Britton v. Cotton States Petroleum Co.

283 S.W. 887, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 872
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 17, 1926
DocketNo. 7551.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 283 S.W. 887 (Britton v. Cotton States Petroleum 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
Britton v. Cotton States Petroleum Co., 283 S.W. 887, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 872 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

On February 16, 1918, William Heard obtained oil and gas leases from G. S. Britton and 16 others upon their lands in Erath county, situated near the Desdamona, oil field. These leases were in the usual form of such instruments, and obligated Heard to begin drilling within a year or pay rentals in lieu of drilling.

The 17 landowners appear to have pooled their holdings and interests, and on February 26, 1918, jointly entered into a drilling contract with Heard, by which the latter obligated himself to drill an oil and gas Well “somewhere on the lands embraced in the pool of acreage,” upon the land of “one” oil the 17 owners. A few weeks later, on April 4, 1918, G. S. Britton, a member of the pool, entered into an individual contract with Heard, who thereby obligated himself to drill a well on Britton’s 480-acre tract embraced in the pool. It was stipulated that the well should be commenced within 90 days, and that drilling should be diligently prosecuted tó a depth of 4,000 feet, unless oil or gas be found in paying quantities at a lesser depth. This contract was duly recorded in the deed records of Erath county.

The two drilling contracts appear to have been made independently of and without specific relation to the leases held by Heard upon the lands to be drilled. And it does not appear that any character of consideration induced the parties to execute them. No penalty was prescribed against Heard’s default in performance, and such default could not have impaired or affected his leases upon the lands.

On June 13, less than 90 days after the execution of his drilling contract with Brit-ton, Heard assigned his lease on Britton’s 480-acre tract to S. F. Cade, but no reference was made in this assignment to the drilling contracts, which seem to have been completely ignored then and thereafter, so far as the record shows. On October -29, 1918, Cade assigned the west 200 acres of the Britton lease to M. H. Thomas and others, who appear to have been the trustees of the Cotton States Petroleum Company, which is an unincorporated concern, operating under a declaration of trust.

It was provided in Heard’s drilling contract with Britton that a well should be- commenced on the latter’s land within 99 days from April 4, 1918. Nothing was done within this period, however, except that a derrick was set up by “Old Man Winters,” a stranger *889 not otherwise identified in the record. About this time one H. C. Cates appeared on the scene, “who seemed to be the general manager in connection with the drilling of the well,” with whom Britton dealt from then on. After the derrick was set up nothing-further was done towards drilling for two or three months, when Britton, impatient at the delay, complained to Cates, who appears to have been acting for M. H. Thomas of Dallas, one of the trustees of the Petroleum Company. In the meantime it appears that Brit-ton had given Oates a 15-day extension of time in which to begin drilling, hut no material progress was made under this extension. Drilling operations had not actually commenced prior to January IS, 1919, when the petroleum company executed and delivered the following bond to Britton (omitting formal parts):

“Know all men by these presents: That Cotton States Petrolehin Company as principal and the others whose names are hereto signed as sureties acknowledge ourselves bound to owe and pay G. S. Britton of the county of Erath, in the state of Texas, the sum of twenty thousand dollars, for the payment of which we hereby bind ourselves, our heirs, executors and administrators, the conditions of this obligation being: That whereas, the above named Cotton States Petroleum Company has contracted and agreed with the said G. S. Britton to drill a well for oil and gas on the C. Schaffer survey in Eastland county, on land on which the said Cotton States Petroleum Company now owns the lease; and whereas, operations for the drilling! of said well have been begun but said well has not been spudded in:
“Now, therefore, if the said Cotton States' Petroleum Company prosecutes the operations already commenced for the drilling of said well with due diligence and shall spud in said well in at the earliest practicable date and shall drill the same to completion, then this obligation shall be null and void — otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

The Petroleum Company spudded in the well and drilled it to a depth of approximately 3,800 feet, when operations ceased. No oil was found by this operation. About a year’s time was consumed in drilling the well. The evidence was such as to raise the issue of diligence, and that issue, if material, should have been submitted to the jury. The evidence was also sufficient to raise the issues of Oates’ authority and agency for the petroleum company, and of the latter’s ratification of his acts, and if those issues were material they, too, should have been submitted to the jury.

Britton brought this suit upon the drilling bond against the Petroleum Company as an unincorporated association, against its trustees as such and individually, and against the sureties on the bond. The case whs tried by jury, but when Britton put on his evidence and rested his case, the trial court directed a verdict for all the defendants. Brit-ton has appealed from the resulting adverse judgment.

It is necessary at the outset to determine the nature and extent of the obligation imposed upon the petroleum company as the principal in the bond sued on. It is contended by appellant that the company’s obligation must be determined by the provisions in the drilling contracts made between Heard and Britton on April 4, 1918, whereby Heard was required to diligently drill a well to a depth of 4,000 feet, unless pay production was encountered at a lesser depth; that the provisions in this drilling contract constituted covenants running with the lease obtained by Heard and subsequently acquired by the petroleum company. We cannot uphold this contention.

The Heard drilling contract was not incorporated in the bond here sued on; was not made a part of the bond; was not referred to in the bond, directly or by implication. It was not referred to in the lease contract, nor in any assignment of that lease, which was assigned by Heard and acquired by the petroleum company independently of and without reference to the drilling contract. The result is that the covenants in the latter were independent of, and separate and apart from, .and in no way ran with, the covenants in the lease. So, in acquiring the lease, the obligation of the petroleum company to develop the land was ascertainable and determinable solely by the covenant in the lease to commence a well within a year or pay rentals in lieu of drilling.

It follows from this conclusion that the parties were relegated to the provisions of the bond to ascertain the nature and extent of the obligation of that -instrument. It is there provided that—

“If the said Cotton States Petroleum Company prosecutes the operations already commenced for the drilling of said well with due diligence and shall spud in said well in at the earliest practicable date and shall drill the same to completion, then this obligation shall be null and void — otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

This provision is in effect that the petroleum company should diligently drill the well in question to completion.

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Bluebook (online)
283 S.W. 887, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/britton-v-cotton-states-petroleum-co-texapp-1926.