75 W. Va. 192 | W. Va. | 1914
The two-fold purpose of the bill in this cause, rescission of a coal lease and restraint, by injunction, of an action of assumpsit to recover minimum rentals accrued on it and in arrears, was defeated by dissolution of the preliminary injunction and dismissal of the bill.
Additional grounds of relief, set up in the bill, were an alleged bar of the right of the defendants to the stipulated rentals; by a former adjudication, and an alleged termination of all rights under the lease by surrender thereof. The ground of rescission was alleged non-existence, in the leased land, of coal of the quantity and quality contemplated by the parties, at the time of the execution of the lease.
The history of the lease and some of its material provisions are narrated in the opinion in Beckwith v. Laing, 66 W. Va. 246.
The adjudication relied upon as extinguishment of the rights of the defendants under the lease and affording ground for the injunctive relief sought, is the decree in Price et al. v. Laing, Admr., affirmed by this court, as shown by the decision reported in 67 W. Va. 373.
That decree expressly sustained a demurrer to the bill and then dismissed it in general terms, making no reservation of
The allegation of. a surrender of the lease wholly fails for want of proof. It was assigned by James Laing, the lessee, to Isadore Meadows, who, it is said, re-assigned it to the New River Fuel Company. That company, through one of its subsidiaries, paid the stipulated rentals accrued under the lease from January 1907 to October 1907, and taxes on the land, amounting in the aggregate to about $2400.00. After the decision in Becktwith v. Laing, 66 W. Va. 246, involving an alleged assignment of the lease to Beckwith, trustee, it ceased to make further payments, and S. Dixon, president- of the company, notified one of the plaintiffs that no further royalties would be paid, because the lease had been cancelled in said suit and the prospecting done by the company had revealed a lack of coal in workable quantities. Beckwith did not amend his bill, and his suit was dismissed. The decree in his favor which the court reversed would have compelled the Laings to assign the lease to him and taken it from the New River Fuel Co., if it had not been reversed,
The plaintiffs say they were entitled to relief, if the coal is not of the thickness of vein, persistency and quality requisite to profitable mining, because both parties believed it to be so, at the time of the execution of the. lease, and their mutual mistake and failure of consideration afford two well recognized grounds for equitable relief by way of rescission. On the other hand, it is said the contract was one of hazard on the part of the lessee, he having bound himself to pay the stipulated rentals for the term created by the lease and the chance of profit from the mining of the coal if there happened to be any. The covenants to pay fixed or minimum rentals, found in many contracts of lease of mineral lands, have been held to be absolute and enforced accordingly. Lehigh Z. & I. Co. v. Bamford, 150 U. S. 665; Ridgely v. Conewago Iron Co., 53 Fed. 988; Timlin v. Brown, 158 Pa. St. 606; Ridgeway v. Sneyd, Kay, 627, 69 Eng. Reprints, 266; Phillips v. Jones, 9 Sim. 519, 59 Eng. Reprints, 458; Palmer v. Wall-
Failure of proof of non-existence of coal in the land and of unfittedness thereof for the markets in point of quality dispenses with necessity of inquiry as to classification of this contract with reference to the character of the rental covenant. That there is coal in the land is fully proven. In fact it is not denied by any witness introduced. The objection is that no vein is sufficiently thick and clean to enable the lessees to operate it profitably. But the evidence adduced to prove the allegation is speculative and uncertain in character. There has been no real effort on the part of the lessees to determine whether any of the veins are susceptible of advantageous mining. No entry has ever, been driven, shaft sunk on the premises or core taken from the land, far enough back from the out-crop to reveal the true character of the seams. The prospecting has been limited to the out-crops of the seams on the leased lands and others adjoining them. Some of the openings were made under the direction of expert mining engineers and others were old ones from which coal had been mined for local domestic purposes. The best known veins are locally called the Halstead and Tolly, the latter being lower than the former, near stream-level and apparently identical with one known as the Fire Creek seam and successfully worked in other territory. The engineer employed by the plaintiffs reports this vein as being, at one
The plaintiffs carry the burden of proof. They seek relief from a solemn agreement imposing heavy obligations upon them and securing large advantages to the defendants. To make out a case for such relief, the proof must be clear and convincing. The creation of a mere doubt or suspicion does not suffice. Parol proof of a ground of relief from the obligation of a written contract must be- clear and strong enough to establish it to the entire satisfaction of the court. Fishlack v. Ball, 34 W. Va. 644; Allen v. Yeager, 17 W. Va. 128; Jarrell v. Jarrell, 27 W. Va. 743; Smith v. Patton, 12 W. Va. 641: Armstrong v. Bailey, 43 W. Va. 778; Trustees v. Blair, 45 W. Va. 812; Sigler v. Beebe, 44 W. Va. 587. An obvious corollary of this general rule is that the plaintiff in such a case must exercise diligence to remove doubts and uncertainties. As he is bound to prove his case clearly and fully, he must do what is reasonably practicable toward the elimination of uncertainty. That has not been done here. Deeper openings would have disclosed the true character of the parting, and, if made on the land, by means of a core-drill, they would have put beyond question the thickness of the veins as well as the character of the coal. Under the rules of law governing such eases, the evidence is clearly insufficient to make- out a case for relief, under the contract as interpreted by the plaintiffs themselves, and we need not ascertain the correctness of that interpretation.
These conclusions result in an affirmance of the decree complained of.
Affirmed.