Wheeling Valley Coal Corporation v. Mead

186 F.2d 219, 28 A.L.R. 2d 1007, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3685
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedDecember 20, 1950
Docket6146_1
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 186 F.2d 219 (Wheeling Valley Coal Corporation v. Mead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wheeling Valley Coal Corporation v. Mead, 186 F.2d 219, 28 A.L.R. 2d 1007, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3685 (4th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

PARKER, Chief Judge.

This is an appeal from an order disallowing a claim in bankruptcy. Claimants are the Wheeling Valley Coal Corporation and the Wheeling Coal Company, corporations which on Aug. 26, 1942, leased two coal mines to the bankrupt Warner Coal Corporation under a contract providing for the payment of minimum royalties. A petition in involuntary bankruptcy was filed against the Warner Coal Corporation on October 9, 1943, and on October 23, 1943, the bankruptcy court appointed an operating receiver who entered into a contract with claimants prescribing the terms under which the mines were to be operated thereafter. The claim is for the sum of $14,757.87 and represents the excess of the minimum! royalties provided in the contract of lease-over payments received. The court below held that the claim should be disallowed affirming an order of the referee to the effect that the closing down of the mine, which-occurred on June 15 and continued until the-appointment of the receiver, was due to an interference with mining operations by “acts of government” or to “other causes *221 beyond the control of the lessee” within the meaning of the absolving clause of that part of the lease relating to minimum royalties. That clause is as follows:

“Anything herein to the contrary not withstanding, the Lessee shall have no obli gation to make any minimum royalty pay¿ ment under this lease for any month or months during which the Lessee has been prevented, for a period of ten (10) or more consecutive days, from carrying on its mining operations in the premises herein described as the result of fire, flood, explosion, damage to or destruction of improvements or equipment, riots, strikes, work stoppage, acts of God, acts of the government, acts of the public enemy, failure of car or river transportation facilities for coal, or other causes beyond the control of the Lessee.”

Payments made under the lease were in excess of the minimum royalties due until the operation of the mines ceased on June IS, 1943. The position of the trustee is that minimum royalties subsequently accruing fall within the absolving clause.

The facts are that the government took over the operation of all coal mines on May 1, 1943, but they continued to be operated by their owners or lessees under existing contracts; and the mines here were continued in operation under the officers of the Warner Coal Corporation. They were closed down on June IS, but this was in order that work might be done on machinery and the intention was to resume operations within a week. Operations were not resumed at that time, however, because of a lawsuit, involving an attachment of funds, commenced against the corporation by one of its principal customers. Government regulation of labor conditions raised the cost of producing coal, O.P.A. regulations of price made it impossible to realize a profit on coal produced without leave to charge increased prices, and there were delays in securing orders permitting such prices to be charged. Lack of sufficient operating capital ¡was an additional embarrassment; and the officers of the corporation permitted the mines to stand idle until the petition in bankruptcy was filed. The receiver .began operations immediately after his appointment and conducted them with profit as long as he remained in possession.

Appellee lists seven causes for the failure of bankrupt to operate the mines, viz.: (1) the order of the War Labor Board of Feb ruary 1943 for -a six day week with time and a half for the sixth day; (2) the executive order of May 1, 1943, seizing the mines; (3) the order of the Coal Administrator increasing pay of slate pickers; (4) the order increasing vacation pay; (5) the order to refund lamp rentals; (6) the portal to portal order; and (7) the fixing of a maximum price by the O.P.A. The appellants, on the other hand, say that the failure to operate was primarily due to other causes, viz., lack of operating capital, worn out equipment, the lawsuit to which we have referred and the high cost of operation due to the condition of the mines.

It is clear, of course, that the seizure of the mines by the government did not interfere with their operation within the meaning of the absolving clause. This seizure continued their operation under existing arrangements and management. See Krug v. Fox, 4 Cir., 161 F.2d 1013. And it is also clear, we think, that, while the government regulations upon which appellee relies did increase the cost of producing coal and limit the price at which it could be sold and thus increased the financial difficulties of the bankrupt, these things cannot be said, of themselves, to be the cause of the discontinuance of mining operations. They were mere aggravating circumstances of a bad financial condition arising out of lack of sufficient operating capital and high operating costs, brought to a head by thé law suit and attachment and the loss of customers to whom the product of the mines was being sold. The testimony of Whitney Warner, president of bankrupt, with respect to this matter is illuminating. He said:

“With respect to the months of June, July and August and September, it has always been our contention that we were prevented from operating because of the lawsuit in Ohio and the attachment of our funds in Ohio by the Ohio Edison Company plus the fact we were under government control and the miners were not working *222 too well and we didn’t know what ultimate liability we might have as the result of the government interference both as to prices and as to our operating procedure.” Later in his examination he said:

“It wasn’t the lawsuit in itself or the attachment in itself that collapsed everything; it was the fact our largest customer refused to continue paying us for coal, so we suddenly were faced with the fact that we had no money and couldn’t operate, and it was their refusal to pay for the coal that was beyond our control. Sure we could have sold coal elsewhere. * * * If we had tried to sell coal elsewhere they would have clamped down immediately and forced us to either live up to the contract or pay them $125,000 we owed them”.

And summing up, in answer to a question at the end of his cross examination, he said:

“Q. As a matter of fact by way of summation, Mr. Warner, isn’t it a fact that you were prevented from mining coal because of the failure to run the business successfully and to keep contracts to furnish coal and due to the company’s own financial weakness ?

“A. Well, I think that was to a large measure true, yes, but the financial situation of the company while it was weak nevertheless it was adequate so long as Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Company and Ohio Edison and W. H. Warner and Company, Incorporated, were back of it, but when Ohio Edison tipped over the apple cart that just ended the whole show, and their action was the cause of — the primary reason why we never reopened again. I think if it had not been for that we could have gotten started again in July or August. June was a bad month because of work stoppages and a number of other things.”

In the light of this testimony, it is idle to contend that the lessee was “prevented from carrying on its mining operations” by “acts of the government” or “other causes beyond the control of the lessee”, within the meaning of the absolving clause.

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186 F.2d 219, 28 A.L.R. 2d 1007, 1950 U.S. App. LEXIS 3685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wheeling-valley-coal-corporation-v-mead-ca4-1950.