B. L. McFarland Drilling Contractor v. Connell

344 S.W.2d 493, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 824, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2148
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 15, 1961
Docket5443
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 344 S.W.2d 493 (B. L. McFarland Drilling Contractor v. Connell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B. L. McFarland Drilling Contractor v. Connell, 344 S.W.2d 493, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 824, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2148 (Tex. Ct. App. 1961).

Opinions

LANGDON, Chief Justice.

W. N. Connell, appellee, sued B. L. McFarland Drilling Contractor, appellant, for willful and wrongful trespass in taking caliche from land upon which appellee had an undivided mineral interest in the entire surface estate, and upon which appellant had an oil and gas lease. Trial was had before the court without a jury, and judg[494]*494ment was rendered that appellee did not have the right of free use of the caliche. Appellant filed notice of appeal and thereafter filed the proper appeal bond. Subsequently, appellee filed a release, stating that he had been satisfied and compensated and that, for a valuable consideration, he was releasing appellant from any further claims; and also filed a motion to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the questions involved herein were now moot.

Appellant refused to pay any part of the damages found by the trial court and insisted upon an appeal, bringing five points of error.

By Point 1, appellant contends that the appeal should not be dismissed because the judgment as now entered and executed, if unreversed, decides and determines substantial property rig'hts of the parties under oil, gas and mineral leases being developed and operated by appellant, and that such questions and matters are in controversy between the parties and are not moot. By Point 2, appellant contends that all costs of appeal should be taxed against appellee, because appellee argued for and secured an erroneous judgment in the trial court and insisted upon a judgment fixing the substantive property rights of the parties while, at the same time, attempting to deliver a release of only the money damages.

It follows, since we have overruled appellee’s motion to dismiss the appeal, it is our opinion that this appeal is not moot (Point 1), and that there is a substantial question that has been properly raised on this appeal: That is, can the holder of an oil and gas lease be the free user of caliche found on the lease, for development of the lease, or has such holder become a trespasser to the surface owner’s rights to the surface when he uses such caliche on the leasehold premises and nowhere else? We do not consider this to be a moot question, in spite of the so-called release, and believe appellant still has a vital interest in the question raised. 5 C.J.S. Appeal and Error § 1354(1), p. 411; Speekels v. Kneip, Tex.Civ.App., 170 S.W.2d 255, at page 257; Cravens v. Wilson, 48 Tex. 321; 3 Tex.Jur. 74.

With respect to appellant’s second assignment of error, involving the taxing of costs, we believe this matter to be controlled by Rule 448, Vernon’s Annotated Texas Rules of Civil Procedure, and it will be disposed of depending upon the final ruling in this case.

Appellant’s third, fourth and fifth assignments of error attack the judgment of the trial court, holding that appellant was a trespasser in opening and taking the caliche from a pit on the west half of Section 37, and in using such caliche on roads and on drill and tank battery sites on the leased premises, and in holding that appellant was liable to appellee in damages for the market value for grazing purposes of the one acre of land used for the caliche pit, as well as for the market value of the caliche taken from the pit, and in rendering judgment that appellee recover from appellant damages for the depression in market value for grazing purposes of the one acre of land, and for the market value of the caliche taken and used by appellant on the leasehold premises, because appellant had the legal right to take and use such caliche under his oil, gas and mineral lease from the mineral owners.

In this cause, appellant has been adjudged a trespasser and has been held liable in damages because he opened a pit, excavated, and took caliche from land which was a part of the lands covered by appellant’s oil and gas leasehold estate, without the consent of appellee, who owned all of the surface of said lands, and an undivided interest in part of the minerals thereunder.

Appellant McFarland had drilled four oil wells on the South half of Section 37, and the West half of Section 48, of the land involved in this controversy. The caliche was taken from a pit located in the South half of Section 37, and was used by appellant to build roads and pads for drill sites, and for tank batteries on the two half-sections under lease, and nowhere else.

[495]*495It was stipulated that appellee, W. :Ni-Connell, owned only a' part of the minerals, subject to oil and gas leases, and that he o.wned the surface of the West half of Section 37 and all of Section 48; it-was-further stipulated that appellant McFarland owned and had- oil and gas mineral leases from the various minerals owners (including the mineral interest owned by appellee), some of which leases covered all of Sections 37 and 48 and additional lands, and some covering only the South half of Section 37, and some covering the West half of Section 48.

Trial below was to the court without the intervention of a jury.' The trial court did not file separately its findings of 'fact and conclusions of law, but did incorporate certain findings of fact in the judgment, some of which are material, and it is believed must control the disposition to be made of this case. These findings are paraphrased and set out below:

(1) Appellant drilled four wells on the leasehold premises and constructed roads thereon to give access to such wells and well sites for drilling and production purposes, including the location of two tank batteries thereon. The use of appellee’s surface estate in said land for such purposes was reasonable and necessary, was authorized by the mineral leases, and appellant used no more of said land than was reasonably required for the drilling and production of oil from said land.

(2) Appellant opened a pit one acre in size and eight feet deep, from which he extracted 2,105 cubic yards of caliche which was used by appellant in constructing the roads and pads for drill sites and tank batteries. The pit from which the caliche was taken, as well as the roads and pads on which it was used, were all located on lands which were a part of the lands covered by the oil and gas mining leases in which appellant did, at all pertinent times, ■own a valid and subsisting interest.

(3) 2,105 cubic yards of caliche was the amount of caliche reasonably necessary to construct appellánt’s roads and-- .pads 'for drill sites and tank batteries! ■ .

(4)If defendant had the right to open the, caliche pit under the terms of the various oil and gas mining leases its location was at the most • advantageous and reasonable place for the building of roads and tank battery pads. í

From the facts actually found, it would appear that such use as was made of the caliche by appellant was reasonable and necessary, and that no more of the caliche, and no more of the land, was used than was reasonably necessary for drilling and production operations.

It appears that the trial court based its judgment in this cause on-its finding, as a matter of law, that the caliche taken by appellant was a 'mineral; therefore, not a part of the surface estate; that such mineral (caliche) was not included as one of the minerals granted, leased and let to the oil and gas lessees under the terms of the leases held by appellant’ on such land.

Whether caliche is, or is not, a mineral seems to us to be immaterial.

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Related

Connell v. BL McFarland Drilling Contractor
347 S.W.2d 565 (Texas Supreme Court, 1961)
B. L. McFarland Drilling Contractor v. Connell
344 S.W.2d 493 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1961)

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Bluebook (online)
344 S.W.2d 493, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 824, 1961 Tex. App. LEXIS 2148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/b-l-mcfarland-drilling-contractor-v-connell-texapp-1961.