Gaines v. Va. & Ala. Coal Co.

TYSON, J.

— The plaintiff, who is the appellant here, leased to the defendant a tract of forty acres of coal bearing land for a period of eight years for mining purposes. *397In this written contract of lease, it was provided, in substance, that the lessee, defendant, should mine a stated minimum number of tons of coal each month, for which the lessor, plaintiff, Avas to be paid monthly as royalty ten cents per ton, less one dollar per day for 2,300 Avorking days, Avhich sum Avas to be retained by the defendant in payment of a debt due it by the plaintiff. It Avas also stipulated in the written contract “that the party of the first part (defendant )shall mine and pay for all the coal in said seam which can be reasonably mined out and at the expiration of the'lease shall pay for all the coal in said seam on said land Avhether the same be mined or not” at ten cents per ton. There Avas a further stipulation that “at the Avill of either' party when or after either party has violated or refused to perform any obligation imposed upon him hereby,” the, lease may by either party he declared terminated and annulled. Eight separate suits were brought upon the contract to recover for monthly installments of royalty for coal, which were consolidated by an order of the court. At the term of the court at which the cause was tried, an amended complaint was filed, in the first count of Avhich, each of the installments which had, in the original complaints been made the subject of separate counts was included. Demurrers Avere interposed to each of the original complaints as well as to the first count of the amended complaint. While the record does not show such á judgment upon the clem ".rrers to the original complaints as can be reviewed by this court, yet if it did, the appellant could take nothing by their being sustained, for the reason that he had the full benefit of Avliat had been alleged in each of the separate complaints under the first count of the amended complaint, to Avhich a demurrer was overruled. Waiving the insufficiency in the recital of the judgment entry as shoAving a judgment of the court sustaining the demurrers to the second and third counts of the amended complaint, and conceding that the question of importance in the record is properly presented by the demurrers to these counts Avhich seek to recover the ten cents per ton for coal left unmined at the expiration of the lease, and the charges given at the request of the de*398fendant relating to the same subject, the question thus raised involves a construction of the contract in respect to the requirement that the defendant shall at the termination of the lease, pay ten cents per ton for all coal left unmmed on the land. It is contended for the appellant, that the appellee, under this term, is bound to pay for all coal in place on the leased land, without taking into account such as might be made unmerchantable in the process of mining by becoming mixed with the soil, etc.; or. such as might be required for supports for the roof etc.; and that no possibility of obstruction can be considered that might arise from what is known as a “fault” or “a roll” etc.

The contention of the appellee is simply the reverse of each of these propositions. It contends that the words, “which can reasonably be mined out” apply to and qualify the entire contract including the term requiring the mining of all the coal on the land.

.The object of all construction is to ascertain the intent of the parties; and iii ascertaining this intent as respects contracts, regard must be had to the subject matter of the contract and the situation of the parties as related to that subject matter.

The plaintiff was the owner of a deposit of coal. It was valuable only as it might be dug from the earth and sold in the market, either by himself for his own account or as undertaken by others under contract with him.' Whether done by himself or others, there were certain fundamental requirements that must always accompany the proper execution of the work. It is so in every department where human labor and exertion is a factor in the execution of an undertaking; and every contract is made with reference to the existence of such requirements.

In the mining of coal, one of the hazards of the work is the danger of overhead masses falling, if left unsupported; and to prevent this, there must be supports of some kind to the roof. In the absence of any safe mode provided in the contract, it Avill be presumed that the parties intended to adopt the mode usually adopted and found safe by miners of such coal, more especially in *399that general locality. Assuming that the contract here under consideration requires the mining of all the coal under the land, there must be excepted so much as would be reasonably required to support the roof, if pillars of coal is the mode usually adopted. So also, if in getting out coal for the market, some is rendered unmerchantable by being mixed with foreign substances from causes not preventable by prudent management — bestowing such care as a prudent owner operating his own mine and desiring the largest yield would bestow — that such losses in tonnage should be deducted from the tonnage required to be mined.

In respect to what is technically termed “a race,” “a fault,” and “a squeeze,” where from one cause or another, either the danger or cost of mining is increased, it cannot be said, as matter of law, that because of the in creased danger or cost, the work may be abandoned, or, on the other hand, that the contract must be construed as a contract to mine all the coal under the surface irrespective of the danger or costs attending it. The contract must receive a reasonable construction. If the danger or cost is such that in the first aspect, a prudent operator having due and reasonable care for the safety and welfare of his men would not risk the danger, and in the other, with an incentive to take out the largest quantity reasonably practicable, would abandon the work rather than remove or evade the obstacle with its attendant expense, the lessee in this case would not be required to incur the risk or cost. G-uided by these principles, he cannot magnify dangers or cost, so as to evade the duty of mining all that should be mined, nor, on the other hand, can he be required to assume unreasonable risks or expense wholly disproportioned to the profits that might reasonably be expected from such an undertaking.

Of course the rule is different where one undertakes to pay royalty upon a given number of tons irrespective of whether the coal can be mined reasonably or at all. We construe the words of the contract we have quoted, as applicable to the entire contract; but even without them, there is no fixed number of tons stipulated for, as the total output. The lessee, it is true, is to “mine” all on *400the land, but when he engaged to procure the coal — not at all events, but by “mining’’ for it, it must be understood as implied that he is to mine as other persons desirous of obtaining, the best results and using adequate means to achieve it, perforin the same kind of work. Vincent v. Rogers, 30 Ala. 471; Grier v. Campbell, 21 Ala. 327; Holland v. T. C. I. & R. Co., 91 Ala. 451.

It follows from what we have said that the court did not misconstrue the contract.

There is no merit in the objections to evidence. We cannot assume “forks” could not be used in the mining required. True, the contract does not provide they shall be used, but it may also be said, it does not provide against their use. Each party had the right to have his theory of the best and most efficient mode of obtaining the best result sustained bv proper evidence.

The judgment of the circuit court must be affirmed.