Phillips v. Sipsey Coal Mining Co.

118 So. 513, 218 Ala. 296, 1928 Ala. LEXIS 264
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedMay 10, 1928
Docket6 Div. 823.
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 118 So. 513 (Phillips v. Sipsey Coal Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Sipsey Coal Mining Co., 118 So. 513, 218 Ala. 296, 1928 Ala. LEXIS 264 (Ala. 1928).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 298 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 299 The bill was in the nature of an interpleader, and sought affirmative relief against some of the respondents. As originally filed September 9, 1922, it sought to have the court take jurisdiction of the subject-matter, to require respondents to propound their claims to royalties for coal mined in the month of August, 1922, and thereafter to adjudge the respective interests owned in said lease of date of July 10, 1914. Thus the purpose of this pleading was (1) to have the lease exhibited, established, and construed, and (2) to determine complainant's liability to E. J. Phillips or his two children, C. L. Phillips and Mary Wood.

Respondent Catts answered, admitted the allegations of the bill, set up his broker's or agency agreement with the lessor Phillips, and claimed a per ton compensation or indebtedness for his alleged services in procuring the lease. In response to appropriate demurrer, Catts was stricken from the bill as an improper party. Phillips et al. v. Catts, 206 Ala. 594,91 So. 579; Catts v. Sipsey Coal Min. Co., 212 Ala. 421, 102 So. 895.

In 1914, E. J. Phillips and wife, being the owners of the land described as about 339 acres, were, and are now, domiciled thereon, entered into the lease with "J. E. Dilworth, trustee," gave right to the latter to mine the coal from the land on terms and conditions expressly stated in the lease that was transferred to complainant. The latter opened a coal mine, established its entry and mining plant, commissary and employees' houses on these lands near Phillips' dwelling. From this operation of the same, certain controversies arose regarding the royalties that eventuated in a suit at law and one in equity. In the suit in equity, E. J. Phillips exhibited his lease in form and substance as that now exhibited by complainant, and materially different from that which is set up in the Phillips answer and cross-bill.

The respondents, C. L. Phillips and Mary Wood, amend their answer in the instant suit — made it a cross-bill averring certain provisions of the lease to the effect that, should dispute arise as to the amount of the coal mined by Dilworth's successors, "the railroad weights shall govern as to all coalshipped." These respondents allege that disputes had arisen; that complainant habitually and continuously mingled coal mined from the Phillips land with coal taken from other lands, thus making it impossible for Phillips to ascertain from railroad weights the quantity of coal mined and shipped from the Phillips land; that they have no other method of ascertaining the amount of coal mined and shipped from said land by complainant, except the record of railroad weights, as they had contracted and agreed upon in the lease; that such commingling of coal destroyed their instrumentality of ad-measurements; and that complainant be enjoined from so commingling its coal in the railroad car; that respondents have no way of protecting themselves against fraud and imposition in making settlements with the Sipsey Coal Mining Company under the lease other than required in the lease.

It is further set up in the Phillips-Wood answer and cross-bill that complainant is unlawfully using the leased property for its employees working in other mines, dumping débris from said other mines on the Phillips property; that "since the complainant has begun operation of said mines on the lands of the said Empire Coal Company, or other lands, the rents and royalties accruing to these respondents, and under the said lease, have been materially decreased, and in fact, according to the statements furnished by the complainant to these respondents, only about one-third of the total of coal mined under the lands embraced in said lease, and these respondents are under no duty to furnish such surface rights to the complainant for the purpose of mining coal from lands other than those embraced in said lease, and they are greatly injured and damaged by reason of the fact that the complainant has used, and is continuing to use, the same for said purpose; that such uses by the complainant were not contemplated by the terms of said lease"; and further alleges that complainant has been using the Phillips timber, contrary to lease provisions, in other mining operations. The answer and cross-bill concludes with appropriate prayer for injunction in many respects indicated.

The Sipsey Coal Mining Company answers that it had the right to —

"remove, without further compensation, over and through said lands, all coal mined from any and all other lands that may be acquired or used by the lessee, his successors, heirs or assigns, during the mining of coal from any of the lands hereby leased or while the minimum royalty of $50 per month is paid; and complainant says that it is still mining coal from under the lands contained in said lease, and that it is still paying royalties that amount to more than the minimum royalty contained in said clause. That it has acquired other lands as contemplated by said clause, and has the right to mine the same so long as it continues to mine coal from the lands covered by the lease or pays the minimum royalty of $50 per month. Complainant says that it is mining coal from adjacent lands, and has been for a long time. That it dumps said coal over the same tipple that it dumps the coal mined from cross-complainants' lands; and does dump same in the railroad cars with coal dumped from lands of the cross-complainants, and which is contained *Page 302 in the lease, and it has the express right to mine said coal under the lease, from said adjacent lands, and to do so the only feasible way to handle same is to dump it in the same railroad cars. * * *

"That when one of these mining cars is loaded in the mine under cross-complainants' land, that it is brought to the tipple with the check number of the miner digging the coal. That it goes on the scale, and the weigh boss weighs the same, takes down the weight of same on his daily sheet of the coal mined from that particular mine. That, when a car is loaded from the other mine under the adjacent mine, it is brought to the tipple, with the check number of the miner. That it is weighed by the weigh boss, and placed on his daily sheet for that mine. That he makes up his daily report, showing how many tons of coal are mined from cross-complainants' mine, and how many tons from the Empire lands, and that same is easily known, as they are operated by different numbers and different men. That, by merely adding together all the coal that goes over the tipple from one of the mines, it shows the amount that went into the particular railroad car. If the coal is placed in the washer, it will likewise show how many tons went into the washer from each mine; that the coal weighs less when it goes through the washer, and the average deduction from both mines gives the net amount after washed. That the railroad weights will bear the same ratio as the ratio is shown being mined from each of said mines."

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Bluebook (online)
118 So. 513, 218 Ala. 296, 1928 Ala. LEXIS 264, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-sipsey-coal-mining-co-ala-1928.