Wilson v. Beech Creek Cannel Coal Co.
Wilson v. Beech Creek Cannel Coal Co.
Opinion of the Court
Opinion by
This is an appeal from the refusal of the court below to take off a compulsory nonsuit, entered because the plaintiff did not prove that it was practicable to mine merchantable coal “ in reasonable quantity ” from the Soult seam which he leased to the assignor of the defendant company. The lease was made on the twenty-third of February, 1888, and the lessee was to commence operations under it within three months from its date, but he was not bound to mine and ship coal from the demised premises prior to July 1,1895. He agreed to advance to the lessor, “ on account of royalty,” five hundred dollars, within four months from the date of the lease, and to pay after July 1, 1890, two hundred and fifty dollars a year until July 1,1895, after which time he was to mine and ship from the premises at least three
The provision in the lease in relation to the application of the
We think the cases cited by the defendant company to sustain the nonsuit are not applicable to the facts of this case.
Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded.
Reference
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Coal lease — Unmerchantable coal — Evidence—Burden of proof Under a coal lease the lessee was to mine and ship from the premises at least three thousand tons of coal annually or to “ pay for that quantity whether mined and shipped or not.” The lease also provided that should the seam of coal “ prove faulty in the strata or unmerchantable in its quality, the said lessee shall have the right to abandon the same, with the right to remove all the improvements by said lessee erected on or under said premises.” Held, in an action for the rent, that the burden of proof was on the lessee to show that the coal was unmerchantable, and that it was error to nonsuit the plaintiff because he did not prove that there was merchantable-coal in reasonable quantity. Under the lease a portion of the rent was to be applied to the payment of certain judgments on the land. Held, that the failure of the lessee to exercise his privilege of paying the judgments was no ground for non-suiting the plaintiff.