Morris Coal Co. v. Thompson

2 Ohio App. 345, 19 Ohio C.A. 346, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 221
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 26, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 2 Ohio App. 345 (Morris Coal Co. v. Thompson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morris Coal Co. v. Thompson, 2 Ohio App. 345, 19 Ohio C.A. 346, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 221 (Ohio Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Plaintiff in error seeks to reverse a judgment of the court of common pleas in favor of the defendants in error, John A. Thompson and others, rendered on a lease for the sale of coal. The petition [346]*346of the plaintiffs below sets up that on the 10th day of November, 1903, they leased, let and granted to the predecessors of the defendant below all the minable coal, commonly known as No. 7 vein, four feet or over thick, underlying certain premises which are described as containing 336 acres, more or less; that by the terms of the lease the lessee was to begin mining said coal within six months from the date of the same, and from thence forward to diligently prosecute the mining, without discrimination or unfairness, until all the minable coal in said premises should be mined, and to pay for each two thousand pounds of coal the sum of ten cents, payable monthly; that after the expiration of said six months they should pay said lessors an aggregate royalty amounting to not less than $4,000, and to continue to pay said royalties until all said coal had been removed or paid for; that the lessee continued to mine said coal until the 10th day of May, 1910, when they ceased, since which time they have refused to pay plaintiff any sum whatever, and they ask to recover such royalty at $4,000 per year.

A copy of the lease is attached to the petition. It contains several provisions, among them one providing that if the territory became exhausted to such an extent that 40,000 tons of coal could not be mined and removed in one year by reason of horsebacks or the thinness of coal, making it impossible to produce 40,000 tons by diligent operation, the lessee should be charged royalty only upon the tonnage actually produced.

To this petition an amended answer is filed, set[347]*347ting up that at the time of making the agreement mentioned in the petition the defendant owned and operated a coal mine known as King’s mine; that it owned divers and sundry structures used in connection with the operation of said mine, including shaft, tipple, hoists, screens, scales, tracks and other machinery and appliances; that this shaft, tipple and appliances were situated upon land adjoining the plaintiff’s land, mentioned in the petition, and about 1,000 feet distant from said lands; that these appliances had cost about $46,000, which was the reasonable value thereof; that after making said agreement the same was improved until defendant had invested in said shaft, tipple and equipment about $60,000; that beginning at the time mentioned in said agreement and continuing diligently and continually thereafter until the destruction of said tipple and appliances, defendant did, without discrimination or unfairness, mine and remove about 150 acres of the coal demised by plaintiff as aforesaid, being about 450,000 tons of lump coal; that in said agreement no surface was demised, let or granted to defendant, nor was there granted any right or privilege to use plaintiff’s land surface, or any part thereof; that the royalty paid, ten cents per ton of lump coal, was in excess of the rate theretofore paid for mining from said vein; that on the 7th day of February, 1910, without the fault of defendant and against its will, the whole of said plant above ground was destroyed by fire; that thenceforth it was impossible for the defendant to mine and produce the coal then remaining unmined in plaintiff’s land; that the said property has not [348]*348been replaced or restored; that because of said destruction, and for no other reason, defendant quit said mine and since said time has not operated the same or any part thereof, and defendant at once removed its property from and surrendered possession of said premises to the plaintiff and wholly abandoned the same; that the reasonable co'st of replacing said destroyed plant, or of building the equivalent thereof, would greatly exceed the reasonable and ordinary profit which could or would be made from mining and producing such minable and unmined coal as underlay plaintiffs said lands, and would exceed the total amount of royalty payable to plaintiff at the rate of $4,000 per annum during the term of years reasonably and ordinarily required for the mining of the minable coal demised as aforesaid by the plaintiff.

To this answer a demurrer was filed by the plaintiff, which was sustained, and the defendant not desiring to plead further, judgment was rendered on the pleadings in favor of plaintiff. The points claimed by the plaintiff in error in these pleadings, as stated by brief of counsel, are as follows:

1. Plant on outside built and in use before and when contract was made more than nine years ago.

2. More than 1200 acres opened up by entries and underground working before contract made.

3. The plant destroyed was and has been the' only existing plant or approaches'whereby Thompson’s coal could be reached.

4. No surface right for a new mine opening or for erecting plant is given by the contract, and there is no mining plant anywhere on Thompson’s [349]*349land. In other words, the plant cannot be replaced there.

5. Plaintiff in error had explored this territory and all adjacent territory, before the fire, and had destroyed all the accessible coal.

6. What remained unmined, owned by Thompson and others, is not sufficient to warrant restoration of plant.

7. The ten-cent royalty was dictated because defendant in error intended, and plaintiff in error expected, to and could reach Thompson’s coal without outlay for plant or entries; in other words, through the means at hand when the contract was made. In any other view it was excessive.

8. The allegation of impossibility as a fact.

9. The mutual intention to mine and produce Thompson’s coal through and by means of said plant and not otherwise.

10. That plaintiff in error has abandoned the coal granted and has not retained possession.

Norris, J; Metcalfe and Pollock, JJ., concurring.

It is claimed by plaintiff in error that from the facts stated in the pleadings there was an "implied condition that the coal in the land of the plaintiff below was to be mined through and by means of the shaft and tipple then in operation and theretofore constructed on the adjoining land by defendant below, and that because of the destruction by fire of the tipple and appliances without the fault of the coal company, it was no longer under obligations to carry out the agreement and mine the coal; that the parties, when they made the contract, had this [350]*350situation in view; that by reason thereof this implied condition arises and that while the performance of the contract on the part of the coal company is not impossible, this implied condition relieves it from liability.

The substance of this answer is that it would be unprofitable* for the coal company to reconstruct the tipple and appliances destroyed by fire to remove the small amount of coal still remaining in the land of the plaintiff below.

There are numerous authorities, holding that where the subject-matter of the contract is destroyed without fault of the parties so that the contract is impossible of performance, there is an implied condition that the parties are relieved from the carrying out the contract. The earliest case we have found where the question is discussed is perhaps Paradine v. Jane,

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Bluebook (online)
2 Ohio App. 345, 19 Ohio C.A. 346, 1914 Ohio App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-coal-co-v-thompson-ohioctapp-1914.