Ammons v. South Penn Oil Co.

35 S.E. 1004, 47 W. Va. 610, 1900 W. Va. LEXIS 130
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 31, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 35 S.E. 1004 (Ammons v. South Penn Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ammons v. South Penn Oil Co., 35 S.E. 1004, 47 W. Va. 610, 1900 W. Va. LEXIS 130 (W. Va. 1900).

Opinion

McWhorter, President:

Daniel Conaway, of Monongalia County, devised to his-daughter, Armina Ammons, for the term of her natural life, and at her death to her children (subject however, to a life estate therein, which he devised to his wife, Malinda), a tract of two hundred acres of land in said county, which, on being surveyed, proved to contain two hundred. [612]*612and forty-three acres. On the 17th day of March, 1891, Malinda conveyed by deed of that date her life estate in said tract of land to her son-in-law, Milton A. Ammons, and her daughter, Armina Ammons, his wife, in consideration of natural love and affection, and the further consideration that the vendees would comfortably support, care for, maintain, and clothe the vendor during the remainder of her life, and give her a decent burial at her death, and erect or cause to be erected over her grave a monument as near like the monument then over the grave of her late husband, Daniel Conaway, as it was possible to get, and retained a lien on said estate so conveyed to secure the comfortable support, caring for, maintenance, and clothing, which was a part of said consideration. By deed of date 27th of May, 1889, said Milton A. Ammons and his 'wife, Armina Ammons, leased for oil and gas purposes the said tract of two hundred and forty-three acres, in connection with adjoining lands, making in all three hundred acres, more or less, to Charles J. Ford, for the term of five years from the date of the lease, and as much longer as oil or gas should be found in paying quantities, which lease was by Charles J. Ford, by a writing, duly signed and acknowledged, dated Juty 17, 1889, assigned to the South Penn Oil Company, which .lease and assignment were admitted to record in the clerk’s office of the county court of said Monongalia County. On the 17th of Febrvary, 1892, M. A. Ammons, guardian of Howard L. Ammons, Clarence L. Ammons, Ashlev Ney Ammons, Cyrus C. Ammons, Stella M. Ammons, Millard E. Ammons, Early F. Ammons, and Ernest H. Ammons, the infant children of said Arinina Ammons, filed his petition in the circuit court, under chapter eighty-three, Code, naming the said infants and the said Armina Ammons, Milton A. Ammons, Malinda Conawa3>-, Charles J. Ford, and the South Penn Oil Company, a corporation, as defendants, and asking for such proceedings as would authorize him to make sale or dispose of the interest of the said infant defendants in their ■estate in remainder in the undivided seven-eighths of the •oil as well as the gas which might be under the said tract of two hundred and forty-three acres of land, together with the right and privilege of the purchaser to enter upon [613]*613said tract of land and operate for oil, etc., and for general and special relief. It was ascertained by proper proceedings therein that the infant defendants, children of the said Armina Ammons, who had an estate in remainder in said tract of land, should have and be seised of an estate vsx fraesenti of an undivided one-half interest in all the gas and oil in and under the said tract of two hundred and forty-three acres of land; and the court, being of opinion that such division was proper, appointed Charles Powell a special commissioner to sell at either public or private sale the interest of said infants in and to the seven-eighths of the oil and g-as, with all proper privileges for producing and securing the same. Said special commissioner made sale of same for the sum of three hundred dollars in cash to the South Penn Oil Company, in addition to paying all the costs of the proceeding and the cost of conveying the same, which sale was confirmed, and Charles Powell appointed special commissioner to convey the same to the South Penn Oil Company, which he did by deed dated February 18, 1892. It is provided in said deed “that, as a part of the terms and conditions of the said sale, the purchaser of the said interest and rights and privileges shall do and perform the. following, to wit: To begin to operate, mine, and bore for oil and gas within and under said tract of land free of cost to the said infants or their guardian, within sixty days after the confirmation of the sale hereunder, and complete one well thereon in one year after said confirmation, unavoidable delay and accidents excepted; and, if oil be found thereon in paying quantities*, then after the said first well is completed thereon the said purchaser shall immediately commence and drill other wells thereon as shall seem necessary to protect the oil and gas in and under the said tract' of land, and shall also deliver as royalty to the credit of the said infants'or their guardian, free of cost to them or their guardian, the one-half of the one-eighth of all the oil produced and saved from the said land, in pipe lines or tanks, and pay to the said infants or their guardian the one-half of three hundred dollars per year for the gas from each and every well drilled thereon, producing gas, the product from which is marketed or used off tne said premises, and also pay all the damages to [614]*614the growing crops by reason of operations. And this conveyance is made on the terms and conditions and subject to the requirements and restrictions of said decrees only. Reference is here made to the said will of record as aforesaid, and to the said decrees and papers in the said cause or proceeding aforesaid, for a full and more perfect description of either said tract of land, and the said oil and gas interests, rights, and privileges, and the terms and requirements of the said decrees.”

On the 28th of August, 1895, the said Howard L. Am-mons ánd the other seven named children of Armina Am-mons, all infants, by Milton A. Ammons, their next friend, sued out of the clerk’s office of the circuit court of Monon-galia County their subpoena in chancery, and filed their bill against the South Penn Oil Company, a corporation organized and existing under the laws of Pennsylvania, and Charles Powell, special commissioner, defendants, alleging that the said tract of two hundred and forty-three acres of land is located in what is known as the Doll’s Run and Mannington oil field or belt; that the oil is found in said field or belt in a porous sand rock stratum; that, at the time of entering the proceedings and the decrees selling said defendant the seven-eighths interest of plaintiffs in said oil and gas, said land was practically tested and very valuable oil territory, and the same, if it had been properly and fairly developed, and the oil and gas thereunder properly and fairly protected by the drilling of such wells as seemed and were necessary, was worth several hundred thousand dollars for oil purposes; that the defendant oil company is very largely interested ánd engaged in the oil business in said field or belt, and owns leases for oil and gas purposes on many thousand acres in said belt, and near thereto, and owns and operates very many producing oil wells in said belt, by means whereof it has a very large production of both oil and gas, — and filed with their bill a map, as Exhibit ten, showing the tract accurately, and the courses and distances; alleging that said defendant is the owner of leases for oil and gas purposes on all the lands adjacent and adjoining said tract of two Hundred and forty-three acres, and has developed or partially developed said adjacent territory and leases; that, owing to [615]

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Bluebook (online)
35 S.E. 1004, 47 W. Va. 610, 1900 W. Va. LEXIS 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ammons-v-south-penn-oil-co-wva-1900.