Marmet v. Watson

145 S.E. 744, 106 W. Va. 429, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 201
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 27, 1928
Docket6301
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 145 S.E. 744 (Marmet v. Watson) 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
Marmet v. Watson, 145 S.E. 744, 106 W. Va. 429, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 201 (W. Va. 1928).

Opinion

Lively, President:

Defendants below, appellants here, served notice on plaintiffs below declaring forfeiture of a coal mining lease on £25 acres near Cedar Grove in Kanawha county held by plaintiffs and advised them and their tenants that possession of the property would be taken by them, claiming non-performance of covenants in the lease as ground of forfeiture. Thereupon this suit was instituted to inhibit defendants from interfering with plaintiffs’ possession. Defendant answered, a temporary injunction was awarded, the parties went to proof, and at the final hearing the injunction was perpetuated upon findings of'fact, from which defendants prosecutes this appeal. The parties will hereinafter be designated as lessors and lessee, for brevity and clarity.

The 225 acres leased, prior to 1901, had been mined by various persons, and much of the coal which could be mined practically having been taken out. In May, 1901, John Nor-vell, who was trustee for some of the owners in fee, organized with other incorporators the Mile Branch Coal Company, a West Virginia corporation, and took from the owners, the lessors, the coal.mining lease here involved on the 225 acre tract for a term of ten shears, at a fixed royalty per ton, and to pay a fixed minimum royalty of $1000.00 per year, payable quarterly, with right to the lessee, its successors and assigns to renew the lease at its expiration for such further period of years as it then might desire. Mile Branch Coal Company at the same time acquired a coal mining lease on an adjacent large tract of land, lying behind the 225 acres, known as the Bowers land, containing a large area of coal. In the lease here involved, right was given to the lessee to transport coal from adjacent lands over and under the leased tract. The *431 purpose of the Mile Branch Company seems to have been to operate the Bowers lease, and the merchantable coal in the 225 acres, and to put its miners’ houses on the level land on the 225 acre tract, there being no level land on the Bowers lease which was hill land entirely. The Mile Branch Company began development with Norvell as its manager, producing very little coal from the 225 acres, its main development being on the Bowers land. On May 14, 1903, the Mile Branch Company sold and assigned all its property to the Marmet Company, and John Norvell continued as superintendent for the Marmet Company, and erected for that company about fifty miners’ houses on the level land on the 225 acre tract. From the year 1904 until January, 1911, a period of seven years the coal mined on the 225 acres was 7,223 long tons, the royalty on which could not have exceeded five or six hundred dollars. During that period the minimum royalty of $1000.00 per year was paid lessors, amounting to $7000.00. According to the evidence of several of the miners who worked for the Marmet Company in 1904 and later there was very little coal on the 225 acre tract bordering on the Bowers land which could be mined, that in mining on the Bowers land they frequently broke through on the 225 acre tract into the old workings on that tract and found that the coal had been taken out. The last coal mined on the 225 acres was in the first part of January, 1911. On July 1, 1911, the lessors renewed the lease to Marmet Company for a period of 20 years under the same terms, stipulation and conditions contained in the original lease.. Since that time until the beginning of this suit no coal has been mined, although the minimum royalty of $1,000.00 per year has been paid, amounting to 16 or 17 thousand dollars. Two or three years after this renewal of 1911 was made the Marmet Company went into the hands of a receiver who operated its properties until a judicial sale was made and confirmed in 1919 to Western Bank & Trust Company, which purchaser deeded the entire property including the lease here involved to plaintiff, Edwin Marmet, in June, 1920, who has since kept paid up the minimum royalty.

The pertinent part of the lease contract on which lessors *432 base their right to declare and enforce the forfeiture is found in clause 10, which reads as follows: “It is further agreed that if the lessee, its successors or assigns, fail on its part to pay the rent and royalties aforesaid in the manner and at the times hereinafter provided, and such failure shall continue for the space for more than twenty days; and further, if the lessee shall cease to work and mine said coal for a period of sis consecutive months, (excepting on account of strikes or unavoidable causes) then in either case such failure (at the election of the lessors, their heirs or assigns, after 30 days’ notice) shall work forfeiture of this lease, and said lessors, their heirs or assigns, shall thereupon be entitled to re-enter upon and take possession of the demised premises and any and all pertinent improvements thereon, and to enter and remove said lessee and all persons claiming under it or its agents.” The rents and royalties bargained for in the lease were not in arrear at the time the lessors declared forfeiture and served notices of such upon the lessee and its tenants. In the answer the lessors set up that the houses upon the leased premises have been permitted to become decayed and are out of repair; that they are in much worse condition than when the Marmet company took the lease way back in 1903; and that the rents, issues and profits of these buildings if turned into the hands of the lessors would more than equal the minimum royalty which has been regularly paid.' Such a situation may be a cause of complaint, but it is no. cause of forfeiture, and we can see little bearing which it has in this case.

Other portions of the lease which indicate the intention of the parties, and which bear upon the right of forfeiture are found in other sections. Section, or clause, 1 provides that the lessee shall proceed to work to take the coal from the lease in an effectual, workmanlike and proper manner, and that during the continuance of the lease all mines shall be so worked as to permit the getting out of all the merchantable coal practicable in each and every seam worked on said leased premises, where the same can be worked at a profit to the lessee. And in section or clause 3 we find, “it is further understood that said lessee shall not be required to mine coal *433 from any of said seams where the thickness of the same is less than 36 inches, at the above mentioned royalties; bnt if the lessee elects to mine any snch seams of a less thickness, the royalties to be paid upon same are in such cases to be hereafter agreed upon in writing.” Clause or section 7, in substance, says that if at the termination of the lease the lessee has not mined all of the coal and does not elect to renew, it must leave the mines and .permanent improvements in good order and repair so the mining of coal may be continued by the lessors or a new lessee; but that this requirement is not to prevent the lessee from drawing pillars from such portions of the mines as may be so far mined as to make further mining through such parts unprofitable; and that all permanent structures remaining on the property at the expiration of the lease become property of the lessor. Clause ten also provided, in substance, that if by reason of faults, or other cause the coal becomes too thin or impure to be mined at a profit to the lessee, then he could, after notice, surrender the lease. This covenant was for the lessees’ benefit and was optional with him.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
145 S.E. 744, 106 W. Va. 429, 1928 W. Va. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/marmet-v-watson-wva-1928.