Blue Creek Development Co. v. Howell

133 S.E. 699, 101 W. Va. 748, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 246
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1926
Docket5294
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 133 S.E. 699 (Blue Creek Development Co. v. Howell) 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
Blue Creek Development Co. v. Howell, 133 S.E. 699, 101 W. Va. 748, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 246 (W. Va. 1926).

Opinion

MelleR, Judge :

Plaintiff, by its bill and attachment sued out on the ground of their non-residence, sought to recover from defendants, trading as the Eastern Fuel Company, damages for the alleged breach of their contract to build and operate a gasoline *750 plant on what is described, as the Brinegar tract of fifty acres, on which plaintiff owned a lease for the production of oil and gas, and to extract the gasoline from the casing head gas from four oil wells drilled on said tract, according to the terms stipulated in the contract, and which wells "at the date of the alleged contract were being operated for oil by the plaintiff company.

By clause one (1) of the contract, dated April 7, 1917, it was provided as follows: "The First Party (Plaintiff) hereby sells and grants unto the Second Party (Eastern Fuel Company) the right of extracting the gasoline present from such casing head gas, and for such purposes the right to erect, maintain and use one or more gasoline extracting plants upon the surface of said leased premises in such manner as not to interfere with the First Party’s operations thereon.” This is the provision upon which defendants mainly rely in their defense, that the contract properly construed constitutes merely a right or license, at their option, to go upon the property and produce gasoline upon the terms of the grant or offer therein contained.

The third (3) clause, however, provides as follows: “It is agreed that all the casing head gas which shall he produced from the wells of the First Party shall be used and treated by the Second Party, and after such treatment and extraction of the gasoline therefrom the remaining gas shall be the property of the First Party.”

By the eleventh (11) clause defendants were given the right to go upon the leasehold at points described, for the purpose of making a practical test of said gas for gasoline present, subject to the inspection and consent of plaintiff’s engineer, without charge for the gas, such privilege to continue no longer than April 25, 1917, and to be concluded sooner if possible. And if such tests should prove satisfactory to the defendants, and they should decide to take under the contract, work on the construction of the gasoline plant should begin within fifteen (15) days from May 1, 1917, and the building operations vigorously prosecuted to a speedy completion, and the plant completed within one hundred and twenty (120) *751 days, subject to reasonable delays and accidents beyond defendants ’ control.

By the fourth (4) clause right was given defendants to erect and maintain their extracting plant or plants with ingress and egress free of rent, provided the plaintiff owned or controlled such rights in sufficient area, outside of the land used for its own purposes, to supply the need of defendants in that regard; also a pipe line right of way out to the railroad, over any land owned or controlled by plaintiff; and provided that the buildings of defendant should not be closer than 300 feet to plaintiff’s buildings, and that all such buildings and rights should be subject to the restrictions contained in the insurance policies carried by plaintiff.

By the fifth (5) clause the plaintiff reserved the right, with the agreement of defendants, to disconnect any gas well or wells from the pipe line, on account of the abandonment thereof, or for the purpose of cleaning out or repairing the same, or for drilling deeper, or for drilling from the gas sand to the oil sands for the purpose of oil, or for the purpose of making repairs of any kind to the wells or pipe lines, and that' the gas from any well or wells so disconnected, and while so disconnected, should be considered no longer under the terms and conditions of the contract, until original conditions should be re-established.

By the eighth (8) clause the second party agreed to put in such compressors as might be necessary to increase the pressure of the gas to such an extent as to produce the greatest amount of gasoline practicable therefrom.

By the seventh(7) clause the term of the contract was to be fifteen (15) years from its date, with the right of renewal by the second party for an additional five (5) years, upon terms to be mutually agreed upon.

As a consideration for the rights and privileges granted to defendants, it was provided by the tenth (10) clause that:

‘ ‘ 10. The First Party is to receive from the Second Party as royalty, without cost or expense to it: (a) One-half or 50 percent gross of the gasoline produced at said extracting *752 plant or plants; but the said Second Party exclusively shall market the First Party’s share with its own proportion of said product, and shall account to the First Party for the sale of its one-half and of the one-sixteenth hereinafter mentioned, of the gasoline produced each month at the price obtained by the Second Party f. o. b. ears at the railroad destination point selected by it, which price shall be 70 percent of the retail price of automobile grade of gasoline sold on Grant Boulevard, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, f. o. b. Pittsburgh; (b) and in addition thereto, one-sixteenth gross of the gasoline produced at said plant or plants, which last mentioned interest is due or payable to the said W. W. Brinegar as royalty to him for the casing head gas herein mentioned under an agreement between the said Brinegar and the said First Party; which one-sixteenth interest shall be sold and accounted for by the Second Party as herein provided, concerning said fifty percent interest above mentioned. Monthly settlements shall be made on or before the 20th of each and every month for the gasoline produced and sold during the previous month. Second Party’s sale books shall be at all times open to inspection by the First Party to the end that the amount of gasoline sold and the price received therefor may be verified.”

We have thus quoted literally such provisions of the contract as seem to be vital, and have digested such other parts as seem to shed any light upon the construction that should be given thereto.

The bill alleges that on April 24, 1917, defendants notified plaintiff that they had elected to take under the contract, and that the same thereby became absolute and a binding agreement between the parties according to the terms thereof; that on the same day plaintiff acknowledged receipt of the notice, and agreed that the proposal thereby became an absolute and binding agreement between the parties; and that it exhibited with the bill copies of said acceptance, also a copy of the lease from Brinegar and wife for said land.

The bill further alleges that with a view of erecting their plant for extracting the gasoline defendants had acquired a tract of land from one Gavender near to or adjoining the *753 Brinegar tract, and in July 1917, Rad employed the Hope Natural Gas Company to erect tReir plant on tRe Cavendeir lot; and tRat pursuant to its contract tRe Hope company Rad entered upon and Rauled tRereon a large quantity of material and Rad purcRased a large quantity of macRinery for erecting tlie plant, and were proceeding witR tRe work, wRen, about tlie ....

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
133 S.E. 699, 101 W. Va. 748, 1926 W. Va. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blue-creek-development-co-v-howell-wva-1926.