Battle v. Adams

229 S.W. 930, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1921
DocketNo. 642.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 229 S.W. 930 (Battle v. Adams) 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
Battle v. Adams, 229 S.W. 930, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 128 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinions

©’•QUINN, J.

This suit was brought by appellee, T. C. Adams, against appellant, O. M. Battle, to cancel an oil lease executed by appellee to appellant on June 12, 1919, on 904 acres of land situated in Panola county, Tex.

The substance of plaintiff’s petition is that the lease was procured by fraud; that the purpose and consideration of the lease was to develop the said lands for oil, gas, and other minerals; that defendant had wholly failed to comply with the provisions of the lease, and that same was terminated; and prayed for judgment canceling same. Defendant answered, denying the allegations in plaintiff’s petition, and said he had complied with all the terms, obligations, and requirements in said lease, and had performed all the covenants stipulated and obligations contained in said lease and within the time therein required.

Among other stipulations not necessary to the determination of the questions involved, the lease contained the following:

“If no well be commenced on the lands described herein nor within 200 feet of any lands owned by the lessor, on or before the 15th day of August, 1919, this lease shall fully terminate as to both parties hereto, and it is agreed and understood that, after the commencement of operations of the drilling of the said first well, the same must be continued with due diligence.”

There was also a clause expressly allowing the contract to be assigned by either party in whole or in part.

Upon the conclusion of the testimony, the court peremptorily instructed a verdict for the plaintiff, appellee; the charge being as follows:

“Gentlemen of the jury, the court, in view of the testimony in this case, is of the opinion that the uncontroverted testimony shows that the lease has been forfeited by the failure to comply with the stipulations in the lease that a well will be commenced upon the land owned by the lessor or within 200 feet of same, for the reason that the defendant had obtained an agreement from the Hope Oil Company to drill a well, where it was drilled, before he obtained the lease from Adams, and did nothing thereafter.”

Judgment was accordingly entered for plaintiff, canceling the lease, from which judgment the defendant has appealed.

The testimony shows that a well was drilled by the Hope Oil Company within 200 feet of plaintiff’s lands, and within the time specified in the lease.

The court’s charge was based upon the following testimony from the'record:

O. M. Battle, appellant, testified, substantially, as follows:

“The first time that I met Mr. Adams, that I am certain about, was on the morning of the 23d of May, last year, in his field; I met Mr. Adams in the presence of Dewitt Furrh, Mr. Littlejohn, and Mr. Tiller. Before that time I had acquired a lease on some acreage of the Louis Werner Sawmill Company, approximately 2,000 acres. I went to see Mr. Adams on the 23d of May because he had a lease of probably a , couple of thousand acres held by the Gulf Refining Company that I just learned had been forfeited for nonpayment of rentals. When Mr. Timmons and Mr. Furrh and I went to see Mr. Adams, there was an agreement entered into between us with reference to the procurement of additional acreage over there. He said he would give us 1,000 acres in lease and help us secure other acreage. The proposition from Mr. Furrh and myself to Mr. Adams was that we could get. as much as 3,000 acres, the minimum was placed at 3,000 acres, to get a well. In that conversation with Mr. Adams there was no one designated to drill the well. As a matter of fact, if I could secure the well for them in that locality, the acreage was to be made to me. With regard to the lease from the Louis Werner Sawmill Company to the Hope Oil Company, that lease was originally made to me. I got the lease made at my order to the Hope Oil Company. I got from the Hope Oil Company $5,000 in stock for my associates and myself for the Louis Werner lease that I had paid $5,000 cash for, and. .1 am now a stockholder in the Hope Oil Company, and have been since its organization. At *932 the tíme I began negotiations with Timmons and Furrh the Hope Oil Company was not in existence. They (the Hope Oil Company) invited me and asked me to come in with them. That they would drill their acreage over close to Minden and would promptly drill mine over in Panola county. Adams, Timmons, Furrh, and Í procured somewhere between 3,000 and 4,000 acres in leases between the 23d of May and 12th of June.
“My agreement with them, on the 23d of May, when I first talked to them of getting up this acreage, was this: That I, having owned the Louis Werner acreage, being the owner of the Louis Werner acreage, would secure development, that is, the drilling of a well somewhere in that neighborhood, and that as the Louis Werner lease was strictly a drilling obligation, that the well, of course, would have to be drilled on the Louis Werner acreage, and that if they would come in and help me get this 3,000 acres for myself, which was to replace the acreage already owned by me, that X was to give to secure the drilling of'a well in that locality; that all above 3,000 acres we would go in together on a profit-sharing plan. _ I assisted in procuring the well to be drilled in that vicinity. As to the interest I had in the procurement of the drilling of a well on the Louis Werner acreage, the point of interest with me was the securement of acreage for my own protection, and to get a well in there, of course, on the best terms I could. I made the trade or bargain with the Hope Oil Company to drill on the Louis Werner lease that I owned at that time, (and which the testimony showed adjoined appellee Adams’ land). There was nothing said about the place where the well was to be drilled; it was understood at the outset. Mr. Secrest, who was the general manager of the Hope Oil Company, was an associate of mine in the Louis Werner lease, and as general manager of the Hope Oil Company the point was understood and agreed upon with reference to where this well should be drilled. The well was drilled at the point where Mr. Secrest agreed it would be drilled. When the location, of that well was selected, I was along. Mr. Secrest was there, and Mr. Gibbons, the head driller of the Hope Oil Company, and Mr. Adams was along, and I think that Mr. Carpenter, of the Iiouis Werner Company, was there. The location was made before the 12th of June, the date of the Adams lease, but was known only to Mr. Secrest and myself, and probably one or two others, but not to any one else prior to the lease of Mr. Adams. Later I was there when it was laid out, so to speak, and definitely settled where the well would be drilled. That was about the middle of July. When I met Mr. Adams the first time I still held the Werner lease of 2,000 acres of land, and Mr. Adams became acquainted with the fact that I held that lease at that time. The purpose of organizing the Hope Oil Company was for the drilling for gas and oil in Webster parish, La.,- and in Panola county, Tex., and the Panola county holdings was the Louis Werner lease that X had.”

E. C. Brown, witness for plaintiff and secretary of the Hope Oil Company, testified;

“I am secretary of the Hope Oil Company, and have been ever since it was organized. Mr. A. L. Betts is president of the company.

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229 S.W. 930, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/battle-v-adams-texapp-1921.