Third National Bank & Trust Co. v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co.

44 A.2d 571, 353 Pa. 185
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 28, 1945
DocketAppeal, 105
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 44 A.2d 571 (Third National Bank & Trust Co. v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Third National Bank & Trust Co. v. Lehigh Valley Coal Co., 44 A.2d 571, 353 Pa. 185 (Pa. 1945).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Horace Stern,

Did a lessor, by giving the lessee permission to mort: gage the demised estate, waive the right reserved by it in the lease to repossess itself of the property upon a default by the lessee? That is the question involved in this case, and we answer it, as did the court below, in the negative.

In 1932 the Lehigh Yalley Coal Company leased to the Wyoming Yalley Collieries Company certain coal mines in Luzerne County known as the Forty Fort and Harry E. Collieries. The lease ivas for all the coal in, *187 under and upon the therein described tracts of land, together with the breakers, machinery, miners’ houses, improvements, fixtures and personal property of every description upon the premises and connected with the mining, preparing and transporting of coal. The term was to continue until all the merchantable coal should be fully mined out and exhausted, provided that the lessee should so long keep and perform its covenants in the lease. The lessee was to pay a rent or royalty on all coal dug or carried away from the premises in the amount of fifty cents per ton for coal of the size known as barley or larger, and thirty cents per ton for smaller coal; after a total of 8,000,000 tons of the size of barley or larger should have been mined the royalty of fifty cents per ton was to be reduced to thirty-five cents. The lessee, at its own cost and expense, was to maintain all the properties in repair and to pay as additional rent all taxes thereon. If at any time an instalment of rent or any part thereof should become due and remain unpaid for a period of sixty days, the lessor was to have the right to declare the lease terminated; thereupon all rights of the lessee were to cease absolutely and the demised estate was to revert to the lessor which might then resume possession of the premises. In the event of a forfeiture of the lease by reason of a violation by the lessee of any of the prescribed covenants or conditions, the lessee was not to be entitled to remove any of the buildings, improvements, breakers, machinery or fixtures that might have been erected or installed by it, but all such improvements and fixtures were to be the absolute property of the lessor. The lessee was not to assign, mortgage or lien the demised estate without the written consent of the lessor first had and obtained, but a limited permission was given to the lessee to mortgage its interest under the lease to an amount not exceeding $250,000. This privilege was exercised by the Wyoming Company, and, when the mortgage which it then executed became *188 substantially reduced, an agreement was entered into by the parties, in 1936, in which, after again reciting that the lessee was not to assign, mortgage or lien the demised estate without the prior written consent of the lessor, it was provided that the lessee might “mortgage its interest under this lease to an amount not exceeding the sum of Five Hundred Thousand ($500,000.00) Dollars, inclusive of any amount outstanding under any prior mortgage, for a period not to exceed ten years from April 1, 1936; Provided, however, that nothing herein contained shall operate to impair, encumber, abridge or curtail in any way the rights, privileges or interests of the Lessor under this lease, or give to the mortgagee in said mortgage any lien or preference, or right of collection as to principal or interest which shall be prior to the right of the said Lessor to first receive the entire amount of the rentals or royalties agreed to be paid to it under the terms of this lease, and provided further, that the proceeds of any mortgage executed by Lessee under the power herein granted by Lessor shall be used by Lessee first for the payment in full of all indebtedness to Lessor under the terms of this lease up to and including April 1, 1936, and thereafter solely for the development of the premises herein demised and the marketing of the coal mined therefrom.”

Pursuant to the right thus acquired by it the Wyoming Company thereupon executed and delivered to the Third National Bank and Trust Company of Scranton, as trustee for bondholders, a mortgage on the demised estate to secure an issue of $500,000 “First Mortgage * Leasehold Ten Year 5% Sinking Fund Bonds”, which were sold to individual investors in the aggregate amount of $239,000. The mortgage recited that it was upon all the Wyoming Company’s “estate, right, title and interest ... in and to the land and lease of all the coal remaining in, under and upon” the described premises, and *189 in and to the lands, mines, properties, fixtures and structures used in connection with the operation of the mines. It contained a covenant that the Wyoming Company would not make any default whereby the lessor might have the right to terminate the lease.

During the course of the Wyoming Company’s occupancy of the premises it constructed tunnels and installed some mining equipment designed for the more economical and efficient mining of the property. Its operations, however, were not successful, and in 1937 it defaulted in the payment of royalties; by October of that year it had been in arrears for more than sixty days in an amount, as it subsequently admitted in its bankruptcy proceedings, of approximately $160,000, together with some $22,000 of unpaid taxes. The Lehigh Company, having made repeated but futile demands for payment, entered judgment in an amicable action of ejectment as authorized by the lease, and, on October 25, 1937, by virtue of a writ of habere facias, received possession of the premises, including the coal, surface, breakers, improvements and personal property, from the sheriff. A month later the Wyoming Company filed a petition in the United States District Court for reorganization under the Bankruptcy Act. Plaintiff, as trustee under the mortgage, participated in those proceedings ; it filed a claim on behalf of the bondholders for the principal and interest due on their bonds. It is of some significance to note, as reflecting its own viewpoint at that time, that, in answer to a petition of the Wyoming Company on a collateral matter, it admitted that the Wyoming Company had “for more than sixty days prior hereto, made, suffered and permitted various defaults whereby . . . the Lehigh Valley Coal Company has had and does have the right to terminate” the lease.

The Lehigh Company filed a petition in the bankruptcy proceedings for reclamation of the personal property and equipment claimed to belong to it by virtue of *190 the terms of the léase. Notices of the filing of this petition and of the hearing to be held thereon were duly-given by the referee to all creditors of the Wyoming Company, including the plaintiff. Several hearings were had and testimony was taken, the final result of which was an order by the referee, from which no appeal has ever been taken, aAvarding to the Lehigh Company the larger part of what it claimed, consisting mostly of the property which had been on the premises at the time of the making of the lease and the renewals and replacements installed under the lessee’s covenant to repair and maintain, and awarding to the bankrupt estate some items of equipment which had been added by the lessee; these were subsequently sold and the proceeds accounted for by the trustee in bankruptcy.

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

Related

Untitled Case
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2026
Eric Daimler v. Chris Moehle
Third Circuit, 2025
Thomas v. Transcore, LP
M.D. Pennsylvania, 2024
ZAFTR INC. v. LAWRENCE
E.D. Pennsylvania, 2023
FARHANGUI v. GROSSINGER
E.D. Pennsylvania, 2020
GROSSINGER v. FARHANGUI
E.D. Pennsylvania, 2020
U.S. Venture, Inc. v. Com. of PA, DCED
Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2020
Sokolow v. Damico et.al
S.D. Florida, 2019
Gress v. Freedom Mortg. Corp.
386 F. Supp. 3d 455 (M.D. Pennsylvania, 2019)
Vantage Learning (USA), LLC v. Edgenuity, Inc.
246 F. Supp. 3d 1097 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2017)
PLAC, Inc. v. Lamb, W.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016
Enslin v. Coca-Cola Co.
136 F. Supp. 3d 654 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2015)
Dallas School District v. Northeast Pennsylvania School Districts (Health) Trust
67 A.3d 102 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2013)
Montanez v. HSBC Mortgage Corp.
876 F. Supp. 2d 504 (E.D. Pennsylvania, 2012)
Roethlein v. PORTNOFF LAW ASSOCIATES, LTD.
25 A.3d 1274 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 A.2d 571, 353 Pa. 185, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/third-national-bank-trust-co-v-lehigh-valley-coal-co-pa-1945.