Court Opinion

ID: 7930440
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-08 23:03:45.294008+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:33:20.054014
License: Public Domain

Campbell, J.
Defendants are lessees under certain leases of coal-mining lands near the city of Jackson, granted to them in the early part of the year 1879 by the land-owners severally. Complainants are assignees of leases of the same lands for similar purposes, made in 1857 and 1858, by the persons then owning the property, to the Detroit & Jackson Coal & Mining Company.
These earlier leases were for terms of 25 years and some of them were renewable for a second term. They were not exactly alike, but all provided for a preliminary testing of the lands within a year, and all provided for a rent of ten cents per ton on all coal raised, and the same sum for a certain number of tons per year, as a minimum, whether raised or not.
The Detroit & Jackson Coal Company continued to mine on some other lands for several years, and for a portion of the time sub-let to other persons, and upon the lands actually mined the rents seem to have been kept up. None of the lands involved in this suit were ever mined at all, but annual payments were made of the amount stipulated until 1871. Since that time no rents' have been paid, and nothing has been done whatever.
In February and March, 1879, the land-owners, regarding these leases as abandoned, made the new arrangements with *58the defendants, who were proceeding to commence mining. The rents under these new leases are much higher than those under the first.
In April, 1879, the complainants obtained a sublease from the Detroit & .Jackson Coal & Mining Company of their whole property at a rent of nineteen cents a ton.
All of the parties protected themselves against the risks and results of litigation, and all of them knew or had means of knowing the facts.
This bill was filed in August, 1879, to restrain the defendants from mining, and to obtain a decree asserting complainants’ title. It avers the performance by the original lessee of all covenants in one of the leases except as excused, and as to the others that nothing has been done to forfeit or terminate the lessee’s rights.
The defence is chiefiy rested on abandonment — so far as the merits are concerned; but it is also objected that the necessary parties are not before the court.
As the lessees never entered upon the leased land, and never did any work on or under the surface, it is manifest that the rights of the parties must be governed by the contracts, and acts or omissions under them. Whatever may be the technical questions concerning forfeiture, there can be no doubt of the equitable duty of the lessees to pay their rent. There is in our opinion, under the testimony, no reasonable question concerning the intentional abandonment of these leases, for the reason that they were not regarded as worth working then, whatever may have been their possible speculative value in the future. And we think the testimony preponderates in favor of a communication of this design to the lessors. No payments were made or tendered, and no suit was brought to collect the rent.
The change in the condition and prospects of mining, and the new arrangements made with the defendants, appear to be the real cause of the renewed interest of the complainants and their assignors. We do not think that they can complain that their ultimate lessors acted as they were justified in supposing they had a right to act. They were not *59bound to keep their property unemployed, on any such uncertainties, and they had a right to regard the abandonment as final. Neither do we think equity should favor the purchase of litigious titles. Formerly such sales were invalid, and if they are valid now, they are not especially meritorious. The demand in controversy is a stale demand, revived after it was naturally regarded as dead, and snch demands are not entitled of right to equitable enforcement. But we do not propose to discuss the legal possibilities.
Had the case been otherwise regular, the owners of the land are necessary parties to a bill intended to destroy securities under which they are entitled to increased revenues.
The bill was properly dimissed, and the decree must be affirmed with costs.
The other Justices concurred.