Tressler Coal Mining Co. v. Klefeld

24 S.E.2d 98, 125 W. Va. 301, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 2
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1943
Docket9381
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 24 S.E.2d 98 (Tressler Coal Mining Co. v. Klefeld) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tressler Coal Mining Co. v. Klefeld, 24 S.E.2d 98, 125 W. Va. 301, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 2 (W. Va. 1943).

Opinion

Lovins, Judge:

The Tressler Coal Mining Company prosecutes this appeal from a final decree of the Circuit Court of Barbour County, entered on March 5, 1942, dissolving a temporary *302 injunction and dismissing defendants, Julius Klefeld and H. H. Rose, Trustee, from the cause. The questions herein arise from proceedings following a remand of the cause by this Court upon a prior appeal.

In 1935, the Tressler Coal Mining Company instituted this chancery suit in the Circuit Court of Barbour County for the purpose of enjoining the sale of two tracts of coal upon which it held a lease for mining purposes, the two* tracts being part of nine tracts of coal conveyed to H. H. Rose, Trustee, in 1925, to secure an indebtedness of $25,000.00, evidenced by notes. The holder of the notes transferred the same to Julius Klefeld, who, in 1928, agreed in writing to the execution of a mining lease by the deed of trust debtor to S. B. Tressler; in 1934, Tressler assigned his rights thereunder to plaintiff. This injunction suit followed the Trustee’s advertisement for sale of the leased tracts, at the direction of Klefeld. From a decree dissolving a temporary injunction which had been issued at the time of the filing of the bill, the coal company appealed, and on February 1, 1938, this Court reversed that decree and remanded the cause for further development, on the principal ground that the leased tracts were “protected in equity from the operation of the deed of trust until recourse is had to the unleased tracts, in the absence of a showing that the unleased tracts are unavailable for sale under the deed of trust.” Tressler Coal Mining Co. v. Klefeld, et al., 119 W. Va. 567, 195 S. E. 202.

Upon the remand, Klefeld filed an amended answer in which he alleged that the seven unleased tracts were unavailable for sale under the deed of trust; that one tract had been released for valuable consideration applied on the trust debt, prior to the execution of the mining lease to Tressler; that the other six tracts had been sold both to the State and individuals in 1929 for nonpayment of 1927 taxes, without Klefeld’s knowledge, and that he had lost all rights of redemption. By demurrer and special replication to the amended answer, the coal company asserted that Klefeld had wrongfully created the unavailability alleged therein, the replication pleading equitable estop-pel. The demurrer to the amended answer was overruled *303 and Klefeld’s demurrer to the special replication was sustained. After depositions were taken, certain facts stipulated and exhibits filed on the issues thus raised, a final decree was entered which found that: (a) Royalties from the coal company’s development of the leased tracts had not been applied on the notes secured by the deed of trust as provided in the lease and the Klefeld agreement for the execution of the lease; (b) all the minable and merchantable coal, as described in the lease, had not been removed; and (c) that the other seven tracts covered by the deed of trust were unavailable for sale thereunder through no failure of duty on the part of Klefeld.

By the terms of the Tressler lease, the lessee is required to pay lessors or assigns a royalty of fifteen cents on each ton of coal mined, with a specified yearly minimum royalty of $1,500.00; it also provides that lessee is not required to mine “any area where the coal seam is less than FIFTY (50) INCHES in thickness, or is faulty making it unreasonably hard to mine, or where the coal is not mér-chantable”, and that when all coal has been mined from the leased premises, except 20,000 tons, further payment of royalty would not be required. In the written agreement of 1928, by which Klefeld consented to the execution of the lease by the deed of trust debtor, the following appears: “It being understood that the royalties due under said lease are to be paid to the said undersigned in discharge of said indebtedness and the interest thereon until the same is paid off by said royalties or otherwise.”

On this appeal the coal company contends that it was error to overrule its demurrer to Klefeld’s amended answer; that it was error to sustain the demurrer to the coal company’s special replication to the amended answer; that the record is without evidence to warrant the finding that all the royalties were not applied on the notes held by Klefeld; that no finding was made as to the existence of a seam of coal over fifty inches in thickness, and, therefore, it could not properly be held that minable and merchantable coal remained in the premises, and that the finding of unavailability of seven tracts through no failure of duty on the part of Klefeld ignores Klefeld’s duty to *304 protect the security for payment of the debt; and that Klefeld should not have recourse to the two tracts held by the coal company under its lease.

The findings of the trial chancellor as to the unavailability of the seven tracts, his rulings on the demurrer to Klefeld’s amended answer and on the demurrer to the special replication of the coal company are interrelated and will be discussed together. The opinion of this Court on the former appeal, Tressler Coal Mining Co. v. Klefeld, et al., supra, states the law of the case. Kaufman v. Catzen, et al., 108 W. Va. 1, 150 S. E. 371. On the first appeal there was no pleading or proof to show the unavailability of the seven tracts. It was there reasoned that such showing was necessary before Klefeld could have recourse to the two leased tracts for satisfaction of his lien. On remand it was made to appear by pleadings, proof and stipulation that the seven tracts are not available to Kle-feld for the satisfaction of his lien, for the reason that they have been sold, one of the tracts having been sold at private sale prior to the date of the lease to Tressler, the proceeds of such sale in the amount of $9,531.21 being applied on the indebtedness due Klefeld. The other six tracts were sold to various persons on account of nonpayment and delinquency of taxes levied and assessed against them. The tract sold at private sale was duly released of record, and the lien held by Klefeld was reduced in the amount of $9,531.21, as above stated, prior to the date of the lease from Hartley and wife to Tressler. For these reasons we see no prejudice to the coal company’s rights, because of such private sale. The six tracts sold to satisfy delinquent taxes have been conveyed to the purchasers thereof, deeds of conveyance therefor are of record, and it seems to be admitted that they are not redeemable.

The appellant urges that it was incumbent upon Kle-feld to pay thesé taxes and that his failure to do so prevents him from recourse to the two remaining tracts held by Tressler under his lease. The amended answer of Klefelds pleads the private sale and tax sales. The coal company’s special replication to such amended answer likewise avers such sales, and also that it was Klefeld’s *305 duty to protect his security by the payment of the taxes. Klefeld was not in possession of the tracts of coal conveyed to secure the payment of the debt held by him, nor interested therein otherwise than as a lienholder.

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Bluebook (online)
24 S.E.2d 98, 125 W. Va. 301, 1943 W. Va. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tressler-coal-mining-co-v-klefeld-wva-1943.