William Clift v. RDP Company

702 F. App'x 385
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 2017
Docket16-6346, 16-6347
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 702 F. App'x 385 (William Clift v. RDP Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Clift v. RDP Company, 702 F. App'x 385 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

JULIA SMITH GIBBONS, Circuit Judge.

Between 1967 and 1977, two families— the Storys and the Clifts—entered into a series of mineral leases with Fredonia Valley Quarries, Inc. (FVQ). The leases allowed FVQ to quarry limestone from the Story and Clift properties in Caldwell County, Kentucky. The operative leases were subsequently assigned to the RDP Company (RDP) and quarry operations were subleased to Lafarge West, Inc. Beginning in 2013—more than thirty-five years after the most-recent leases were executed—the Storys and Clifts stopped accepting royalty payments from RDP. The families then brought independent actions, now consolidated on appeal, raising numerous claims against RDP and Lafarge and seeking a declaration that the operative leases are no longer valid. Because these claims are either waived or without merit, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to defendants and deny the pending appellate motion to dismiss as moot.

*388 I.

A.

At some point prior to 1967, FVQ established a jimestone quarry in Caldwell County, Kentucky. FVQ expanded the quarry throughout the 1960s and 1970s by entering into mineral leases with adjacent landowners, including the Storys and the Clifts. By January 1986, however, the quarry was in a state of disarray and on the verge of closing. At this point, the quarry and all associated leases were assigned to Rock Dust Products, a general partnership, in exchange for $450,000. The partnership immediately invested approximately $2 million to make the quarry operational and then ran the quarry for the next eleven years, reinvesting all net income into quarry operations.

In 1997, Rock Dust Products assigned the quarry leases to RDP, a business trust. RDP immediately subleased its rights in the quarry to Martin Marietta Materials, Inc. In exchange, Martin Marietta agreed to pay RDP a gross royalty of 30.33$ per ton of limestone removed until April 30, 2007, the greater of 30.33$ or 4.5% of Martin Marietta’s average retail price per ton removed between April 30, 2007, and April 30, 2027, and the greater of 30.33$ or 4.0% of Martin Marietta’s average retail price per ton removed after April 30, 2027. RDP remained responsible for paying rents, royalties, taxes, and other charges associated with the quarry. In December 2011, Margin Marietta assigned its sublease to Lafarge West Inc. Lafarge continues to operate the quarry today.

In order to remove limestone from the quarry, Lafarge must drill and blast stone from the quarry walls. Normally, this loose stone is immediately processed through a machine known as a primary crusher. Large boulders, however, must be broken down further before they can be run through the crusher. Lafarge keeps these boulders in the quarry—segregated by lease—for anywhere from six to twenty-four months until there are enough to justify the expense of the equipment required to break them down. After the boulders are broken down, Lafarge runs them through the primary crusher and pays out royalties on the resulting limestone.

B.

1.

In 1967, Jewell Story executed a lease granting FVQ the right to “all the merchantable limestone rock and other kindred substances in, under and upon” a 132.4 acre tract of land that he owned in Caldwell County, Kentucky. DE 81-4, Page ID 1969. FVQ agreed to pay Story 5$ per ton for the first 2,000 tons, and 3$ for each additional ton, of limestone removed from the property each month, with a guaranteed minimum monthly royalty of $40. If FVQ installed, certain facilities on the property, Story was entitled to an additional $150 per month. Story retained the right to “all cedar timber on the premises,” so long as removing that timber did not interfere with quarry operations. Id. at 1971. The lease had a five-year term with an option for additional five-year terms if FVQ “well and truly kept and performed” the “stipulations, covenants and agreements” in the lease. Id. FVQ could terminate the lease at the end of any month by written notice and a $250 payment. Story could declare a “forfeiture” if FVQ failed to make royalty payments for six consecutive months. When Jewell Story died in 1970, he devised his interest in the lease to his children: Charles Story, Janice Cope, and Pat Lyles. In 1972, the children and their spouses signed a second lease with FVQ that mirrored the 1967 lease’s terms.

*389 In 1977, FVQ sought to standardize its outstanding leases. The parties entered into a third lease, dated August 1, 1977, that again granted FVQ the right to “all the merchantable limestone rock and other kindred substances in, under and upon” the same tract. 5:14-cv-21 DE 81-4, Ex. C, Page ID 1979. FVQ also received:

the right and license to enter upon the premises ... at all times and to use so much of the surface thereof as may be reasonably necessary in searching for and exploring for limestone rock and other kindred substances and in determining the thickness thereof, and for the establishment of Quarries and Quarry building and for the deposit of waste material from such quarries; also the right and license to quarry and remove said limestone and/or kindred substances from said premises together with the rights, privileges, license and easements necessary, incidental or in any manner appertaining to the proper prosecution of the business of quarrying and removing said limestone and other kindred substances; also the right of way for necessary roads and railroads over said premises, and the right to occupy so much of the surface of said premises as may be reasonably necessary for the storing of said limestone rock or other kindred substances, and depositing the refuse therefrom, and the right to erect on said premises such buildings, structures and fixtures as may be necessary or incidental to the proper prosecution of said business of quarrying.

Id. at 1980. FVQ agreed to pay 7.5$ per ton for the first 4,000 tons of limestone removed and 4.5$ per ton for each additional ton removed per month, with a guaranteed minimum monthly royalty of $40 from May through November and a conditional minimum of $40 from December through April if the quarry was operating. The Storys retained the “right to all timber cut by [FVQ] on the premises in the course of operation” and FVQ promised to “deliver to the [Storys] at the Quarries, fifteen ton[s] (15) of agricultural lime each year ... free of any cost to the [Storys].” Id. at 1981. Although the initial lease term was five years, it provided that:

if all the stipulations, covenants and agreements herein contained have been well and truly kept and performed by [FVQ] as herein provided, this lease may be renewed according to the terms hereof and for the same consideration for five (5) additional years and at intervals of five (5) years thereafter for a period not exceeding ninety nine (99) years, and so long as said conditions have been kept and performed.

Id. The lease provided only one other avenue for termination: the Storys could declare a forfeiture should FVQ fail to operate the quarry or pay royalties for ninety days.

2.

Charles Story, who is Jewell’s son and a signatory to the 1977 lease, has lived on the family’s Caldwell County property since 1957.

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Bluebook (online)
702 F. App'x 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/william-clift-v-rdp-company-ca6-2017.