Vandalia Coal Co. v. Underwood

111 N.E. 329, 60 Ind. App. 675, 1916 Ind. App. LEXIS 26
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 2, 1916
DocketNo. 8,901
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 111 N.E. 329 (Vandalia Coal Co. v. Underwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vandalia Coal Co. v. Underwood, 111 N.E. 329, 60 Ind. App. 675, 1916 Ind. App. LEXIS 26 (Ind. Ct. App. 1916).

Opinion

Moran, J.

Appellees recovered a judgment against appellants in the sum of $433.97, as an an- [677]*677• nuity alleged to be due them under a lease executed to appellant, William W. Ray, on a 40-aere tract of real estate in Clay County, Indiana, authorizing the lessee to operate for and. mine coal and other minerals. The lease at the time of the commence: ment of the action was held by appellant, Vandalia Coal Company, by” assignment. Many questions are presented on the rulings on the pleadings, but the nature of the same is such that they can be disposed of under the assignments of error questioning the correctness of the conclusions of law rendered by the court on the facts specially found.

The correctness of the conclusions of law involves the construction of the lease, which is the foundation of the action and which is a part of the special findings of fact. The lease was entered into on October 1, 1904, and provides among other things that it was to continue for fifteen years unless the minable coal in the land and adjoining lands should be sooner exhausted, but the annuity was not to be paid after the exhaustion of the coal. The lessee to enter upon the lands and make search for coal within ninety days from the date of the execution of the lease, and if the coal was found in sufficient quantity and quality and the roof of sufficient strength to justify mining, to sink a shaft and have the same completed for operation within six months and from thence to mine coal and pay the lessors for all coal caught on a screen of a certain size, ten cents per ton, to be payable between the fifteenth and twentieth of each month for coal mined during the preceding month. The nut and slack coal to be free of royalty except when worked on mine run basis. The lessee to pay from date to make the royalty amount to $600 annually, or in default, to pay the sum each year after the completion of a shaft or the commencing of mining operations and any sum paid [678]*678in excess of royalty on coal mined to be deducted out of any excess over $600 in any year or years thereafter. The annuity not to be payable until after the expiration of one year from the commencement of mining operations. The failure to sink a shaft or begin mining operations within the time stipulated, lessee to pay at the expiration of said time $600 to lessors as advance royalty to be deducted as hereinbefore provided. The lessee reserved the right to abandon the lease at any time on account of the thinness of coal. A failure on the part of lessee to comply with the covenants of the lease was to render the lease null and void.

The controlling question for the decision of the court is the amount of royalty or annuity, if any, that is due the lessors by the terms of the lease and the facts found by the court. On January 16, 1905, a shaft was completed on the land lying immediately east of appellees’ land and which was in the same quarter section as that of appellees; all of which quarter section was leased at the same time, for’ the purpose of operating for and mining coal. This was the only mine opened under the lease, and from this shaft operations were commenced and 751.55 tons of coal mined on appellees’ land, for which they received a royalty of $75.15. On November 21, 1905, appellant paid appellees $600 and in October, 1906, an additional $600 as advanced royalty. The court found that on account of the thinness of the vein and the poor quality of the coal in the lands of appellees, coal could not have been mined with ordinary mining facilities during the year of 1906, and in none of the succeeding years up to and including the year 1911, and during these years there was no minable coal in appellees’ land, and the term, “minable coal”, as used in the lease had reference to coal that could be mined and [679]*679marketed at a profit to the operator under ordinary-mining and marketing conditions. In June, 1907, appellant ceased mining operations and abandoned the mine in appellees’ land, and on December 24, 1907, mining operations ceased as to the entire 160 acres. In January, 1908, appellant removed its personal property from the mine and dismantled the building used in connection -with mining operations ■with the knowledge of appellees. On the facts found by the court of which the above is a brief summary, the conclusion of law was that there was due appellees as unpaid annuity $325 from October 1, 1906, to June 30, 1907, with six per cent interest.

• Recurring again to the lease, it will be remembered that it provides that the annuity should not be payable after the exhaustion of coal and that sufficient coal should be mined to make the royalty amount to $600 annually, or in default to pay said sum each year after the completion of a shaft or the commencing of mining operations, and any sum paid in excess of the royalty on coal mined should be treated as advanced royalty to be deducted out of any excess over $600 in any year or years thereafter, with the proviso that the annuity was not to be payable until after the expiration of one year from the completion of the shaft or the commencement of operas tions on appellees’ land. Appellant plants itself on two legal propositions, (1) that when parties enter into an agreement in regard to a thing, which, unknown to both parties, is nonexistent at the time, .the mistake avoids the contract, as the thing agreed upon ceased to be possible before the agreement was made; there being no subject-matter, there could be no contract in reference thereto; (2) the lessee in a lease of the character under consideration determines whether the minable coal is exhausted, or the condition of the same renders operation unprof[680]*680itable, and that a surrender or termination of the lease is not necessary in order to resist payment of rent or royalty, on the ground that it had not accrued by reason of the nonexistence of minable coal; that the contract is based on a royalty, and that a recovery can be had under the same only on the theory that minable coal existed. On the other hand, it is appellees’ contention that under the lease, appellant was liable for the rent or royalty so long as it held under the lease and that it is no defence to the collection of the minimum rent or royalty that the mine became unprofitable. Appellant and appellees use the words “rent”, “royalty” and “annuity” interchangeably.

1. The coal industry, however, seems to recognize two general classes of mining leases, (1) the lease which requires the lessee to pay the lessor a certain amount of money at stated intervals as a “dead rent”, irrespective of the productiveness of the mine; (2) the payment of royalty on the quantity of mineral mined, with the requirement that a stipulated amount be mined within a stated period of time, or upon failure to do so to pay a certain amount of money equal to the income that would have been received by the landowner had the mineral been mined. Ridgely v. Conewago Iron Co. (1893), 53 Fed. 988; Muhlenberg v. Henning (1887), 116 Pa. St. 138, 9 Atl. 144; Diamond Iron Min. Co. v. Buckeye Iron Min. Co. (1897), 70 Minn. 500, 73 N. W. 507. The lease^in this case must be considered in the light of the authorities as falling within the class that is based upon a royalty; the consideration to the landowner was a stipulated sum on each ton mined, the minimum production not to yield less than $600 per annum, with provisions for a like sum per annum for failure to mine. This leaves for consideration the [681]*681period for which the royalty should be paid under the facts specially found.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
111 N.E. 329, 60 Ind. App. 675, 1916 Ind. App. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vandalia-coal-co-v-underwood-indctapp-1916.