Carder v. Blackwell Oil & Gas Co.

1921 OK 334, 201 P. 252, 83 Okla. 243, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 348
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 27, 1921
Docket10274
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 1921 OK 334 (Carder v. Blackwell Oil & Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carder v. Blackwell Oil & Gas Co., 1921 OK 334, 201 P. 252, 83 Okla. 243, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 348 (Okla. 1921).

Opinion

ELTING. J.

This suit was commenced in the district court of Kay county, state of Oklahoma, by James" A. Carder and Ida Carder, against the Blackwell Oil & Gas Cornuanv, a corporation. The plaintiffs below are the plaintiffs in error in this suit, and the defendant below is the defendant in error in this appeal. We will hereafter refer to them as plaintiffs and defendant.

Plaintiffs filed suit for the purpose of canceling an oil and gas lease on the lands of the plaintiffs for a breach of the following provisions of said contract:

“To have and to hold the above described premises and all the rights and privileges therein granted unto said Blackwell Gil & Gas Company, its successors and assigns for the term of three years from this date and so much longer as oil or gas is found or produced on such premises in paying or commercial quantities”

—and the further provision:

“It is hereby agreed that the party of the second part shall drill one additional well for gas on said premises prior to the first day of March, 1915, and on the failure to drill said well prior to said date, then the party of the second part shall pay on said date to party of the first part the sum of $100.00 and the sum of $100.00 for each year thereafter which the drilling of said well is delayed and upon the drilling of said well the payments shall cease, and if said well is a commercial well, that is to say, if it produces gas in paying and commercial quantities, then the payments for said well shall be made for the same as such under the other covenants and agreements of this lease.”

The date of said lease is the 9th day of November, 1914. Then it is alleged that the lessee has not bored such additional well; alleged, further, that they refused to accept the payments of rentals provided for *245 in said lease for the last payment next before expiration of the three-year term of the lease, and that the lessors and plaintiffs refused to accept further gas from the well of the defendant, and gave notice of intention to forfeit the lease unless the defendant got production during the term m an additional well. And then prayed that the said lease be canceled and set aside and held for naught, and that title be quieted in plaintiffs in and to me land.

The plaintiffs in their petition alleged, further, that on the 28th day of June, 1909, the piantiffs made, executed, and delivered to the Blackwell Brick, Tile & Gas Company an oil and gas mining lease on the premises described in the lease dated November 9, 1914, and that afterwards the said first named lease was assigned to the Blackwell Oil & Gas Company by the Blackwell Brick, Tile & Gas Company. That prior to the date of the-lease of the 9th of November, 1914, the defendant had drilled a gas well on said premises and that the plaintiffs, being dissatisfied over the actions of the defendant in regard to development, filed a suit against the defendant to require further development, and that in order to compromise the differences between the parties, the parties in said suit entered into a new lease, and being the lease heretofore referred- to and dated the 9th day of November, 1914, am* ror ana in consideration of said lease the suit to require production was dismissed. The pla’n-tiffs were also paid $190 cash and the stipulations and terms as to development were embodied in the lease that wo have h reto-fore stated. The former lease had a term running for 20 years, while in the second "lease the term was reduced to three years. Copies of the first and second leases were attached to the petition of the plaintiffs in the instant suit, and to said petition the defendant demurred, and the demurrer was overruled; whereupon the defendant filed its answer, admitting the allegations of the plaintiffs in their petition: and to meet the contention of the plaintiffs that it had failed to comply with the condition as to production, alleged the following;

“Defendant has fully complied with the covenants, promises and agreements contained in said oil and gas mi úng Dase made obligatory upon the lessee and said oil and gas mining lease is an executed contract.
“The natural gas which is now being produced on said leased premises by the defendant and which was being found and ■ being produced on the 9th day of November, 1917, and at all times since, was and is being found and produced by the defendant, the Blackwell Oil & Gas Company, on said leased premises, under the terms and conditions of said oil and gas mining lease which was made and executed on the 9th of November, 1914; and thereby said oil and gas .mining lease has been continued in force and effect, and the same is now’ in full force and effect and a legal, binding, valid and subsisting oil and gas miming lease between the parties to said L.ase. ’

The cause went to trial, the plaintiffs introduced their evidence, and defendant demurred to the plaintiffs’ evidence, and the trial court sustained said demurrer. Plaintiffs filed a motion for a new trial, the same was overruled, and notice of appeal was given and the cause was appealed to this court.

The contentions of the parties herein is narrowed down to one proposition: Did the failure of the defendant, which failure is admitted, to develop another gas well upon said premises, under the developing provisions of the second contract within the term of three years, constitute a forfeiture of said contract, or. did the well, as contended by the defendant, that had been brought in under the old contract answer for and constitute, under the provisions of the new contract as to production, an executed contract? In other words, the contention of the plaintiffs is that the second contract abrogated the provisions of the old contract and constituted an entirely new contractual relation between the parties. The defendant contends that the two contracts are to be taken together, and supplement each other, afld that the old production under the old contract answered for the production required under the new contract. The following provision of the second contract makes reference to the first contract, and also makes reference to the well drilled under the old contract,

“It is hereby expressly recited that the party of the second part now holds a gas and oil lease on said premises by virtue of a lease and grant executed and delivered by James O. Carder, and Ida Carder, husband and wife, unto the Blackwell Brick, Tile & Gas Company,a corporation of Blackwell, Oklahoma, of the date of the 7th day of August, 1909, and which was filed for record on the 9th day of August, 1909, at the hour of 9:40 o’clock a. m. and recorded in book seven, Miscellaneous records, page 407, in the office of the register of deeds of' Kay county, Oklahoma, and which said gas and oil lease has been duly and legally sold, assigned and transferred to the Blackwell Oil & Gas Company, and sa’d corporation is now the owner and holder of said oil and gas lease and all the rights granted *246 under said lease, Tliat under and by virtue of said lease one well for gas lias been drilled on said premises and the rental payment for said well has been paid up to and including the first day of March, 1915.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1921 OK 334, 201 P. 252, 83 Okla. 243, 1921 Okla. LEXIS 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carder-v-blackwell-oil-gas-co-okla-1921.