Caldwell-Guadalupe Pick-Up Stations v. Gregg

276 S.W. 342
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 7, 1925
DocketNo. 7393. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 342 (Caldwell-Guadalupe Pick-Up Stations v. Gregg) 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
Caldwell-Guadalupe Pick-Up Stations v. Gregg, 276 S.W. 342 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

One of the appellants, the United North & South Oil Company, herein designated as the oil company, was the owner of an oil and gas lease executed in the year 1919 by J. E. Allen and wife. The lease was in the usual form of such contracts, and originally covered two tracts of land in Guadalupe county, embracing 140 acres and 200 acres, respectively. Prior to the transactions now in controversy, however, the lease was assigned in parts to others, so that O. C. Cannon became the lessee of the west 35 acres of the 140-acre tract, and the Grayburg Oil Company, the Texas Company, and the J. K. Hughes Company became the lessees of separate tracts embracing the north 65 acres of the 200-acre tract. This left under the original lease the east 105 acres of the 140-acre tract, and the south 135 acres of the 200-acre tract.

The 200-acre tract and the 140-aere tract are oblong in form, extending east and west, and lying parallel to and adjoining each other. The 140-acre tract lies north of the larger tract, both tracts slope downward to the north, and drain through natural “draws,” or ravines, into Brushy creek, which forms the north boundary line of the 140-acre tract. The 65-acre strip, covered by the leases of the Grayburg, Texas & Hughes Companies, is only 600 feet wide, and lies between and completely segregates the residue of the two larger tracts, although both the latter are covered by the one lease, now owned by the oil company.

Appellant oil company drilled a string of wells near the upper edge of its lower, or 140-acfe, tract, ■ and other wells at various points on its upper tract of 200 acres. The lessees of the narrow strip between these two tracts also, brought in producing wells, as did other adjacent owners. All the tracts lay upon the same hillside, and waste oil from many of the wells flowed naturally with the slope, and down upon appellant’s lower, or 140-aere, tract. In order to rescue and save the waste oil from its own wells on both tracts, the oil company constructed pits and ditches upon its .lower tract, and in this way impounded the waste oil, not only from its own wells, but from those of adjacent tracts owned by third parties.

In the early stages of these activities, on April 7, 1924, Allen, the lessor and owner of the soil of the tracts in controversy, executed to O. Lackey and another a licence or grant of the exclusive right to “build, operate, and maintain on the land therein described a plant for the purpose of picking up and conserving the waste oil that flows down the creeks, ravines, and across the land.” This grant purported to cover the original 140-acre tract embraced in the first lease, and was subsequently assigned by Lackey to Gregg and others, appellees herein. At the time this grant was made the grantees and their assignees, who are appellees herein, had both constructive and actual notice of appellants’ prior lease and its terms and conditions. Upon obtaining this grant appellees sought to construct pits and ditches of their own upon the 140-acre tract covered by both grants for the purpose of intercepting and impounding waste oil flowing thereon from adjacent leases.

Appellees claim, however, that, when they undertook to proceed' with this operation, they were ejected from the premises by appellant, and because of that ejectment made no further effort towards capturing and impounding the fugitive oil. All of this waste oil was appropriated by appellant, and appel-lees, of course, got none of it. If under their grant appellees had been permitted to carry out their plans, they claim they would have constructed pits so as to capture this waste oil, which they would have appropriated to their own use; their contention being that all waste oil flowing from other premises than the 140-aere tract had been abandoned by. its original owners, and that as the first takers they would have become the owners of it. They contend that, because appellant ejected them from its leased premises, they were deprived of a right given them under their grant to use those premises for the purpose of capturing and appropri *344 ating all waste oil flowing thereon from other premises including the 200-acre tract covered by appellant’s lease.

The trial court adopted appellees’ theory and contentions, and, upon findings of the jury, rendered judgment for appellees for the value of all waste oil flowing upon appellant’s lower tract from other leases, including that originating from appellant’s own wells in its upper, or 200-acre tract. The Caldwell-Guadalupe Pick-Up Company, one of the appellants, was employed by the oil company as its agdnt in constructing and operating its pits, and the judgment obtained by appellees was against both companies, who have appealed. Eor convenience in statement we have referred in this opinion to the oil company, only, as the appellant, and will continue to do so.

The basic question in the whole case is that of the relative rights of the parties under their respective grants to the use of the surface of that part of the 140-acre tract covered by both grants.

Under the terms of the original lease in question the premises in controversy were “granted, demised, leased, and let” to appellant oil company “for the sole and only purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas and laying pipe lines and building tanks, powers, stations,- and structures thereon to produce, save, store, and take care of said products.” It is elemental that the grant of the right to mine and operate for oil, and to produce, save, store and take care of the products of such operations’ carried with it, by necessary implication, the correlated right to such use of the surface of the premises as was necessary or reasonably incident to the basic object of producing and saving the product. The grant of such easement would necessarily have been implied, even if it had not been expressed in the contract.

It is conceded by appellees, or at least it -follows as a matter of law, that, in carrying out the object of the lease contract, appellant, as the lessee, had the undoubted right and it was its obligation under the contract, to construct and maintain earthen pits or dams or any other appropriate receptacles to arrest, impound, and market any overflow or waste oil coming from wells drilled by it on the leased premises. To accomplish this purpose and perform this duty the lessee was obliged to construct and so locate as many pits as were necessary to cut off all avenues by which the oil might escape from the premises. To do less would be only to accomplish in part the object in view. To leave open any of the outlets would result in the loss of some of the product of the lease, thereby doing violence to the lessee’s own interest, as well as to its duty to the lessor, to whom it was obligated to save and deliver one-eighth of all the oil produced from the premises under lease. In other words, the lessee had the| right to use its own judgment in locating its pits on the leased premises. It was its duty to locate them at strategic points, with due regard to the object in view. If it negligently placed the pits so that any oil produced from the lease escaped and was lost, it was accountable to the lessor for the value of his royalty so lost, and must stand its own loss besides.

The lessee in this case had two tracts, but both were under one lease. Both lay upon the same hillside, sloped in the same direction, drained into the same outlet. The lessee, then, was put to the choice of pit locations to serve the whole lease.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caldwell-guadalupe-pick-up-stations-v-gregg-texapp-1925.