Blaffer Farish v. Gulf Pipe Line Co.

218 S.W. 89, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1337
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 17, 1919
DocketNo. 7791.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 218 S.W. 89 (Blaffer Farish v. Gulf Pipe Line Co.) 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
Blaffer Farish v. Gulf Pipe Line Co., 218 S.W. 89, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1337 (Tex. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

LANE, J.

This is a suit Brought by appellants, Blaffer & Farish and the Paraffine Oil Company, a corporation, against the Gulf Pipe Line Company, a corporation, to recover 40 cents per barrel on 17,627.82 barrels of oil, designated by all parties as excess oil, which was delivered to the defendant Gulf Pipe Line Company under certain contracts and agreements existing between it and the plaintiffs. The causes of action of the two plaintiffs were separate causes of action, but, as they are so identical that a détermination of one determines the controversy concerning each, it was agreed by all parties that the plaintiffs might bring their suits jointly. The cause was tried without a jury upon an agreed statement of facts, which is in substance as follows:

On the 30th day of July, 1915, appellants Blaffer & Farish, at Houston, Tex., .wrote Harry C. Hansen, agent for the appellee Gulf Pipe Line Company, at Beaumont, Tex., as follows:

“Tour letter of the 29th inst. in reference to oil contract on Paraffine 40 acres, received. We are willing to sell Blaffer & Farish’s one-third of same for nine months from, say August 1st, which will be about six months’ production, at the price of 60 cents per barrel. I was talking to Mr. Wéis and it is his idea, and I agreed with him, that you ought to give the lease a little larger limit on production, because we would like to have you take care of any production we might get, and it is possible that we will get three or four thousand barrel well. Mr. Weis will see you to-morrow about same.”
*90 On July 31, 1915, Hansen, for appellee, replied:
“I have your letter of the 30th, and hand you herewith oil purchase contract covering your one-third interest in the Paraffine 40 acres at Humble. Mr. Wioss talked to me to-day about the maximum, but I am unwilling to make this for more than 1,000 barrels, and Mr. Wiess has decided to accept my offer. Therefore, assume you will desire to do likewise. Kindly sign the attached contract and return original copy for my files.”
On the 31st day of July, 1915, after the passage of the above letters, the appellants Blaffer & Parish and the appellee Gulf Pipe Bine Company entered into the following written contract:
“Gulf Pipe Line Company Oil Purchase Contract.
“Contract No.-. Division Order No.-.
“This evidences the sale by Blaffer & Parish, hereinafter called the ‘seller,’ to the Gulf Pipe Line Company, of Beaumont, Texas, hereinafter called the ‘company,’ of certain crude petroleum as herein designated, being our portion, to-wit, one-third of the total production from wells one and up on the Paraffine forty acres, Humble, Harris Co., Texas, for the period beginning August 1, 1915, at 7 o’clock a. m., and ending April 1, 1916, at 7 o’clock a. m. The terms and conditions of this sale are as follows:
“Our portion of all 'the petroleum oil produced from said wells during said period of time shall be by the seller thoroughly settled and put in marketable condition, and run into tanks connected with the pipe lines of the company, or to be connected therewith at its expense. In ascertaining the gauge tank measurements such deduction shall be made on account of sediment and impurities which may be held in suspense and for excess temperature as are provided for by the existing rules and regulations of the Gulf Pipe Line Company.
“The company is to receive from said tanks into its pipe lines all the quantity of oil as thus ascertained: Provided, however, that it shall not be required to receive or purchase any oil heavier than 15 degrees Beaumé, but may do so at its option; nor more than one thousand barrels per day, which is the maximum quantity that the company is required to take under this purchase per day during the period of this contract. The company is to have the right under this contract at the time of or prior to any settlement and payment for oil theretofore received to purchase at the price herein named all excess or any part of such excess over said designated quantity of the oil which the company may receive into its pipe lines as also any oil heavier than 15 degrees Beaumé, all such excess and all heavier oil which the company may receive into its lines and not purchase is to be run to the credit of the seller as a regular pipe line run as directed in the division order, and subject to the usual rules, regulations, and charges of the company.
“It is further understood that run tickets for oil from said wells are to be made as per division order on file with the ‘company’ and that payment for oil purchased by the ‘company’ hereunder is to be made to the ‘seller,’ at Beaumont, Texas, and that the price to be paid by the company is sixty cents per barrel of forty-two gallons each. Settlements are to be made for oil purchased hereunder when requested by the seller from time to time, not oftener than once in each seven days’ period.
“The company shall not be liable for any delay in the receipt of oil under this contract or into i,ts pipe lines caused by strikes of employes, accidents or injury to its pipe lines or pumping machinery or other equipment, or by any cause which could not reasonably be foreseen or avoided, and in any such case the company shall be relieved from any duty to receive oil until the expiration of a reasonable time within which to do so after the termination of such strike or repairment of such injury or removal of other causes preventing such receipt.
“The seller agrees, in case of any adverse claim of title, to furnish to the company, upon demand, an indemnity bond executed by a licensed surety company, against such adverse claim or claims, and unless the seller does so the company may retain oil received into its lines or the proceeds of the sale thereof until the dispute as to ownership is settled, and that this contract shall operate between its successors and assigns of both parties hereto' and be binding upon them and each of them.
“Executed in duplicate, Beaumont, Texas, this 31st day of July, 1915.
“Blaffer & Earish,
“By W. S. Earish.
“Gulf Pipe Line Company,
“By Harry C. Hansen.”

On the same day the appellant Paraffine Oil Company and appellee also entered into a contract identical in its terms with the contract set out above; the only difference in the two being the difference in the names of the sellers of the oil. On the date of the execution of the contracts mentioned, each of the plaintiffs, appellants here, owned a one-third interest in the Paraffine 40-acre tract of land, described in the contracts. At the time of the execution of the contracts the appellants and the party owning the other one-third of the land contemplated the development of same for oil. Oil was found on the land, and so long as the one-third part thereof belonging to each of the appellants did not amount to more than 1,000 barrels per day said oil was run into the pipe line of appellee, as provided*by the contracts, and was taken and paid for by appellee at the rate of 60 cents per barrel, as per the contracts.

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Bluebook (online)
218 S.W. 89, 1919 Tex. App. LEXIS 1337, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaffer-farish-v-gulf-pipe-line-co-texapp-1919.