Straight Creek Coal & Coke Co. v. Straight Creek Coal Mining Co.

122 S.W. 842, 135 Ky. 536, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 318
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedNovember 30, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 122 S.W. 842 (Straight Creek Coal & Coke Co. v. Straight Creek Coal Mining Co.) 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
Straight Creek Coal & Coke Co. v. Straight Creek Coal Mining Co., 122 S.W. 842, 135 Ky. 536, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 318 (Ky. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Lassing

Affirming.

Tlie Straight Creek Coal & Coke Company is a corporation owning large bodies of coal and timber lands in Bell county, Ky. For more than 10 years it has operated a coal mine on a tract of its land on the waters of Straight creek, about 2% miles eastwardly from Pineville. ■ It also has a coke- plant and a sawmill there. In order to get its products to the market, it owns and operates a railroad switch running from its mines and coke plant to the Louisville & Nashville Railroad at Pineville. The corporation owns no rolling stock except a few logging cars on which it brings its logs to its sawmill. It rents an engine from'the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company with which to do the necessary switching of coal cars on the yards at its mines.

[538]*538In 1905 the corporation desired to develop a; large Body of its land which lays some four miles northwárdly of its coal and coke plant. In order to do this, it entered into a contract with the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to build this four miles of additional switch from its mining camp to the property to be developed; the expenditure to be repaid to the Louisville & Nashville by the coal company’s paying live cents per ton for every ton transported over the new switch. To further secure the payment of the cost of building the switch, the coal company executed and delivered to the railroad company a mortgage upon its whole railroad switch, and the railroad company agreed to maintain the switch during the existence of the mortgage, and to haul the coal company’s coal from its mines to Pineville free of charge. In o.rder to secure the right of way for the new switch, the coal company entered into contracts with the various landowners through whose lands it was proposed to run, by which it was agreed, among other things, that the owner conveyed a right of way 50 feet wide to the coal company, and the latter agreed that the landowner might have the use of the switch for transporting his coal to market at a track-age charge of five cents per ton.

Along the line of the proposed new switch, the Howards owned a tract of land, and they (except one infant to be hereafter noticed) conveyed to the appellee by deed a right of way through their land. The deed contains the agreement between the owners of the land and appellee concerning the trackage charges to be paid by the vendors to appellee for the use of its switch. So far as it is necessary to notice this contract, it may be stated that, as a consideration for the [539]*539right of way, the owners of the land and their assignees were to have the nse of the switch at a trackage charge of five cents per ton. One of the Howards was an infant, and, although his guardian offered to convey to appellee for the ward his interest in the right of way, it was thought better that a friendly condemnation suit should be instituted and carried to judgment in order to fully bind the infant; and this was done. With this exception the record shows that the appellee obtained its entire right of way for the new switch by contract.

During the pendency of the negotiations between appellee and the Howard heirs for the right of way, certaifi individuals, who afterwards organized themselves into a corporation called the Straight Creek Coal Mining Company, were negotiating with the Howards for a lease of their property for the purpose of opening and operating a coal mine thereon. This corporation is the appellant in this action. After the switch was built, the appellant opened its coal mine, and for some time shipped coal over the switch to Pineville under the contract made by appellee and the Howards, and during this period paid the trackage charges in accordance with the terms of the contract between appellee and appellant’s lessors, the Howards. Afterwards, however, appellant refused to pay further trackage charges, asserting that appellee was a common carrier and was discriminating against it by not charging other coal miners on its switch anything for trackage, and that therefore it was not required to pay anything for the use of the switch.

This position is based upon the following state of facts: In order to induce the Louisville & Nashville Railroad Company to build the four miles of switch [540]*540involved here, the appellee company found it necessary to insure the railroad company against loss by reason of its outlay in building the switch; and to do this it entered into a contract with the railroad that it would make certain developments of coal mines upon its land, which would insure a large haulage over the road and furnish to the railroad company a large quantity of freight from Pineville to the various coal markets of the country. In order to make good this contract with the railroad company, the appellee leased parts of its land, which was to be developed by the switch, to two coal mining companies, and agreed, among other things, that in consideration for the payment by its tenants of eight cents royalty on each ton of coal mined, it would haul, or cause to be hauled, the coal of its tenants to the Louisville & Nashville Railroad for the purpose of being transported to the market; it being especially agreed that the eight-cent royalty was to cover both payment for the coal and the transportation of it from the mine to the Louisville & Nashville Railroad.

So that the real questions here are: (1) Is the appellee, in the use- of its switch, a common carrier? (2) If it be such, does the effect of the contract between it and its tenants result in an illegal discrimination in the trackage charges as between appellant and the tenants? It is not disputed by any of the parties to this record that, if appellee is a common carrier, it may not discriminate in trackage charges between its patrons, and that, if it allows any of its patrons to haul over its switch free, then it cannot charge track-age against any of its patrons; and therefore, if it be ascertained that appellee is a common carrier, the question at once arises: Is the contract with its ten[541]*541ants a discrimination in freight or trackage rates between them and the other patrons along its line?

Appellee, being a corporation engaged in the coal mining business, points out that under the Constitution it cannot be a common carrier; and in support of this position relies upon the provision of section 210 of that instrument, which is .as follows: “No corporation engaged in the business of common carrier shall, directly or indirectly, own, manage, operate, or engage in any other business than that of a common carrier, or hold, own, lease or acquire, directly or indirectly, mines, factories or timber, except such as shall be necessary to carry on its business; and the General Assembly shall enact laws to give effect to the provisions of this section. ” It is obvious that the foregoing provision of the Constitution prohibits appellee, if it be a common carrier, from owning or operating a coal mine. Section 815 of the Statutes authorizes, among other things, the owner of a coal mine within three miles of any navigable stream or railroad to condemn a right of way, not to exceed 50 feet wide, for the purpose - of building a switch or tracks in order to get his produce to market.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 S.W. 842, 135 Ky. 536, 1909 Ky. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/straight-creek-coal-coke-co-v-straight-creek-coal-mining-co-kyctapp-1909.