Rocky Mountain Fuel Co. v. Clayton Coal Co.

134 P.2d 1062, 110 Colo. 334
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 8, 1943
DocketNo. 14,948.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 134 P.2d 1062 (Rocky Mountain Fuel Co. v. Clayton Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rocky Mountain Fuel Co. v. Clayton Coal Co., 134 P.2d 1062, 110 Colo. 334 (Colo. 1943).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Jackson

delivered the opinion of the court.

In a suit to quiet title, the district court of the City and County of Denver entered a decree in favor of the plaintiff, The Clayton Coal Company, hereinafter referred to as the Coal Company, and against The Rocky Mountain Fuel Company, hereinafter referred to as the Fuel Company. The latter company brings the case here on writ of error.

The narrative of pertinent facts begins with the 14th day of July, when Frances M. Chase, being the owner in fee of two quarter sections of land in Weld county, entered into a contract of purchase and sale with Walter and Clarence Gray, hereinafter referred to as the Grays, *336 in respect to said land, and later executed her warranty deed conveying the land to the Grays. Both contract and deed were placed in escrow with a Denver bank. On September 1, 1931, the Fuel Company, being the owner of all of section 29 and the northwest quarter of section 28, township 1 north, range 68 west, Weld county (its Columbine coal mine being located on the northeast quarter of section 29), entered into a lease with the Grays with respect to the above mentioned two quarter sections, i. e.: northeast quarter and the southwest quarter of section 28, both quarters being contiguous to the coal lands of the Fuel Company. On September 25, 1931, the Grays quitclaimed to Frances M. Chase an undivided one-half interest in all of their right, title and interest to coal, oil, and other minerals underlying the premises, including any interest that they now have or may hereafter acquire in said coal, oil, and other minerals by reason of the contract of purchase dated July 14, 1930, and warranty deed dated November 28, 1930, which instruments were held in escrow. On October 21, 1932, the Grays, through their attorney, wrote a letter stating that they were cancelling the lease, and on November 5, 1932, the Fuel Company recorded the lease in the records of Weld county. Subsequently the Grays filed suit in the United States district court of Colorado to cancel the lease. The Grays, after making some payments under their contract with Frances M. Chase, mutually agreed with her to cancel the contract which was never recorded and the copies of which have been lost or destroyed. On June 28, 1933, Frances M. Chase, by special warranty deed, conveyed, along with other property, the above mentioned two quarter sections covered by the Gray lease to her son, Gaylord R. Chase. On May 24, 1934, the Grays’ suit in the federal district court to cancel the lease was dismissed for lack of prosecution. On December 20, 1937, Gaylord R. Chase conveyed the premises by special warranty deed to Thomas W. Cosslett, and the Grays simultaneously conveyed the same *337 property by quitclaim deed to Cosslett; and on the next day Cosslett conveyed to the Coal Company by quitclaim deed the mineral rights to these two quarter sections covered by the Gray lease.

The lease between the Grays and the Fuel Company contains many of the usual clauses appearing in mining leases, including the last paragraph that “time is of the essence of the within lease throughout,” and sets up a sliding scale of royalty payments. Unusual provisions are:

1. It runs “for an indefinite term, for the purpose of mining and marketing coal therefrom as its [the lessee Fuel Company’s] needs and requirements demand so long as the coal contained in the aforesaid property is of workable nature and can be operated at a profit, and the lessee shall determine when the coal seam is workable * *

2. Lessee “shall not be required to start development work toward any coal in the said leased premises until September 1, 1932, and such development work thereafter to be prosecuted as determined by the lessee’s needs and requirements which it may determine. The lessee shall have the right to protect and explore said leased premises at any and all times after date hereof.”

3. “After the beginning of development work in said leased premises the lessee will extract and remove therefrom a minimum production of six thousand (6,000) tons of run of mine coal annually * * * .”

The Fuel Company has never begun development work in the leased premises and therefore has not obligated, itself under 3. It did start development work toward the leased premises by continuing the line of its main haulage in a general easterly direction from the northeast quarter of section 29 into the northwest quarter of section 28; then subsequently turning south it approached the northerly boundary line of the southwest quarter of section 28, being one of the quarter sections of the Gray lease, but instead of continuing on into the *338 Gray quarter section it drove westerly back into the ■ northeast quarter of section 29 and thence south on its own property into the southeast quarter of section 29 in a line generally paralleling and in fairly close proximity to the western boundary line of the southwest quarter of section 28, the Gray lease. The Fuel Company’s engineer testified that they were still in coal when, after driving the main south, they turned west again rather than continue into the land covered by the Gray lease; that he thought the coal was the same in the southwest quarter of section 28 as in the Fuel Company’s property, and that the reason for turning west was so that the main passageways should be located on the Fuel Company’s property. Although the Fuel Company’s correspondence indicates that it is its intention now to mine coal on the two quarters in section 28 covered by the Gray lease and contract, its counsel, in their argument, contend that there is no obligation upon it to do so even at the present time.

The trial court’s decree quieting the title in favor of the Coal Company was based on findings that the only consideration for the granting of the lease was the agreement of the Fuel Company to pay royalties on the coal produced from the leased premises, and that it was therefore the duty of the defendant to prosecute the work required of it under the lease with reasonable diligence; that time was expressly made the essence of the agreement, and that the defendant failed to prosecute such work with reasonable diligence and failed to work the leased premises, within a reasonable time or at all, and that the Fuel Company thereby forfeited and abandoned the lease. Further, that the Grays, who, as lessors, executed the lease to the Fuel Company as vendee, never acquired any title to the premises conveyed by the lease; that therefore there is no privity of contract between the Fuel Company and the Coal Company or any of its predecessors in title, and that the *339 lease is therefore of no effect against the Coal Company.

.Counsel for the Fuel Company urge that in a suit to quiet title plaintiff must allege and prove possession of the property, title to which is sought to be quieted. In this case neither plaintiff nor defendant owns the surface of the two quarter sections covered by the Gray lease, and the only way in which any person could be in actual possession of the minerals under the surface would be through actual mining operations and workings — of which it is admitted there are none on the premises in question.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Ranch O, LLC v. Colorado Cattlemen's Agricultural Land Trust
2015 COA 20 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2015)
Tuttle v. Burrows
852 P.2d 1314 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1992)
Grynberg v. City of Northglenn
739 P.2d 230 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1987)
Grynberg v. City of Northglenn
703 P.2d 601 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1985)
Archer v. Mountain Fuel Supply Co.
642 P.2d 943 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1982)
Graefe & Graefe, Inc. v. Beaver Mesa Exploration Co.
635 P.2d 900 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1981)
Page v. Fees-Krey, Inc.
617 P.2d 1188 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1980)
Dulin v. West
528 P.2d 411 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1974)
Sedalia Land Co. v. ROBINSON BRICK AND TILE CO
475 P.2d 351 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1970)
O'REILLY v. Balkwill
297 P.2d 263 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1956)
Ohio Oil Co. v. Wyoming Agency
179 P.2d 773 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1947)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
134 P.2d 1062, 110 Colo. 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rocky-mountain-fuel-co-v-clayton-coal-co-colo-1943.