Rockport Coal Co. v. Carter

163 S.W. 734, 157 Ky. 555, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 327
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedFebruary 24, 1914
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 163 S.W. 734 (Rockport Coal Co. v. Carter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rockport Coal Co. v. Carter, 163 S.W. 734, 157 Ky. 555, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 327 (Ky. Ct. App. 1914).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Hannah

Affirming' in part and reversing in part.

Appellant, H. L. Tucker, and appellee, J. T. Carter, together with one M. W. Heltsley, on December 28, 1908, formed a partnership for the purpose of obtaining options and leases on coal and mineral lands in Ohio County. The leases were to be taken in the name of' Tucker, but each of the three partners was to be equally, interested therein. Carter executed a lease to Tucker covering his own land's, which lease was acknowledged! [556]*556by him on December 28,1908, and by his wife on December 29, 1908. This lease provided for a royalty to be paid by the lessee to the lessors, of two cents per ton on all coal mined from the lands so leased.

At the time of the execution of said lease by Carter’s wife, there was executed a supplemental contract .signed and acknowledged by H. L. Tucker, by the terms of which he agreed that if-he should assign the said lease to a third party, the royalty to be paid to said Carter and his wife on the coal mined from the lands covered by said lease, should be two and one-half cents per ton instead of two cents per ton as provided in the said lease. The original lease was recorded on January 7, 1909, but. the supplemental contract was not recorded until April 2, 1909. On March 27, 1909, appellant Kockport Coal Company, a corporation, was organized, the capital stock being fixed at fifty thousand dollars, which stock: was subscribed for by various persons, strangers to these contracts, appellant Tucker and appellee Carter and Heltsley each receiving three thousand dollars of said stock, this being given to them for the leases held by them under said partnership. Tucker also received an additional six thousand dollars of this stock for his services and expenses in promoting and organizing the corporation. The remainder of the subscriptions were paid in, cash.

On that day, Tucker transferred and assigned to said corporation the leases held by said partnership, includ-' ing the. original lease from appellees, Carters. The coal company immediately thereafter commenced work, and expended some ninety thousand dollars in erecting a coal plant on said property, and commenced the mining of coal therefrom.

After the company commenced operations, a difference arose between Tucker, Carter and Heltsley over tb.e distribution of the six thousand dollars in stock which Tucker had received for his services in promoting and organizing the corporation, Carter and Heltsley claiming that this stock was given Tucker in payment for the leases held by the partnership, and suit was brought by said Carter and Heltsley seeking a division of said1 ■stock, but in this they were unsuccessful. See 138 Ky., 34; 127 S. W., 498.

After this difference arose between Carter, Heltsley and Tucker, Carter sued the coal company for the [557]*557royalty on twenty thousand tons of coal mined on his land, at the rate of two and one-half cents per ton, as set out in the said supplemental contract, the company, offering to pay him only two cents per ton as provided1 ■in the original lease.

Thereafter, appellant, Tucker, instituted in the Ohio Circuit Court, this action in equity aganst appelees, J. T. Carter ánd wife, seeking a reformation of the supplemental contract, upon the ground that it does not express the true intent of the parties and was entered into by mutual mistake of the parties thereto. Appellant, Rock-port Coal Company, joined in the petition, and sought to have said supplemental contract cancelled in so far as it constituted or purports to be a cloud upon appellant company’s title, or the basis of claim against it, by appellees. Upon a trial of the action, the chancellor denied both plaintiffs the relief prayed for, and dismissed the petition; and plaintiffs appeal.

At the time of the making of the partnership agreement and the execution of the original lease, defendant, J. T. Carter and his son-in-law, M. W. Heltsley, and plaintiff H. L. Tucker were contemplating the opening and operation of a coal mine on the lands of Carter and others in Ohio County;, and plaintiff Tucker, contends that after the execution of said lease, Carter proposed to him that if the project by which he, said Carter, expected to become interested in the development of the coal mine, should fail of consummation, and the lease which he had executed to Tucker should be sold outright to other and stranger interests, in and with which said Carter had no connection, and from which he should receive no financial gain or remuneration by reason of the execution of said lease except such royalty as might be paid for the coal mined from his land, then and in that event he should receive a higher royalty than two cents per ton; and that plaintiff, Tucker, acceded to and accepted said proposition of defendant, Carter; and that such was in fact the true contract of the parties.

Plaintiff Tucker contends that when it was undertaken to reduce such contract and understanding to writing by mutual mistake of the parties and the draughtsman, language not sufficiently explicit and not clearly specifying the terms of the agreement was used; while defendant, Carter, contends that there was no mistake made in drawing up the contract, and that the writing [558]*558contains the true contract of the parties. The supplemental contract in question reads as follows:

“This contract entered into between J. T. Carter and S. E. Carter, his wife, of Rockport, Ohio County, Kentucky, parties of the first part, and H. L. Tucker, of Central City, Kentucky, party of the second part, witnesseth: the said party of the second part does hereby agree that should he transfer the lease on three hundred acres of coal located in Ohio County, Kentucky, to a third party, then the said parties are to receive two and one-half cents per ton for all coal mined from the lease obtained this day from the said first parties.”

Plaintiff, Rockport Coal Company, contends that at the time of the transfer to it by Tucker of the original lease from Carter to said Tucker, it did not know of the existence of this supplemental contract, which was not recorded until six days after the said transfer was made;' that the defendants had created a cloud upon its title by giving out and proclaiming that said supplemental contract entitles them to a royalty of two and one-half cents on all coal mined from their lands so leased; and that said defendants are coercing the payment, by suit, of such royalty; that said plaintiff is in the possession of the lands so leased, has installed thereon a costly mining-plant; and is mining and removing coal therefrom; and that the supplemental contract in question should be can-celled in so far as it purports to cast a cloud upon itsi title; and that defendants should be perpetually enjoined from prosecuting suits attempting to coerce the payment of the royalty claimed by them under said contract.

1. As to the right of plaintiff, Tucker, to have reformation of the supplemental contract, the evidence is conflicting. His testimony supported his contention in that respect as hereinbefore set out. Heltsley, one of the members of the partnership referred to, and a son-in-law of defendant, Carter, testified as follows: “Well, the question arose when Mr. Tucker spoke in regard to a stock company to open and operate the mines, as we were not at the time financially able to, as he thought, and there was some objections by Mr.

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Related

Carter v. Tucker
266 S.W. 9 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1924)
Litteral v. Bevins
217 S.W. 369 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)
Ohio Valley Banking & Trust Co. v. Citizens National Bank
191 S.W. 433 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1917)

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Bluebook (online)
163 S.W. 734, 157 Ky. 555, 1914 Ky. LEXIS 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rockport-coal-co-v-carter-kyctapp-1914.