Pelzel v. Pen-Mar Coal Co.

132 S.E. 510, 101 W. Va. 247, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 172
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1926
DocketNo. 5618.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 132 S.E. 510 (Pelzel v. Pen-Mar 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
Pelzel v. Pen-Mar Coal Co., 132 S.E. 510, 101 W. Va. 247, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 172 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

Hatcher, Judge:

This is a suit in chancery, brought in 1924 in the circuit court of Kanawha County, by C. IT. Hetzel, a creditor and stockholder of the Pen-Mar Coal Company, against the company and all its creditors. The bill set out the assets of the company, as well as the several amounts of the claims of the *248 ■plaintiff and the other creditors. It alleged that by reason of the condition of the coal market, the company could no longer operate its mine profitably or meet its obligations; that it.was insolvent; and that by reason of judgments already recovered and suits threatened against the company, its assets were in imminent danger of being dissipated and sacrificed at forced sales to satisfy rapacious creditors. Admitting specifically an installment of $500.00 to be due on ¿royalty, the bill asked that G-. A. Goshorn and others, lessors of the property mined by the said company, be restrained from prosecuting distress warrants against the company, and from declaring a threatened forfeiture of the company’s lease. The bill also prayed for the appointment of a receiver, and for an injunction restraining the creditors generally from prosecuting further legal actions against the company, for a reference to a commissioner to report the debts and assets of the company, for the sale of as much of the property of the . company as was found necessary for the payment of its debts, and for the payment of such debts in their respective priorities, etc.

On May 9,1924, a receiver was appointed and an injunction issued as prayed for.

Sometime after the suit was brought the plaintiff died and the cause was revived in the name of his administrator, John Pelzel.

The lessors filed a joint answer and cross bill at January rules, 1925, which set up several grounds of forfeiture of the coal company’s lease, and prayed that the injunction against the lessors be dissolved, and the receiver be discharged, in so far as either prevented the lessors from taking steps to forfeit the lease. Alternatively the answer asserted a lien upon the.leased property and the improvements thereon for minimum royalty in arrears at the date the answer was filed of $2000.00. Of this amount $1500.00 had accrued since the suit was brought.

On August 8, 1925, the Pen-Mar Coal Company, the administrator, and M. E. Moore (surviving partner of Hetzel) filed an answer to the plea of the lessors, which answer challenged the amount of royalty. alleged due by the lessors, *249 averred tliat tlie value of tbe physical properties of the company in the hands of the receiver was $77,700.00, and alleged that if the lease be forfeited in the manner contemplated by the lessors, the remaining crditors of the company would get nothing, but that if the assets of the company be properly handled and disposed of, all the debts of the company would be paid, including the royalty due the lessors. On the day the answer was filed, the cause was referred to a commissioner to take and state an account showing the -said company’s debts, assets, etc., but the reference was not to prejudice a motion which had been theretofore made by the lessors for the same relief as that sought in their answer and cross bill.

A partial and preliminary report was filed by the commissioner on October 20, 1925, upon the request of counsel for lessors, which stated that the lease of the said company stipulated that the lessors should have the right to declare an absolute forfeiture of the leasehold estate upon the appointment of a receiver for the company, or upon its becoming insolvent; that there was a dispute between the company and the lessors with respect to the amount of royalties due; that a minimum royalty of $500.00 quarterly was specified in the lease; and that when the receiver was appointed, at least one such quarterly payment was past due. The commissioner' requested a recommitment to him so he could complete his report. We find no exception to this report.

The lease filed with the answer of the lessors provided for a re-entry on the leased premises by the lessors, after thirty days ’ written notice, in case of default in the payment of any installment of the royalty for a period of thirty days.

On November 12, 1925, a decree was entered which dissolved the injunction and revoked the powers of the receiver, in so far as either inhibited or interferred with the exercise of the right of the lessors to declare and enforce a forfeiture of the lease. The decree also gave the lessors leave to sue the rceiver in any court of competent jurisdiction for the possession of the demised premises and ordered the discharge of the receiver unless someone paid the lessors $3500.00, which sum was fixed by the court as the amount of minimum royalty then *250 due the lessors. Further proceedings under the order of reference were stayed until directed by the court.

From this decree an appeal was taken by the Administrator, the Pen-Mar Coal Company, and M. E. Moore.

The situation in this case, concisely stated, is as follows: The Pen-Mar Coal Company owes numerous creditors besides the lessors; the claim of the lessors amounts to only a few thousand dollars, while the property of the company is alleged to be worth many thousands of dollars, and in fact to be more than sufficient to satisfy all the creditors if properly handled and disposed of; the lower court, through its receiver was earing for such assets of the company, and through its commissioner was ascertaining the indebtedness of the company; the purpose of the court was, through a sale of the company’s property, to settle the claims of all the creditors as far as possible, including the claim of the lessors; yet before a complete report of the indebtedness of the company has been made, or the priorities of the creditors ascertained, the lessors demand the right to halt the entire court proceedings, to forfeit the lease, and to receive from the court or have ‘ ‘ the hand of the court lifted” from the possession of the physical properties of the company. Such proceeding would leave little if anything in the hands of the court to satisfy the claims of the other creditors. There is no charge of mismanagement against the receiver, and the obvious purpose of the lessors is to secure an. overwhelming advantage of the other creditors.

The demand of the lessors is based on the rule that a court of equity will require a party in default to fulfill his covenant before being absolved from the effect of his delinquency; on the fact that no offer has been made in this case by the company to satisfy its obligation to the lessors; and on the theory that in such case equity will not prevent recourse to legal remedies.

We might be impressed with the lessors’ argument if the rights of no one were involved but those of the lessors and the lessee. However, the rights of numerous other parties are seriously affected. We discern no equitable reason for determining and attempting to satisfy the claim of the lessors in advance of all the other creditors. We see no equity in *251 turning over to the lessors property worth many times their claim, when by so doing, other creditors may be prevented from or hindered and delayed in the collection of their demands. Bryant v. Thomas, 143 Ga. 217 (222).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 S.E. 510, 101 W. Va. 247, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 172, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pelzel-v-pen-mar-coal-co-wva-1926.