Williams v. Victory Coal Co.

192 S.E. 329, 119 W. Va. 200, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 100
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1937
Docket8547
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 192 S.E. 329 (Williams v. Victory Coal Co.) 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
Williams v. Victory Coal Co., 192 S.E. 329, 119 W. Va. 200, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 100 (W. Va. 1937).

Opinions

*202 Riley, Judge :

This is a suit in equity brought by the plaintiff, Frank B. Williams, against the defendants, Victory Coal Company, a corporation, T. U. Keener and R. M. Davis, to enjoin the defendants in their mining operations from committing further trespasses upon coal property claimed by the plaintiff; to recover certain penalties under Code 1931, 37-5-1, and other damages caused by such trespasses; and for specific performance of the provisions of a certain contract of partition between the plaintiff and his two brothers, on the one part, and the defendant Coal Company on the other.

The chancellor held the answers insufficient on demurrer and the defendants filed amended answers. In the order sustaining demurrers to the amended pleadings, the chancellor decreed that the bill of complaint be taken for confessed, so far as it alleged that plaintiff was the owner of the Upper Freeport coal, within the boundaries marked “Frank Williams 17.387 Ac. Coal”, on map No. 1, exhibited with the bill of complaint, and that the defendant Coal Company “owns all of the coal in question lying west of said 17.387-acre parcel”, etc., and, further, that he recover $1,000.00, representing the statutory penalty for two encroachments. It is from the foregoing rulings that the defendants prosecute the present appeal.

The contract in question, dated July 22, 1926, involves the partition of the coal underlying land known as the Washington Williams tract. This tract is rectangular in shape, the long part extending north and south. A valley running in a northeasterly direction across the tract separates the Upper Freeport acreage into two parts, the major portion lying to the south and a small triangular boundary to the northwest. The southern acreage is adjacent to lands of both the defendant Coal Company and the Robert Williams heirs. The small triangular body of Freeport coal, however, does not actually adjoin either.

The contract provides in part as follows:

“The said first and second parties hereby *203 agree to partition and divide said (Upper Free-port) coal giving to the second party its two-fifths interest at the western part of said tract and adjoining other lands of said second party the first parties to take their three-fifths interest on the eastern part of said tract and adjoining lands of Robert Williams’ heirs; said partition to be made so that the respective parties hereto shall have their three-fifths and two-fifths respectively of Upper Freeport seam of coal as well as their respective and proper amounts of any other seams of coal under said Freeport seam.”

The bill of complaint avers, among other things, that, in 1926, after the execution of the contract, the plaintiff and his two brothers executed inter-partes deeds, whereby plaintiff was given the coal to the west and adjoining that of the coal company; that in determining the coal company’s two-fifths part under said contract, the deeper seams of coal were not to be taken into consideration, but the line was to be fixed with reference to the Upper Freeport coal; that the lines as run to partition said Upper Freeport coal were to effect and be the boundary lines of all other coal underlying said land, regardless of acreage; that after the execution of said contract, and the delivery of said deeds, the plaintiff caused the two-fifths part of said coal to be surveyed by a surveyor named Purinton and the boundary thereof to be so marked as to plainly designate the division between his coal and that of the defendant Coal Company, causing said boundary to be marked by straight lines through said parcel of land so located as to give on the west side thereof and adjoining other property of said coal company a full two-fifths of the Upper Freeport coal under the entire parcel of land, making due allowance for and not including the outcrop of said coal as a part thereof, but including sufficient marketable coal to make up said two-fifths; that there was no dispute and never had been any dispute or disagreement between the parties as to the outcrop lines of the Upper Freeport coal, nor as to the true division line if the division line laying off the two-fifths and three-fifths, respectively, is *204 to be a straight line across the tract of land.

When the bill was here on certificate, we reversed the chancellor’s action in sustaining a demurrer on ground of multifariousness, on the theory that there was a sufficient “community of interest” in the enterprise, to afford plaintiff both a ground for injunctive relief and a common cause of complaint against the several defendants. Williams v. Victory Coal Co., 117 W. Va. 9, 183 S. E. 520.

The answer of the Victory Coal Company, the principal defendant, after denying (1) that plaintiff’s alleged “survey, if made, is correct”, and (2) that it gives “defendant on the west side thereof and adjoining other property of this defendant a full two-fifths of the coal as provided for in said written contract”, avers that, after the contract was executed, the plaintiff and defendant finally agreed (in 1933) on a surveyor who was to run the line according to the contract; that both parties agreed to submit to, and abide by, the division so made; that the surveyor did run said division line according to contract; that he made a plat, which is an exhibit to said answer; that he gave defendant a copy of the plat and that plaintiff never complained of the division so made to the knowledge of defendant until the bringing of the present suit. This plat shows a north and south line through the coal area to the south of the creek seventy-five feet to the east of, and parallel to, plaintiff’s alleged line, and another line through the triangular area to the west of, and parallel to, plaintiff’s line. The two lines on defendant’s plat do not join; and, for that reason, do not make any division of the Washington W. Williams tract. They purport only to divide each of the two bodies of the Upper Freeport coal.

After a consideration of the foregoing pleading the chancellor, in sustaining the demurrer, decreed, among other things, that the part of the answer which alleges that defendant denies the division line of plaintiff’s map, gives a full two-fifths of the coal adjoining its other coal property; and denies that said line is a correct division line between the parties, is indefinite and in *205 sufficient as an answer to the allegations of the bill of complaint. As appears from this order the court further sustained the demurrer on the ground that the contract provided for a line running through the entire tract, and that defendant had no right to claim a two-fifths in the southern boundary of coal.

Subsequently, amended answers were filed. That of the Victory Coal Company avers that the division line, as shown on plaintiff’s map No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
192 S.E. 329, 119 W. Va. 200, 1937 W. Va. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-victory-coal-co-wva-1937.