Bowers Co. v. Kanawha Valley Products Co.

130 S.E. 284, 100 W. Va. 278, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 246
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1925
Docket5339
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 130 S.E. 284 (Bowers Co. v. Kanawha Valley Products 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
Bowers Co. v. Kanawha Valley Products Co., 130 S.E. 284, 100 W. Va. 278, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 246 (W. Va. 1925).

Opinion

Woods, Judge:

The Bowers Company, a corporation, appeals from a decree pronounced by the'circuit court of Kanawha county, affirming a final decree of the court of common pleas of said county, dismissing its bill and refusing it the relief sought.

In 1912'the Bowers heirs, residing in New Jersey and Pennsylvania (later incorporated as the Bowers Company), leased 1476 acres, situate in Kanawha county, to the Kanawha Valley Products Company, a West Virginia corporation, for oil and gas purposes. This lease grants to the lessee “all the natural gas and oil that may be obtained by said lessee at its own cost and expense from the said lands1 ’, and provides that the lessee shall pay to the lessor (1) a minimum yearly royalty of $1600; (2) 14c for every 1,000 cubic feet of gas measured by meter, and a royalty of Vs of all oil produced; (3) that its books shall be kept open to inspection of lessor; and (4) that lessee “shall not convey, assign, lease, underlet, or sublet, or in any way set over, to any person or persons, or corporation, at any time, any of its interests, rights, term or terms, in whole or in part, under this agreement, without the consent, in writing of said lessors.” The lessees developed the property under said lease.

In the latter part of August, 1918, Godfrey L. Cabot, acquired the controlling interest in the defendant corporation. On August 8th, the lessee entered into an agreement with Roswell T. Hapgood, giving Hapgood the right to extract gasoline from gas' derived from said property and accepting 1/3 of said gasoline in return, with the proviso that “in addition thereto one-half (%) of any royalty on said gasoline recovery that the said party of the first part may be obliged to pay to the land owners, but in no event shall such royalty be computed on a basis greater than one-eighth (Vs) of the total gasoline recovered.” Some time after this agreement, Hap-good sent his attorney, W. B. R. Byrne, to Philadelphia, to *281 secure a site on said leased premises on which, to erect a gasoline plant. An agreement was reached with a representative •of the Bowers estate for such site containing three acres, at .an annual rental of $75. On the attorney’s return to Charleston, he prepared a written lease embodying the terms of the verbal agreement made in Philadelphia. This lease was mailed to the Bowers’ representative, and on October 23, 1918, with some minor changes, was executed by Charles C. Bowers, for the Bowers corporation, in Charleston, under circumstances referred to later in this, opinion. Iiapgood constructed a- gasoline plant on the site so acquired and began the operation thereof on July 16, 1919, and was producing gasoline under the terms of his agreement at the time of the institution of this suit on July 21, 1920.

In this suit the claim is asserted by the plaintiff of a right to share in the gasoline made from the gas produced from the leased territory. The lease of 1912 contains no provision regarding the rights of the parties with respect to such gasoline, and the plaintiff’s claim is based not on the lease but solely upon a contract made by correspondence between the parties, set out hereinafter at length. The plaintiff seeks not only an accounting for and a share in this gasoline in accordance with the contract, but, in addition, avers various breaches of the provisions of the lease on the part of the .lessee, on account of which it asks that the lease be cancelled.

The cause resolves itself into two issues. The principal one is, whether the contract for a division of the gasoline between the plaintiff and the defendant company was made and is binding on the defendant. The other, whether the defendant, ns lessee, has so violated the covenants of the lease by failing to properly develop the leasehold and protect it from drainage by offset wells, and to save and market the oil produced from the premises, that the lease should be cancelled.

Did the letters, communications and actions of the parties, shown in the evidence constitute a binding contract as to a division of or payment for gasoline produced from the plaintiff’s lands? Embraced in this main inquiry are two questions, either one of which is controlling on the issue.- (1) was there a contract; and (2) if so, was it authorized or rati *282 fied by the'defendant corporation? A determination of the first question may render a consideration of the second unimportant ; for, if there was no binding contract for the gasoline, then it is immaterial whether Thomas had authority to make the contract, and it is unnecessary to consider-'ratification of a contract which does not exist.

• The parties to this correspondence were George E. Thomas, secretary and treasurer of the defendant corporation, on the one hand, and Thomas E. Merchant, attorney in fact for the Bowers’ estate, and later Charles C. Bowers, president of The Bowers Company, incorporated, on the other. Between August 3, 1918, and October 22, 1918, the latter date being that of the arrival of Charles C. Bowers in Charleston, Thomas and Merchant and Bowers dealt with each other only by letter or wire. Thomas lived in Charleston, West Virginia, Merchant and Bowers at Philadelphia, Pa. On the first mentioned date, Thomas wrote Merchant a letter, which the plaintiff claims constitutes the offer in the case. As it is important, we will quote it in full, omitting the caption and ending:

“We are writing to you as the representative of the Bowers heirs — now we believe incorporated— with reference to the property we have leased from them.
“As you are aware,, some late improvements have shown the practicability of extracting gasoline from natural gas before using it for fuel. We have this matter up with a party who is willing to put up a plant for this purpose, and offers for 64 per cent of the gasoline extracted from the gas, to turn over to us the remaining 36 per cent of the gasoline extracted; the percentage taken by him representing the cost of saving the gasoline.
“As in our opinion such gasoline delivered to us would in its nature be oil produced, we think our lessors entitled to one-eighth thereof. The gasoline produced from this lease we think will produce in this way a considerable revenue both to the Bowers and to ourselves, which otherwise is necessarily lost.
“For the purposes of saving this gasoline, it is necessary to build a plant, and as we are not quite sure the rights under our lease give us this privi *283 lege, we are writing you to learn whether the Bowers would consent to the location of the necessary plant on the Bowers lease.
‘1 This would only require a' small amount of surface somewhere back in the woods which is absolutely of no value to anyone. More than likely it will be a piece of surface up what is known as Horse Mill Hollow.
“We will be obliged if you will let us know as early as possible whether an agreement along this line will be satisfactory to your clients, as the man making us this proposition is anxious to start in time to complete the plant before frost, so that it will be necessary for us to act at once.
‘ ‘ If 3rou advise us favorable, we will have a brief memorandum prepared along these lines and also a plat showing the location of this plant.”

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Bluebook (online)
130 S.E. 284, 100 W. Va. 278, 1925 W. Va. LEXIS 246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bowers-co-v-kanawha-valley-products-co-wva-1925.