McElroy Coal Copmany v. Gary R. Dobbs and Terry Dobbs and Catherine Dobbs v. Gary Dobbs

CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 12, 2020
Docket18-0134 & 18-0135
StatusPublished

This text of McElroy Coal Copmany v. Gary R. Dobbs and Terry Dobbs and Catherine Dobbs v. Gary Dobbs (McElroy Coal Copmany v. Gary R. Dobbs and Terry Dobbs and Catherine Dobbs v. Gary Dobbs) 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
McElroy Coal Copmany v. Gary R. Dobbs and Terry Dobbs and Catherine Dobbs v. Gary Dobbs, (W. Va. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA

September 2019 Term _______________ FILED November 12, 2020 No. 18-0134 released at 3:00 p.m. EDYTHE NASH GAISER, CLERK SUPREME COURT OF APPEALS OF WEST VIRGINIA _______________

McELROY COAL COMPANY, a Corporation, TERRY L. DOBBS and CATHERINE A. DOBBS, Defendants Below, Petitioners

v.

GARY R. DOBBS, Plaintiff Below, Respondent ____________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Circuit Court of Marshall County The Honorable Jeffrey D. Cramer, Judge Civil Action No. 09-C-20-K

AFFIRMED ____________________________________________________________

AND

_______________

No. 18-0135

TERRY L. DOBBS and CATHERINE A. DOBBS, Defendants Below, Petitioners

GARY R. DOBBS, Plaintiff Below, Respondent

____________________________________________________________ Appeal from the Circuit Court of Marshall County The Honorable Jeffrey D. Cramer, Judge Civil Action No. 09-C-20-K

AFFIRMED ____________________________________________________________

Submitted: September 4, 2019 Filed: November 12, 2020

Ancil G. Ramey, Esq. Robert P. Fitzsimmons, Esq. Stacey Richards-Minigh, Esq. Robert J. Fitzsimmons, Esq. Steptoe & Johnson PLLC Fitzsimmons Law Firm PLLC Huntington, West Virginia Wheeling, West Virginia Counsel for Respondent Gary R. Dobbs William D. Wilmoth, Esq. Steptoe & Johnson PLLC Michael J. Burkey, Esq. Wheeling, West Virginia Linda Burkey, Esq. Counsel for Petitioner McElroy Coal Burkey & Burkey Company Cameron, West Virginia

H. Brann Altmeyer, Esq. Phillips, Gardill, Kaiser & Altmeyer PLLC Wheeling, West Virginia Counsel for Petitioner McElroy Coal Company

Eric M. Gordon, Esq. Berry, Kessler, Crutchfield, Taylor & Gordon Moundsville, West Virginia Counsel for Petitioners Terry L. Dobbs and Catherine A. Dobbs

CHIEF JUSTICE ARMSTEAD delivered the Opinion of the Court.

ii SYLLABUS BY THE COURT

1. “A circuit court’s entry of summary judgment is reviewed de novo.”

Syl. Pt. 1, Painter v. Peavy, 192 W. Va. 189, 451 S.E.2d 755 (1994).

2. “Whether an easement is appurtenant or in gross is to be determined

by the intent of the parties as gathered from the language employed, considered in the light

of surrounding circumstances.” Syl. Pt. 2, Post v. Bailey, 110 W. Va. 504, 159 S.E. 524

(1931).

i Armstead, Chief Justice:

In 1975, Lyle Dobbs died, and land he owned in Marshall County, West

Virginia, passed to his wife and two sons, Petitioner Terry L. Dobbs and Respondent Gary

R. Dobbs. The wife and sons conveyed a small parcel to the sons for the site of a

slaughterhouse business. The remaining land, a home place and a pasture, was conveyed

to one son, Terry Dobbs, and his wife, Petitioner Catherine A. Dobbs. The other son, Gary

Dobbs, reserved the right to buy back the pasture land if Terry Dobbs died or if Terry and

Catherine Dobbs decided to sell, assign, or otherwise dispose of the pasture land. In time,

the brothers had a disagreement, and Gary Dobbs purchased the slaughterhouse property

at auction. He later sold the slaughterhouse property.

Decades later, Terry and Catherine Dobbs entered into an option agreement

with Petitioner McElroy Coal Company (“McElroy Coal”) to either sell the pasture land or

provide McElroy Coal a waiver of liability for McElroy Coal’s mining operations.

McElroy Coal chose a waiver and paid Terry and Catherine Dobbs more than $1.5 million

for such waiver. When Gary Dobbs learned of this, he sued McElroy Coal and Terry and

Catherine Dobbs in the Circuit Court of Marshall County. After discovery, the circuit court

granted partial summary judgment, finding (a) that Gary Dobbs retained his right to

purchase the pasture land and (b) that Terry and Catherine Dobbs triggered that right to

purchase when they signed the McElroy Coal option agreement. McElroy Coal and Terry

and Catherine Dobbs appealed.

1 Based on the record before us, the arguments of the parties, and the

applicable law, we find that the circuit court’s rulings were correct; therefore, we affirm.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

This dispute begins with a 37-acre tract of land in Marshall County, West

Virginia. Hannah Gorby acquired this tract in 1905. When her heirs sold it in August

1956, they reserved the minerals and the right to use the surface for mining activities. The

heirs sold the mineral rights in 1960, and McElroy Coal eventually acquired some or all of

them.

The surface estate (the “Gorby Surface Tract”) passed to Lyle Dobbs, father

of Terry and Gary Dobbs, in September 1956. In 1971, Lyle Dobbs and his wife sold 1.74

acres and kept the remaining 35.26 acres. Lyle Dobbs also owned an adjacent 60-acre tract

where the family home was located (the “Home Place Tract”).

Lyle Dobbs died in 1975, and his land passed to his widow, Pauline Dobbs,

and his two sons by intestate succession. Pauline Dobbs and the sons disposed of the land

in two deeds. The first deed, which was signed 1 in April and May 1976, conveyed a 1.150-

acre portion of the Gorby Surface Tract to Terry and Gary Dobbs. This 1.150-acre tract

(the “Slaughterhouse Tract”) was separated off so the sons could operate a slaughterhouse

business on it, and the deed conveyed an easement for the sons and their “heirs and assigns”

1 Throughout this opinion, we assume that the grantors of the relevant instruments signed those instruments on the same day they acknowledged their signatures before a notary. 2 to use the remaining 34.11 acres of the Gorby Surface Tract (the “Pasture Tract”) for water 2

and for the disposal of blood and manure.

The second deed, which was signed in June 1976, conveyed the Home Place

Tract and the Pasture Tract to Terry and Catherine Dobbs subject to the water and waste-

disposal easements contained in the Slaughterhouse Tract deed. The reported

consideration was $11,254.67. On the same day the second deed was signed, Terry and

Catherine Dobbs and Gary Dobbs also signed an option agreement (the “1976 Option

Agreement”), by which Gary Dobbs reserved the right to buy back the Pasture Tract for

$4,000. Each of these instruments was recorded.

The 1976 Option Agreement is at the center of this case. It begins by reciting

several matters: first, that Gary Dobbs and his wife, Jan Dobbs, conveyed the Pasture Tract

to Terry and Catherine Dobbs; second, that Gary and Terry Dobbs were entering into a

slaughterhouse business; and, third, that the Pasture Tract was subject to water and waste-

disposal easements for the benefit of the slaughterhouse business. The 1976 Option

Agreement further provides as follows:

NOW THEREFORE, in order that there may be continuity in the conduct of said business and that the heretofore described tract or parcel of land [the Pasture Tract] may be available for the use of said business, it being contiguous thereto and said 1.150 acre tract [the Slaughterhouse Tract] having been a part thereof and also in consideration of the sum of One Dollar ($1.00) paid by the said Gary R. Dobbs to the said first parties [Terry and Catherine Dobbs] . . . and in the further consideration of the conveyance by the said Gary R. Dobbs of his undivided interest in the

2 The easement granted use of a spring and a pipeline right-of-way.

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McElroy Coal Copmany v. Gary R. Dobbs and Terry Dobbs and Catherine Dobbs v. Gary Dobbs, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcelroy-coal-copmany-v-gary-r-dobbs-and-terry-dobbs-and-catherine-dobbs-wva-2020.