Beeson v. Drake Oil Co.

97 S.E. 414, 83 W. Va. 32, 8 A.L.R. 414, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 167
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 29, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 97 S.E. 414 (Beeson v. Drake 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
Beeson v. Drake Oil Co., 97 S.E. 414, 83 W. Va. 32, 8 A.L.R. 414, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 167 (W. Va. 1918).

Opinion

Lynch, Judge:

The Drake Oil Company, a partnership, the predecessor in title of the defendant, Drake Oil Company, a corporation, none of whose stockholders were members of the partnership, owned and operated oil wells upon lands leased for oil and gas purposes, and on February 8, 1911, sold unto W. C. Patterson, Jr., the right to take, pipe and utilize gas from the oil wells and out of it manufacture gasoline on the leased premises, he to furnish at his expense the instrumentalities necessary and usual in the process of producing gasoline, and to pay to the 'owners of the wells a stipulated share of the profits derived from the business. The partnership sold its wells and leases to Hyde and others who incorporated the Drake Oil Company, and plaintiffs, Beeson and others, ac~ [33]*33quired from Patterson his rights under the contract, the buildings erected, machinery installed and pipe lines laid by him to convey the gas to the plant, and on May 17, 1913, began and continued to produce gasoline until May 30, 1916, when they abandoned the enterprise, wrecked the plant, sold its component parts and from it realized approximately one-fourth the original cost of the establishment. The abandonment and cessation of the business, plaintiffs allege in their declaration, necessarily resulted from defendant’s installation and application of a patented process used to accelerate oil production from the wells by the forced injection of air at high pressure, whereby they further allege the vaporous properties of the gas were destroyed by absorption or combination with the air and thereby unfitted for use in the manufacture of gasoline, to their great fin'ancial loss and damage, wherefore they brought this action. The Drake Oil Company assigns as erroneous the action of the court in setting aside the verdict for defendant and in granting plaintiffs another trial.

Upon the date of the grant to Patterson and his assignment to the plaintiffs, and thereafter and during the operation of the gasoline manufacturing plant, the partnership and its successors, the corporation of the same name, continually prosecuted the business of producing oil from the leased premises. The continuation of the productive operation for oil contemporaneously with the operation of the gasoline manufacturing plant seems certainly to have been in the contemplation of the parties at the date of the contract. Such unity and continuity of operation, it may be said, was essential to the prosecution of the business enterprise pursued by the plaintiffs. The wells were drilled several years prior to the date of the Patterson contract, and though at first producing oil in large quantities, production later had materially diminished to such an extent, it appears, that their daily average then was about 2y2 barrels for each of the nineteen wells, that average being maintained only by means of one or more vacuum pumps, a process commonly resorted to in order to stimulate the production of oil or gas, or both, in deteriorated or decadent wells. Such it is agreed and not denied was the [34]*34condition of tbe wells owned and controlled by tbe Drake Oil Company, tbe partnership, at the date of tbe contract involved and its assignment to tbe plaintiffs and during their ownership and exercise of the rights thereby conferred, until in lieu of the suction process defendant substituted the air compression process, a process more powerful and efficacious and more modern in invigorating and stimulating the oil production capacity of oil and gas wells. Such was the situation confronting the parties to this action and those through whom they acquired their respective rights at the time of their acquisition and before the installation and operation of the substituted process.

If, as plaintiffs claim, the relation of landlord and tenant was established by the Patterson contract and remained until interrupted by the acts complained of, nevertheless the circumstances detailed clearly indicate that the rights said to have unlawfully been impaired were subordinate to the rights of the defendant to extract oil from the premises which it owned and controlléd through wells thereon, without liability, unless they wilfully interrupted or destroyed the subordinate rights and privileges of the plaintiffs. Wrongfulness and willfulness are the charges preferred by the declaration, but the proof in support of .averments in this respect falls far short of establishing as true the facts so averred. On the contrary, defendant through its chief officers offered to purchase plaintiff’s plant before the installation of the air compressor apparatus, an offer which plaintiffs declined to accept, because, they say, it was inadequate to compensate them for the outlay and expense of the plant, and in lieu thereof they later elected to dismantle, junk and dispose of it for an amount in excess of the offer. The offer, though inadequate, is significant only as tending to negative an intentional injury to the plaintiffs; at least not to warrant the conclusion of the existence of sinister motives prompting the action and conduct of the defendant’s officers and agents.

Before the installation of the air compressor plant the suction of the pumps used under the old process had ceased to be effective in stimulating the productive.capacity qf the wblls, and though the effect of the former upon the gasoline proper[35]*35ties of the gas is doubtfully questionable, as we shall later see, certainly according to the proof the quantity and volume of the gas was increased eommensurately and correspondingly with the increased production of oil due to the substituted process. Obviously the difficulty thereafter confronting plaintiffs in the manufacture of gasoline was the want of a plant large enough and powerful enough to meet the changed conditions brought about by the new situation.

The proposition that the injection of air into oil and gas producing wells renders gas flowing therefrom unfit for the manufacture of gasoline is not established clearly by the proof addressed to that subject. The weight of the evidence shows the fact to be otherwise. Although the latter instance necessitates the use of a higher degree of power to solve the manufacturing problems so presented, operators skilled in the oil and gas business, and incidentally in the production of gasoline, testifying in the ease and basing their opinions upon their own personal experience, frankly, fairly and unequivocally declare that the commingling of air with gas in an oil and gas well under pressure to promote the production of oil therefrom does not rob the gas of its gasoline qualities, but does require a more powerful compressive force to separate the lighter or vaporous element from the gas so burdened with air. Indeed, there seems to be a general concurrence of evidential opinion among the witnesses on this subject. Evidence to the contrary is slight and inconclusive.

Equally without merit is plaintiffs’ contention, the one upon which they chiefly rely, that under the contract by which defendant sold to them all the gas produced from the oil wells on the leased premises, he may not now interfere with the supply or quality of such gas by the change of processes from suction to compressed air. The pertinent part of the agreement between plaintiffs and defendant is: “The said Drake Oil Go. by these presents does sell, assign and transfer to said Patterson, his heirs and assigns, all gas produced from the oil Avells now owned by the said Drake Oil Co. on the’ leases hereafter described, and all gas produced from wells which said Drake Oil Co. may hereafter drill thereon, reserving, however, to said Drake Oil Co. enough

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
97 S.E. 414, 83 W. Va. 32, 8 A.L.R. 414, 1918 W. Va. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/beeson-v-drake-oil-co-wva-1918.