the adjacent property of Henry Lark, with Mr. Lark’s apparent permission.

6. The silt which Legal Coal deposited upon its own property was generally of a better quality than the silt which it deposited upon the Lark property.

7. From 1954 or earlier until 1970, Legal Coal deposited the waste material from the coal preparation process upon its own property and in an area intentionally segregated from any silt deposits.

8. For a period of years until 1970, and from 1980 to 1982, Legal Coal sold some of the silt, after processing, which it had deposited upon its own property.

9. Legal Coal has never sold nor removed any of the silt which it had deposited upon the Lark property.

10. Between approximately 1954 and 1970, Legal Coal never had any actual nor prospective customers for the silt which it had deposited upon the Lark property because of a lack of demand for such silt.

11. Between approximately 1954 and 1970, the silt in question was of no use to Legal Coal and had no commercial value, and it was uncertain whether or not it would ever be of any use or acquire any commercial value.

12. The silt in question did not acquire any commercial value until approximately 1978.

13. In 1975, the Lark property was conveyed to GMP.

14. At the time of said conveyance, of which Legal Coal was aware, Legal Coal did not request permission from GMP to use GMP’s property for storage of the silt nor did Legal Coal communicate with GMP in any manner regarding the silt deposits in question.

15. Legal Coal did not notify GMP of its claim to the silt in question until November, 1981, after GMP had applied to the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources for a permit to mine the silt.

16. Legal Coal has never kept any records whatsoever regarding the silt in question.

17. Although Legal Coal has kept and continues to keep records of its inventory, the silt in question has never been included nor designated as a part of Legal Coal’s inventory.

18. Legal Coal has no documents nor records which in any way indicate its ownership of the silt in question.

19. Legal Coal never performed any maintenance whatsoever of the silt in question nor of the sites on which the silt was deposited.

20. Legal Coal never posted any signs, barriers, or other indications whatsoever on or near the sites of the silt deposits in question, or elsewhere, that it claimed ownership of the silt.

21. No evidence was presented that Legal Coal ever had any agreement or understanding with Henry Lark regarding Legal Coal’s right to subsequent use of the silt in question.

22. Since no later than 1975, one of the two sites on which the silt in question was deposited was used as a dumping ground for assorted trash, junk, and garbage by local residents. As a result of the condition of the site, a fire hazard exists. In order to alleviate the fire hazard, GMP sealed off the public access to the site in approximately 1981 or 1982 at the request of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Resources. This use of one of the sites as a dumping ground has caused the contamination and concomitant decrease in current value of some of the silt.

23. Since no later than 1975, some of the silt in question on one of the two sites has been washed into an airhole of an abandoned strip mine.

24. The silt in question was deposited by Legal Coal in abandoned strip-mining pits in order to lessen erosion of the silt. However, contrary to Legal Coal’s contention, there is no evidence that another purpose of depositing the silt in such pits was to facili *731 tate removal of the silt by Legal Coal at some future time.

25. From 1970 until 1982, on a weekly basis, a Legal Coal stockholder and his brother took turns “keeping an eye” on the silt in question for the purpose of “[M]aking sure there wasn’t any type of a runoff so they wouldn’t be infringing on DER regulations.” (Notes of Testimony, p. 51)

26. Dr. Hugh Curran has been a director and stockholder of Legal Coal since 1942.

27. Dr. Curran has been a practicing dentist since 1942.

28. Dr. Curran has never been an employee of Legal Coal.

29. Dr. Curran has never been involved in the day-to-day operations of Legal Coal.

30. Dr. Curran took no part in the decision to deposit the silt in question upon the Lark property.

31. Dr. Curran testified that Legal Coal deposited the silt in question upon the Lark property with the expectation that Legal Coal would remove and sell it if and when it acquired a commercial value.

DISCUSSION

The sole question in this case is whether, according to Pennsylvania law, Legal Coal has abandoned its ownership interests in the silt in question. If so, its claim for injunctive relief must be denied.

Under Pennsylvania law, it is well-established that coal or coal by-products, when severed from the earth, become personal property which may be abandoned when left on the land of another with the intention of abandoning them. Llewellyn v. Philadelphia and Reading C. and I. Co., 308 Pa. 497, 162 A. 429 (1932); Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co. v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co., 294 Pa. 47, 143 A. 474 (1928). “Abandonment includes both the intention and the external act by which the intention is carried into effect; intention may and indeed often must be inferred from acts.” Llewellyn, supra, 308 Pa. at 502, 162 A. 429. Furthermore, abandonment is to be determined from “a consideration of the nature of the pi’operty and the conduct of the plaintiff in relation to it.” Russell v. Stratton, 201 Pa. 277, 278, 50 A. 975 (1902).

As both parties recognize, the leading Pennsylvania case regarding abandonment of coal by-products is Fidelity-Philadelphia Trust Co. v.

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33 B.R. 729, 1983 Bankr. LEXIS 5253, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/legal-coal-co-v-gmp-land-co-in-re-gmp-land-co-paeb-1983.