Bain v. Portable Drilling Corp.

1948 OK 137, 198 P.2d 207, 200 Okla. 569, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 362
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 8, 1948
DocketNo. 33113
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 1948 OK 137 (Bain v. Portable Drilling Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bain v. Portable Drilling Corp., 1948 OK 137, 198 P.2d 207, 200 Okla. 569, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 362 (Okla. 1948).

Opinion

LUTTRELL, J.

This is an action to cancel an oil and gas lease and to enjoin the lessee from attempting to operate an oil and gas well thereon, or from removing any property therefrom, brought by the plaintiffs, Mark H. Bain et al., against the Portable Drilling Corporation, lessee under said lease. The case was tried to the court without a jury, and upon the conclusion of the evidence the trial court rendered judgment for defendant. Plaintiffs appeal.

The facts are practically undisputed. Plaintiffs, the owners of 80 acres of [570]*570land in Lincoln county, executed and delivered to defendant on October 22, 1945, an oil and gas mining lease covering said land. This lease provided that it should remain in force for a term of one year from date, and as long thereafter as oil or gas or either of them was produced from said land by the lessee.

On the same date plaintiffs and defendant executed a contract in connection with said lease whereby defendant agreed to commence operations for the drilling of a well on the leased premises within 120 days after October 22, 1945, at a location to be selected by defendant, and to drill said well to a sufficient depth, in the judgment of defendant, to test the Hunton Lime.

Defendant commenced a well upon the property within the 120-day period provided in the contract, and drilled the well to and into the Hunton Lime formation, found at a depth of approximately 4,490 feet, but was unable to obtain production from the Hunton Lime formation, although it expended considerable time and money in an effort to do so. It appears that in the drilling of the well defendant had encountered gas in the Skinner Sand, a formation found at a depth of approximately 4,135 feet, and that after it failed to produce either oil or gas from the Hunton Lime formation, defendant, on September 9, 1946, perforated or shot the well at the point where the Skinner Sand was encountered, and that said sand when so shot produced some gas. Defendant spent several days washing the sand and using other methods in an effort to increase the production of gas from said sand, but did not at that time obtain- production in commercial quantities. Defendant made no further effort to produce gas from the Skinner Sand until February, 1947,' at which time it again perforated or shot the Skinner Sand, and obtained production, which its witnesses testified was, in their judgment, in paying quantities. When it sought to have a purchaser of the gas connect to the well it was forbidden to do so by plaintiffs, who thereupon brought this action.

Upon the failure of defendant to produce oil or gas from said well in paying quantities by October 22, 1946, plaintiff Mark H. Bain, on October 24, 1946, called the president of defendant on the telephone, advised him that the lease had expired by failure to produce within the year, and demanded a release of the lease, which the president refused. On January 13, 1947, Bain testified that he again called the president of the defendant and demanded a release of the lease, and was again refused.

Plaintiffs contend that under the terms of the oil and gas lease, it being for one year and as long thereafter as oil and gas, or either of them, was produced from the land by defendant, the failure to produce oil or gas in paying quantities, and to market the same so that plaintiffs would obtain royalty therefrom, automatically terminated the lease on October 22, 1946, the expiration of its primary term, citing in support of this contention, Pine v. Webster, 118 Okla. 12, 246 P. 429; Gypsy Oil Co. v. Marsh, 121 Okla. 135, 248 P. 329, and other cases holding that the word “produce,” as used in the lease, means to produce in paying quantities. Defendant does not contend that it produced gas in paying quantities from said well prior to the expiration of the primary term of the lease, but calls attention to Roach v. Junction Oil & Gas Co., 72 Okla. 213, 179 P. 934, and Parks v. Sinai Oil & Gas Co., 83 Okla. 295, 201 P. 517, holding that the discovery of oil or gas within the term of the lease was sufficient to extend the term and give to the lessee the right to thereafter produce.

Defendant further contends that under the terms of the lease, it having commenced the well within the primary term, it was entitled to complete the same with reasonable diligence regardless of whether or not the primary term of the lease expired prior to such [571]*571completion. The trial court upheld this contention, and in so holding it did not err.

The oil and gas lease, as above pointed out, was for a term of one year and as long thereafter as oil or gas was produced. It provided that the lessee should deliver to the lessor one-eighth of all oil or gas produced and saved from the leased premises. It contained a paragraph governing the payment of delay rentals in which no time was specified for the payment of rentals and no amount was specified, thus evidencing the fact that the term of the lease could not be extended by the payment of delay rentals. After this provision it contained a paragraph providing that if the first well drilled on the land should be a dry hole, then and in that event, if a second well was not commenced within twelve months from the expiration of the last rental period for which rent had been paid, the lease should terminate, unless the lessee resumed the payment of rentals. In the same paragraph and as a part thereof it provided as follows:

“ . . . and if the lessee shall commence to drill a well within the term of this lease or any extension thereof, the lessee shall have the right to drill such well to completion with reasonable diligence and dispatch, and if oil or gas, or either of them be found in paying quantities, this lease shall continue and be in force with like effect as if such well had been completed within the term of years herein first mentioned.”

The supplemental agreement between the parties did not specify a time for the completion of a well upon the premises, but did specify that a well should be commenced within 120 days.

Plaintiff contends that the above-quoted provision of the lease was inoperative and must be disregarded, as it is not a complete provision or conve-nant and is not pertinent to the arrangement made by the parties. We do not agree with this contention. The provisions for rentals, and for the resumption of rental payments in the event a dry hole was drilled upon the property, obviously were inoperative, since the lease did not provide for any extension of time by the payment of rentals.

These paragraphs, however, remained in the lease; they were not canceled or deleted in any way, and the above-quoted provision was not, in our judgment, rendered ineffective or inoperative simply because it was contained in a paragraph which in part was inoperative. The above-quoted provision gave to the lessee the right to complete a well commenced within time whether such well was commenced within the primary term of the lease, as here, or whether it had been commenced within an extension of that term had the lease provided for the payment of rentals. It was a saving clause whereby the lessee, who had attempted to develop the lease and produce oil and gas therefrom in accordance with the provisions thereof, was protected in such effort so long as he continued with diligence his endeavor to complete a well commenced in good faith prior to the expiration of the lease.

In Smith v. Gypsy Oil Co., 130 Okla. 135, 265 P.

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Bluebook (online)
1948 OK 137, 198 P.2d 207, 200 Okla. 569, 1948 Okla. LEXIS 362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bain-v-portable-drilling-corp-okla-1948.