Leslie Co. v. Cosner Coal Co.

48 S.E.2d 332, 131 W. Va. 483, 1948 W. Va. LEXIS 31
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1948
Docket10010
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 48 S.E.2d 332 (Leslie Co. v. Cosner Coal Co.) 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
Leslie Co. v. Cosner Coal Co., 48 S.E.2d 332, 131 W. Va. 483, 1948 W. Va. LEXIS 31 (W. Va. 1948).

Opinion

Fox, Judge:

On December 27, 1945, L. C. Halbritter was the owner of the Upper Freeport seam of coal in several tracts of land situated in Preston County, and on that date conveyed the said coal to R. Doyne Halbritter and Edward W. Eardley, Trustees, to secure to John R. Dawkins the payment of $7,400.00, advanced by said Dawkins to said Halbritter, pursuant to the terms of a then contemplated agreement and coal lease between The Leslie Company, a corporation, and Cosner Coal Company, a corporation; such sum to be repaid to the said Dawkins, by Cosner Coal Company, out of royalties accruing to said The Leslie Company, under said lease, at the rate of six cents per ton for all coal mined by said Cosner Coal Company on the property covered thereby, such payment to be not less than $75.00 in any one month.

The coal lease referred to in the deed of trust, aforesaid, was not in fact executed until the 7th day of January, 1946, the property leased having, in the meantime, been conveyed by L. C. Halbritter and wife to The Leslie Company, a corporation. The record is silent as to the date of the conveyance from Halbritter .to The Leslie Company, but from plaintiffs bill we learn that, at the date of said coal lease, The Leslie Company was' the owner of the property leased thereby.

On January 7, 1946, The Leslie Company leased to the Cosner Coal Company certain parcels of coal aggregating approximately 400 acres, which lease included the properties conveyed by the deed of trust aforesaid. It is provided in the lease that the same shall continue until “all of said coal is mined and removed”; and that the “Lessee agrees to pay to the Lessor a royalty of twelve (.12) cents per net ton of two thousand (2,000) pounds, for each ton *485 of merchantable coal mined and removed from said mine.” There are many other provisions in the lease, among which are the following: (1) providing for a report on coal mined; (2) provisions for forfeiture thereof for failure to pay royalties, when due, or the failure of the lessee to comply with other requirements of said lease, provided twenty days notice of intention to forfeit the lease has been given; (3) provisions respecting method of operation, especially in the keeping of an up to date map of the mine; (4) for the keeping of a registered mine foreman in the mine at all times; (5) requirements respecting headings, ribs and barriers; (6) a provision that one-half the royalty provided for in the lease shall be paid to John R. Dawkins, under the terms of the deed of trust herein-before mentioned. Other provisions of the lease will be hereinafter more specifically dealt with.

Plaintiff’s bill was filed, in the Circuit Court of Preston County, at September Rules, 1947, and alleged, among other things, the execution of the lease contract aforesaid, the same being filed as exhibit with the bill. There was an allegation of improper mining practices, especially with respect to the failure to keep a registered mine foreman in the mine at all times; failure to operate the mine by a method planned by a registered engineer; failure to drive all working places from center points, rather than by what is termed the block system; failure to drive the headings of the mine through the property so as to permit the loading of coal on the main line of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company to increase production; failure to keep mine maps up to date, and make proper reports of production. In addition to these allegations in respect to the operation of the mine, there are two important allegations which deserve special attention: one, that it was an implied condition of the lease that the mine should be operated in a workmanlike manner, for the purpose of removing all the marketable coal, and that, in violation of such implied condition, the lessee had used a mining machine which cut the coal at the top of the seam so as to leave from eight to ten inches of marketable coal attached *486 to the roof of the working places in the mine, and that as' a result of such action a waste of coal occurred, and the operation of the mine was rendered unsafe, in that said thin layer of coal would in time deteriorate and fall, and pull down the roof in the mine. There is, also, an allegation that on May 8, 1947, lessee, being then in default in the payment of royalties, the lessor gave notice to the lessee that the said lease had become forfeited, and that the lessee failed and refused to surrender the property to the lessor, and had continued in the possession and operation of said premises in violation of the terms of the lease. There is a further allegation that “the continued operation of said mine by said defendant (lessee) is doing to the plaintiff irreparable harm and injury, and is destructive to plaintiff’s said property”. There is no definite and specific allegation concerning the manner of operation of the mine which caused such irreparable harm and injury; merely the allegation quoted above.

On September 20, 1947, a temporary injunction was awarded, by the Circuit Court of Preston County, which restrained and inhibited the Cosner Coal Company, the lessee, from continuing to operate the property described in the lease aforesaid, until the further order of the court, upon the execution by the plaintiff of a bond with security to be approved by the Clerk of said Court, conditioned to pay costs and damages should said injunction be dissolved. The penalty of the required bond was not stated in said order, but apparently an injunction bond was given by the plaintiff, and the injunction became effective on or about the 22nd day of September, 1947.

On September 27, 1947, the Cosner Coal Company, lessee, aforesaid, following a notice that a motion to dissolve said injunction would be made on September 25, 1947, filed the joint and several answer of itself, and of Nicholas R. Raschella and Miles W. Bell, alleged in the plaintiff’s bill to be in active charge of the operation on the leased premises, which said answer, in our opinion, fully, plainly and positively denied all the material allegations of the bill on which the injunction was founded, *487 except the allegation of the bill with respect to leaving in the mine the top strata of the coal, and to this point we will hereafter give specific attention. It would seem that no good purpose would be served by going into minute detail as to the several points of denial contained in the answer of the defendants. There is a denial that there was a failure to provide mine maps, and allegations that they were kept up to date; that there had been any forfeiture on account of failure to pay royalties, and an allegation that on receipt of the notice alleged in plaintiff’s bill, all past due royalties were paid within the twenty days provided for in the lease, there being no other grounds for forfeiture mentioned in such notices. It is admitted that the notice, of May 8, 1947, was received, but a denial that any forfeiture occurred by the mere giving of the notice, and it is only necessary to refer to the rule that equity will not enforce a forfeiture. There is a denial of the allegation in the bill that the operation of the mine was being conducted in such a way as to cause irreparable harm and injury to the lessor.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 S.E.2d 332, 131 W. Va. 483, 1948 W. Va. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leslie-co-v-cosner-coal-co-wva-1948.