Armstrong v. Southern Production Co., Inc.

182 F.2d 238
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 16, 1950
Docket13059_1
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 182 F.2d 238 (Armstrong v. Southern Production Co., Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Armstrong v. Southern Production Co., Inc., 182 F.2d 238 (5th Cir. 1950).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

The suit, for a declaration as to, and for enforcement of, rights under a written contract of date August 8, 1947, 1 which had been entered into by and between the defendants, Armstrong, et al., and Southern Production Co., was brought by Southern and its assignee, Cook Production Co., as plaintiffs.

The claim was: that the contract was a lawful and valid one; that all of the obligations imposed upon Southern by it had been complied with, including the deposit of the estimated drilling costs of the first well; but that defendants had refused to deposit their one-half thereof, had declined to execute the oil and gas lease they had agreed to execute, and had warned plaintiffs not to enter upon the lands for the purpose of operating them for oil and gas as it had been agreed could and should be done.

Many and various defenses, some of fact and some of law, were put forward. Because, however, the district judge, on ample supporting evidence, decided against the defendants all of the fact issues, as well as all of the law issues, and all have been abandoned except the three relied on mainly below and wholly here for a judgment in their favor, none of the defenses except these three will be set out here.

The first of these was: that the provisions of paragraph II, 2 of the contract, that “the drilling operations shall not be commenced until each of the parties hereto places or deposits in escrow * * * his and its one-half of the agreed estimated *240 cost of drilling and completing said well to production”, put it in the power of either party to render the agreement inoperative by failing or refusing to agree; that it is impossible for the law to attach any obligation to the agreement; and that the agreement must be regarded as illusory and unenforceable, both because wanting in mutuality and because indefinite under the Mississippi Statute of Frauds, Code 1942, § 264..

The second one was that- Par. XI 3 of the agreement, providing in substance that either party might be relieved from all obligations and liabilities, also renders the contract unilateral and unenforceable.

The third was that plaintiff, “Southern”, had violated Par. XII 4 of the contract by assigning part of its interest to '“'Cook”, without first giving Armstrong the opportunity to buy it, and that such violation placed plaintiff in default and thus prevented it from seeking the equitable remedy of specific performance.

The district judge, carefully canvassing each of these positions in turn, determined each of them against plaintiffs.

As to the first, citing many authorities, 5 *241 including the Mississippi case of Pugh v. Gressett, 136 Miss. 661, 101 So. 691, 38 A.L.R. 678, the district judge concluded: that, construed in the light of the undisputed facts as to the subject matter, and the circumstances surrounding the making, of the contract, it was not a mere “agreement to agree” on a matter involving fancy, taste, or sensibility, where the only determining standard was personal opinion, such that, the contract lacked finality and definiteness of obligation. Rejecting the view that the agreement was a mere preliminary and indefinite step in an effort to negotiate a contract, he found that it was, on the contrary, a definite, good faith agreement that each of the prime contractors would deposit one-half of the sum arrived at on the basis of existing and readily obtainable data and information, furnishing, indeed fixing, a recognized standard.

He concluded, in short: that the controlling, the dominant, factor in the challenged provision was not the word “agreed” but the word “estimated”; that it was contemplated by the parties that the cost could and would be estimated under standards prevailing in the drilling industry, taking into consideration the location of the proposed well, and the prevailing cost of materials and labor and other incidental costs that a reasonably prudent driller would take into consideration in his estimate.

Finding: that, under the agreement, neither party could arbitrarily, or in the exercise of bad faith, by refusing to agree or renouncing the contract, avoid his obligations under it; and that, since, under the reasonably definite standards and data available, the cost could and would have been estimated with reasonable accuracy, the one refusing or making no effort to agree would be bound to put up his one-half of the cost so estimated by the other, he completely rejected the defense of indefiniteness and want of enforceable obligation.

Of the defense that Par. XI, with its provisions for release, rendered the contract unilateral, the district judge was of the opinion that the defense was wholly without merit because the contract as a whole made it clear that there was an absolute obligation upon plaintiffs capable of being enforced as to the original well, and that the paragraph had reference to relief from obligations after the initial well or wells had been drilled.

As to the third point, the transfer to Cook in violation of Par. XII, plaintiff, admitting that Armstrong did know of it several months before he undertook to denounce the contract — not, however, on this ground — insist that, though he did not denounce the contract because of this transfer, nor at any time complain of it, he was not obligated to do so, and his failure to do so could not, in the absence of an express agreement, deprive him of the priority rights given him under the paragraph.

This point gave the judge little concern. He disposed of it against defendants by the finding, that Armstrong knew that the transfer had been made to Cook and not only did not object to it, but, in fact, acquiesced in it, and that if he had ever had any enforceable complaint, he had waived it.

Appellants are here vigorously insisting that, in ruling as he did, the district judge in effect made a new contract for the parties, his decree not enforcing an existing obligation but creating one which did not theretofore exist.

The appellees, on their part, point to the undisputed fact that the points Armstrong now makes against the contract were not made by him when, in his letter of April, 1947, he undertook to induce the plaintiffs to renegotiate, in effect make a new trade, urge upon us: that this is another of those cases of which the books are too full, of a seller seeking escape from his contract in order to obtain a better one by grasping at shadows and putting forward defenses having neither legal nor equitable substance; that none of the points made against the decree are sound; that, indeed, this is a peculiarly appropriate case for the equitable relief granted.

Citing the long line of cases fully supporting their view: that modern decisional *242

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182 F.2d 238, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-southern-production-co-inc-ca5-1950.