American Wholesale Corp. v. F. & S. Oil & Gas Co.

46 S.W.2d 498, 242 Ky. 356, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 278
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 9, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 46 S.W.2d 498 (American Wholesale Corp. v. F. & S. Oil & Gas Co.) 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
American Wholesale Corp. v. F. & S. Oil & Gas Co., 46 S.W.2d 498, 242 Ky. 356, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 278 (Ky. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Richardson—

Affirming

C. Gr. Davenport and Orie S. Davenport in 1919 owned certain lands snitnated in Warren -county, Kv. Title to one tract was in C. Gr. Davenport and the other in Orie S. Davenport. By different written instruments they leased their respective land to W. J. Balmer and Edward M. Shaw for the purpose of operating for oil and gas, with the prvilege to lay pipe lines and install such equipments as would be required for the pumping, caring for and marketing the oil and gas produced.

This provision is in both leases:

“It is agreed that this lease shall remain in force for a term of four years from this date, or so long thereafter as oil or gas or either of them is produced therefrom by the parties of the second part, their successors or assigns. . . . Cessation of operation shall not be continued for more than ninety days after the first well is completed.” •

The royalty reserved to the lessor was one-eighth of the oil produced and marketed.

*358 The F. & S. Oil Company by mesne assignments thereafter became the owner of an undivided interest in the lease on 25% acres of the Orie S. Davenport tract. Shaw and Balmer retained a certain interest in the lease thereon. Three oil wells were drilled on the 25% acres which were pumped from the time of their completion in 1920 until on or about April 21, 1926, and the one-eighth royalty was paid to her. The situation of the 25% acres, its proximity to a pipe line and accessibility to market, are both alleged and proven. It lies within developed oil territory, and there are producing wells within 200 to 400 feet of the wells on it. On or about February 1, 1926, the F. & S. Oil & Gras Company and Balmer and Shaw left the leased premises and ceased to pump the wells, or market the oil. About June 1, 1927, Orie S. Davenport took actual possession of the 25% acres, the wells and equipments used in connection therewith. She assumed complete control of the operations of the 25% acres, expended approximately $200 to repair the equipments theretofore used, with which she pumped and marketed the oil.

The land of C. G-. Davenport comprised 331 acres. The lessees subdivided it into 50-acre tracts, and sold the entire lease, except an interest in the lease on 50 acres in controversy, on which two wells were drilled, with a production of one barrel each per day. The equipment thereon used in pumping the wells was approximately of the value of $900. The lessees left this 50 acres, stopped development, ceased to pump the wells and to pay royalty. From February 1, 1926, to June 1, 1927, no one was in possession of, or exercising control over, this portion of the 331 acres, or looking after, or caring for, or giving any attention to the wells and equipment thereon.

C. G. Davenport sold his land to Orie S. Davenport. About June 1, 1927, he took charge of the 50 acres and the 25% acres, and the wells and equipments thereon, as agent of Orie S. Davenport, began to pump the oil, conveyed it to market and accounted to her for the proceeds.

Some time in March, 1924, the F. & S. Oil Company executed its forty-five notes to M. Leader, and to secure their payment executed and delivered to him a mortgage on certain property situated in Warren county, Ky., including the leases as to the 50 and 25%-acre tracts, and *359 the wells and equipments. M. Leader assigned the notes to the American Wholesale Corporation. The appellant, American Wholesale Corporation, after it became the owner of the notes and mortgage, and after the lessees and their assigns ceased to pump the wells and market the oil from the 50 and 25% acres, did not, nor any one for it, resume the operation of the wells. It instituted this action in 1928, in the Warren circuit court, to enforce its mortgage, making the F. & S. Oil & Gas Company, Orie S. Davenport, C. G. Davenport, Edward M. Shaw, and W. G. Balmer, defendants. Appropriate pleadings were filed by Orie S. Davenport and C. G. Davenport, presenting the issue of abandonment of the leases, wells, and equipments used in the operation of the wells on the 50 and 25% acres. Issues were made, the evidence was taken, and, on the trial, the chancellor canceled the lease ■as to the 50 acres and also the 25% acres; adjudged that the equipments used in connection with the wells on June 1,1927, had been abandoned by the lessees and their assigns; that C. G. Davenport and Orie S. Davenport were the owners thereof, and refused to enforce appellant’s mortgage. From this judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

It is conceded that the <$nly question presented for consideration and determination is, Did the court err in canceling the lease on the 50 of the 331 acres and on the 25% acres, and in holding the equipments had been abandoned, and in refusing to enforce appellant’s mortgage?

The appellant argues that the right of the lessors to cancel the leases as to the 50 and 25% acres is the same as if this were an action to cancel the leases on the entire tracts; that the wells on the remainder of the original tracts are producing, and the oil marketed therefrom by the owners of the leases thereon, and that this precludes the right of the lessors to cancel the leases as to the 50 and 25% acres; that there is no privity of contract between the Davenports and the holders of the leases, in so far as the 50 and 25% acres are concerned. It is further contended that the lessors gave no notice and made no demand of the lessees or their assignees to surrender the leases, before their re-entry on the 50 or the 25% acres. The appellant urges that the lessees were the sole judges and have the exclusive right to determine the continuance or the cessation of the pump *360 ing and selling the oil. To sustain this contention they cite and rely upon Johnson v. Dodson, 227 Ky. 132, 12 S. W. (2d) 310, and Gypsy Oil Co. v. Cover, 78 Okl. 158, 189 P. 540, 11 A. L. R. 129. To these may be added Leeper Oil Co. v. Rowland, 239 Ky. 295, 39 S. W. (2d) 486.

The principles urged by appellant which were applied in the cases, supra, and others that might be cited, have no application to the facts in the present one. In the cases cited and relied upon by appellant, partial development by the lessees, or their assignees, had been made, and they were at the time in the actual possession of the leased premises and actively engaged in operations, but the lessors desired either more rapid or extended development. In such cases, we have often held that notice and demand of further development were necessary and required, before equity will permit the lessor to cancel or forfeit the lease, whether authorized by the express provisions therein or the implied covenants, and, if the lessor was receiving royalty rental, he must also decline to accept it and demand of the lessee further development before he is entitled to cancel or forfeit the lease, Monarch Oil & Gas Co. v. Richardson, 124 Ky. 602, 99 S. W. 668, 30 Ky. Law Rep. 824.

The rule requiring notice and the demand for further development before such right exists does not apply in every case.

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Bluebook (online)
46 S.W.2d 498, 242 Ky. 356, 1932 Ky. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-wholesale-corp-v-f-s-oil-gas-co-kyctapphigh-1932.