Carroll Gas & Oil Co. v. Skaggs

21 S.W.2d 445, 231 Ky. 284, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 269
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 29, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 21 S.W.2d 445 (Carroll Gas & Oil Co. v. Skaggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carroll Gas & Oil Co. v. Skaggs, 21 S.W.2d 445, 231 Ky. 284, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 269 (Ky. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Logan

Affirming.

Appellees executed and delivered to James W. Wright an oil and gas lease on February 5, 1921. Wright transferred the lease on October 21, 1921, to D. L. Johnson and others. Johnson and others transferred an interest in the lease to one Sandusky on October 24, 1921. On December 6, 1921, Johnson and his associates including Sandusky, transferred the lease to appellant Carroll Gras & Oil Company. While Johnson and his associates owned and were in the possession of the lease, they drilled a well which proved to be a gas well. After they transferred the lease to appellant Carroll Gras & Oil Company, a controversy arose between them and the company growing out of the contract. As a result of that controversy, nothing was done towards marketing the *286 gas which was capable of flowing from the well. The company was making the contention that the contract had been obtained through misrepresentation, while Johnson and his associates were denying this contention. During this controversy, which was in the courts, neither of the parties to the assignment did anything towards development of the lease, or marketing the gas. Each party was claiming that the other was the owner of the lease. The controversy was finally determined by the courts, and it was adjudged that the company was bound by the contract.

In the meantime appellees had done nothing, and, so far as the record shows, had made no complaint. In October, 1924, appellees instituted an action seeking a cancellation of the lease, and, in the same petition, seek ing damages by reason of the failure of the owners of the lease to market the gas, and alleging that by reason of other wells located on adjacent property the gas had all been.drained from the lease.

Judgment was awarded by the court canceling the lease in April, 1927, but the question of damages was deferred. No appeal has been taken from that judgment.

After the completion of the proof in the case, and before the judgment canceling the lease was -awarded, appellees filed an amended petition alleging with more particularity their cause of action, and claiming- damages in the sum of $25,000. The cause was referred to the master commissioner to take proof on the question of damages, which he did. In his report he fixed the damages sustained by appellees caused by the failure to market the gas at $1,100. Exceptions were filed to the report by Johnson and his associates, and by the Carroll Gras & Oil Company. The court overruled the exceptions and sustained the findings of the commissioner entering judgment against Johnson and his associates, and the Carroll Gras & Oil Company for $1,100 with interest and costs. From this judgment an appeal has been prosecuted.

Several points are argued by counsel for appellants against the judgment below, and we will dispose of some of them very briefly. It is insisted that the demurrer to the petition should have been sustained because there was no allegation that there was gas underlying the land in paying quantities. The amended petition contains such an allegation. It is insisted that even if the well *287 produced sufficient gas to denominate if a paying well under certain circumstances it should have been alleged that the well was in such proximity to a pipe line that the gas could have been transported to market with profit to the lessees. When it was alleged that there was gas in paying quantities, it was a question of proof as to whether the lessees could market the gas profitably. The petition as amended stated a good cause of action.

It is insisted that the proof does not show that the well, under all the circumstances, produced gas in paying quantities. The proof is conflicting on this point. Appellees were to receive one-eighth of the value of the gas by the terms of the lease when it should be marketed. It is shown that an offset well was drilled on another tract of land soon after the bringing in of the well on this lease. It was also shown that there were other wells from which gas was produced and marketed on adjoining leases. There is a conflict in the evidence on the question of whether the well could have been connected with a pipe line at reasonable expense. The mind is left in doubt on this question, and in such cases the judgment of the chancellor will not be disturbed.

It is urged with much force that the lease expired by its terms soon after the well was brought in, and that the appellees should have taken possession of the lease upon its expiration. We are unable to agree with this contention. The lease contained the provision that the drilling of a well should be full consideration to the' grantor for the lease, and that when the well was completed the exclusive right to drill one or more additional wells on the premises was conferred upon the lessees without payment of additional rentals. The lease contract contains the further provision that it was for a term of 18 months and as much longer as oil or gas should be produced in paying quantities. If the well produced gas in paying quantities, the term of the lease did not expire at the end of 18 months.

The lease contract also contained a provision that the grantee should have the exclusive right to surrender the lease at any time prior to the expiration of any rental paying period by executing a release or deed of surrender and recording the same in the county wherein the land was situated, and that the grantee should then be discharged of all obligations, covenants, and conditions contained in the lease. It is true there was to be no pay *288 ment of rentals after the first well was completed, but the lessors were to receive one-eighth of the market valúe of the gas, if gas should be found in paying quantities, in lieu of rentals and that provision should be held to apply to the lessees, and if they desired to be acquitted of further responsibility by reason of the lease contract they should have executed a release in the manner provided. 1 Thornton’s Law of Oil and G-as (4th Ed.) p. 470, thus states the rule where there is a statute requiring the execution of a release: “Where a statute required a lessee to execute a release and record it when he surrendered the premises, it was held that he was liable in damages if he refused or neglected to do so.”

If such is the rule, where a statute requires it, the parties may contract with the same effect as if a statute did require it. 40 C. J. 1097, thus states the rule: “Where the lease specifies the mode of surrender such mode must be followed; the surrender cannot be made in any other way without the consent of the lessor. ’ ’

The lessors were under no obligation to take possession of the lease and attempt to market the gas for the reason that the lessees were not doing so.

It is insisted that the appellants were under no obligation to market the g’as as the lease did not specifically provide that the gas should be marketed at any particular time. There is this provision in the lease contract: “Should a well be found producing gas only then the grantor shall be paid for gas the equal one-eighth part of all the gas produced each quarter in which the gas is sold therefrom.”

The necessary inference from that provision is that the gas was to be marketed within a reasonable time.

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Bluebook (online)
21 S.W.2d 445, 231 Ky. 284, 1929 Ky. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carroll-gas-oil-co-v-skaggs-kyctapphigh-1929.