Robinson v. Eagle-Picher Lead Co.

297 P. 697, 132 Kan. 860, 75 A.L.R. 840, 1931 Kan. LEXIS 415
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedApril 11, 1931
DocketNo. 29,892
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 297 P. 697 (Robinson v. Eagle-Picher Lead Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robinson v. Eagle-Picher Lead Co., 297 P. 697, 132 Kan. 860, 75 A.L.R. 840, 1931 Kan. LEXIS 415 (kan 1931).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:

This is an appeal by the plaintiffs from a judgment of the trial court in favor of the defendants in an action brought to obtain a decree in equity imposing a trust upon a certain mining lease taken in the name of one of the defendants, which it is claimed should be for the use and benefit of the plaintiffs. There are four plaintiffs who claim to be interested, but all the transactions involved were with and in the name of one only of them, G. D. Robinson.

[861]*861The case involves the question of the right of the sublessor to continue to receive his royalties during the renewal or extension period of a mining lease procured by his sublessees directly from the landowner.

The plaintiffs allege they were possessed of an expectancy of renewal constituting a vested property right in the mining lease, that the defendants as sublessees occupied a fiduciary relationship to the plaintiffs as tenants and owed á duty to plaintiffs to render every service to the plaintiffs imposed by the terms of the sublease and to conduct the mining operations in a manner to bring to the plaintiffs the greatest revenue possible, and to furnish the plaintiffs with full information in their possession as to the mine, the discoveries and development, and not to withhold from plaintiffs nor keep secret from them any steps or movements inconsistent with the best interests of the plaintiffs. Plaintiffs further allege that defendants, sublessees, have violated the terms of their agreement by ceasing to-operate the mine as required by the terms of the lease, that they have withheld and kept secret from the plaintiffs the drill logs, assays and blue prints of the underground workings, the extent of the ore bodies discovered, and that defendants have secretly and surreptitiously negotiated for and obtained a renewal lease from the landowner for the purpose of destroying the right of expectancy of renewal in the plaintiffs; that because of such fiduciary rela.tionship the plaintiffs are in equity entitled to the use and benefit of such renewal lease so procured by the defendants.

The defendants in their answer denied generally the allegations of the petition and specifically denied there was any confidential or fiduciary relationship existing between plaintiffs and defendants, denied that they secretly obtained the lease and denied that the plaintiffs have any right to or interest in the lease in law or inequity.

The evidence showed that on April 18, 1917, one A. L. Wilbur,, the owner of a tract of land in Cherokee county, Kansas, upon which the lead and zinc ore mine in question was located, executed and delivered a mining lease on the same to one of the plaintiffs, G. D. Robinson, for fifteen years, expiring April 18, 1932. On April 19, 1917, Robinson executed and delivered to W. J. Klingenberg,. trustee, a mining sublease on the same land for a period beginning-on that date and expiring April 17, 1932, one day earlier than the expiration of the original lease. On June 28, 1917, Klingenberg,. [862]*862trustee, made an absolute assignment of his lease to the defendant Commonwealth Lead and Zinc Company, retaining no interest.

On September 24, 1918, the Commonwealth Lead and Zinc Company, through one O. S. Picher, entered into a contract with the Eagle-Picher Lead Company, granting the right to mine the land and sell the ores therefrom for a period ending April 17, 1932, pursuant to and under the provisions, covenants, terms and conditions of the mining lease executed by Robinson to Klingenberg, trustee. The contract further recited that Robinson held his right in the premises by virtue of a lease from A. L. Wilbur and that the contract was made subject to all the terms and conditions of both leases, which were made a part of the contract, and that second party agreed to do all things necessary to be done by virtue of said prior leases. The contract contained a provision that both parties, the Commonwealth Lead and Zinc Company and the Eagle-Picher Lead Company, should use their best efforts to secure a mining lease on said premises for an additional period. Thereafter the EaglePicher Lead Company went into possession of the premises under the sublease and has since remained in possession of the premises, ■conducting mining operations thereon and accounting for and paying over to the plaintiffs the royalties provided for in the sublease.

On April 28, 1929, the Eagle-Picher Lead Company, for the benefit of itself and its codefendant, the Commonwealth Lead and Zinc Company, while in possession of the premises and while operating the mines under the sublease and accounting to plaintiffs for royalties accruing under the sublease, took and obtained from A. L. Wilbur, the landowner, a mining lease on said property for the purpose of mining lead and zinc ores therefrom, which was to commence on April 18, 1932, the day on which the prior lease from the landowner terminated, and to run for a period of fifteen years from April 18, 1932, providing for the payment of 12y<¿ per cent royalty, being the same amount of royalty as under the prior lease except under the prior lease it was divided, 10 per cent going to Wilbur and 2% per cent to the plaintiffs.

The appellants, in presenting their theory of the case and the authorities in support thereof, outline and forcibly urge three •propositions of law as involved therein, viz.:

“I. Appellants, as lessees under the original lease, were possessed of an ■expectancy of renewal constituting a vested property right which equity •will protect against all persons in a fiduciary or quasi-fiduciary relationship [863]*863with appellants, although such expectancy constitutes, as against appellants’ lessor, no enforceable legal right.
“II. A fiduciary or quasi-fiduciary relationship existed between appellants and appellees under the terms and incidents of the sublease, the sole rentals thereunder being royalties upon ore produced, since: (1) Appellees were interested for and with appellants in the subject of the lease, both in accounting for royalties and in the eventual division of ore produced or the proceeds thereof; (2) appellees, under the terms and incidents of the sublease, became the agents of appellants; and (3) appellees, through such sublease, became possessed of secret and confidential information, superior to that possessed by appellants, and appellants, as a result, were necessarily compelled to repose trust and confidence in appellees and their integrity, fidelity and good faith, inevitably relying upon them not to use such confidential information so obtained for purposes antagonistic to or destructive of appellants’ rights.
“III. Such fiduciary or quasi-fiduciary relationship existing, appellees were in equity prohibited from acquiring, by the renewal of appellants’ original lease under which appellees were appellants’ subtenants, rights in the property antagonistic to the rights of appellants and destructive of appellants’ expectancy of renewal; appellees having obtained such renewal with the consequent destruction of appellants’ expectancy, such renewal inures in equity to the benefit of appellants; and a constructive or implied trust will be imposed thereon for the use and benefit of appellants.”

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Bluebook (online)
297 P. 697, 132 Kan. 860, 75 A.L.R. 840, 1931 Kan. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-eagle-picher-lead-co-kan-1931.