Winco Block Coal Co. v. Evans

76 S.W.2d 241, 256 Ky. 487, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 421
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 2, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 76 S.W.2d 241 (Winco Block Coal Co. v. Evans) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winco Block Coal Co. v. Evans, 76 S.W.2d 241, 256 Ky. 487, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 421 (Ky. 1934).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Perry

Reversing.

On November 1, 1920, A. E. Evans and his wife, Addie Evans, G. W. Stepp and his wife, Ellen Stepp, and G. C. Stepp executed a coal lease to O. H. Jennings and H. J. Brock, trustees, who sold and assigned the lease to Winco Block Coal Company, and that company entered under the lease and began mining the coal. Addie Evans afterwards died and on April 13, 1931, this action was brought by the Stepps and her devisees against the Winco Block Coal Company, alleging that the royalties under the lease had not been paid and that a balance of $4,981.00, was due and unpaid. The company filed answer. Yoluminous proof was taken and upon final submission of the case on October 26, 1932, a judgment was rendered in favor of the plaintiff for $3,421.65, with interest from that date and costs; and a sale of the leased property was ordered to satisfy the judgment. The defendant appeals.

The lease was for a term of fifty years with the privilege of renewing it for a further period of fifty years. It contained among other things these provisions :

“6. Conditional Termination of Lease. This lease to terminate, notwithstanding the aforementioned terms, when all the workable and 'merchantable coal shall have been taken from the premises herein demised; wheii such time shall have arrived, in the opinion of the lessees, notice shall be given to the lessors and an opportunity given them to determine whether all the workable and merchantable coal has been removed from the premises, it being understood that workable and merchantable coal shall be only such coal as can be mined at reasonable and just expenditure.
“7. Land Rental as Minimum Royalty. The lessees shall pay to the lessors during the first year of this lease as minimum royalty the sum of $1,500.00 per year; for the second year of this lease as minimum royalty the sum of $3,000 per year; and all subsequent years thereafter the sum *489 of $3,000 per year as minimum royalty for said land, the same to be due and payable quarterly; and the same being provided as minimum royalty to be received by the lessors per year, whether or not the coal shall have been mined which at the royalty hereinafter fixed would amount to such rental or not.
“8. Royalty on Coal Mined. The lessees shall yield and pay to the lessors a royalty on each and every ton of coal mined under the terms of this lease the sum of fifteen cents per ton for each and every ton of 2,240 pounds of coal mined, manufactured and transported from or utilized upon said premises during the term thereof; said royalty shall be due and payable quarterly on the first days of January, April, July, October, respectively, in. each year, and shall be paid within thirty days, and it is agreed that in event the royalty on coal mined under the provisions above, for any year, shall equal or exceed the yearly royalty as provided in paragraph 7, then the royalty shall be in lieu of' rental or minimum royalty for such year. In the event the royalty on coal mined shall be less than the rental for any year of the term thereof, the amount of the royalty shall constitute and be taken as a credit on the minimum rental for such year and the balance of the rental for such year only shall be payable under the provisions of said paragraph 7; but the lessees however shall have the privilege at any time during the succeeding ten years from the date hereof of mining free from royalty a sufficient quantity of coal over and above the quantity required to yield the minimum annual rental for said years at the rate of tonnage royalty above provided for, to reimburse it for any deficiency that may have occurred in any of the preceding years.
“The lessees shall pay to the lessors one cent for every ton of 2,240 pounds of coal mined from other lands now owned or leased, or that may be acquired or leased, and transported over, through or under the above premises during the continuation of this lease, or any extension thereof.
“12. Strikes. In case of general strike or other unavoidable accident, such as destruction of tipples or explosion in mines, or total suspension. *490 of service by railroad company, inadequate car supply or other cause over which the lessees have no control, and for which they shall have been in no wise to blame, the rental'hereinbefore fixed as a minimum royalty shall be suspended during the actual time the operations for any such cause may have been stopped.
“16. Payment of Royalties. It is further agreed _ that in the event the lessees shall find it impossible, by due diligence, to carry out the terms of this lease profitably to themselves, then it is agreed that the said lessees may, upon the terms herein set forth, surrender this lease; but the lessees shall not have the right to surrender this lease to avoid the terms thereof until they shall give to the lessors sixty days notice in writing of their intention so to do, and shall in the meanwhile fully comply with all and singular the terms and stipulations of this lease.”

The company went to work promptly under the lease and there was no trouble between the parties until about the year 1928. The company owned a number of other tracts back of the three tracts here jointly leased, some of which it used to bring out the coal from the other tracts.

The lessors, G. ~W. Stepp, G. C. Stepp, and Addie Evans at the time of executing the lease here involved each owned small adjoining tracts of coal land, which they in 1920 jointly leased to O. H. Jennings and H. J. Brock, who in turn assigned it to appellant. As stated, by the terms of article 6 of the lease, it is provided that the lease should terminate “when all the workable and merchantable coal shall have been taken from the premises herein demised, * * * it being understood that workable and merchantable coal shall be only such coal as can be mined at reasonable and just expenditure.”

After the lease was assigned to the appellant, it appears that, as stated, it immediately proceeded to open up the lower or Chilton seam of coal in this tract, which was at first over three feet thick and clear of much impurity and which it worked or mined until it was found that the coal in that seam was no longer either “workable or merchantable” and that it could not be mined at a “reasonable expenditure,” due to the “diminished size of the vein, nor, due also to its defective *491 and unmarketable quality, could it be sold at a profit. Upon tbe exhaustion of the marketable and workable coal in this lower seam, it at once abandoned it and proceeded to open and mine an upper coal seam upon the leased tract. Upon mining into this coal seam, it too soon became broken by seams of slate and other impurities, which rendered it of such low grade as to be practically unmarketable and worth only about 20 per cent, of what it appeared worth at the opening of the seam. Upon this condition being found and realizing that it had practically exhausted both of the tracts’ coal seams of their “merchantable and workable coal,”' the company, as provided for by section 6 of the lease, treated the lease as terminated and closed the mine upon which it had spent in its development something over $200,000.

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Bluebook (online)
76 S.W.2d 241, 256 Ky. 487, 1934 Ky. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winco-block-coal-co-v-evans-kyctapphigh-1934.