Cocke v. Vacuum Oil Co.

63 F.2d 406, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3447
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 1933
Docket6730
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 63 F.2d 406 (Cocke v. Vacuum Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cocke v. Vacuum Oil Co., 63 F.2d 406, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3447 (5th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Circuit Judge.

Appellees are oil corporations adequately equipped with skill and capital and extensively engaged in prospecting and drilling for and producing oil in the Gulf Coast region of Texas and Louisiana. In the conduct of their business they acquire new territories and prospect them to develop new oil fields.

Appellants, dealers in oil and mineral leases, are engaged in the business of blocking up and leasing for resale to producers, likely oil territory. At a considerable cost of time and money they acquired a block of 7,000' acres of mineral leases in territory which,'though not proven, had interesting geology. These leases they sold to appellees. *407 The contract prepared by appellees, after reciting an option on the property to take it over after it had been explored geophysically with a torsion balance, and that the option had been accepted, provided: “Now therefore, the Vacuum Oil Company for and in consideration of the transfer and assignment of the leases, has this day paid the sum of $12,500 cash, and further agrees as a part of the consideration for the assignment, that in the event that salt or caprock is encountered in drilling the first or any subsequent well, or in the event oil is discovered in the first or any subsequent well as the result of the operations of second party, second party shall at once pay to first party the sum of $25,000 in cash, and a further consideration of $75‘,000 out of 14 of the first oil if, when and as produced and saved.” This suit is to recover the $25,000 payable “in the event oil is discovered in the first or any subsequent well.”

The District Judge, before whom the caso was tried upon a jury waiver, denied recovery on the ground that though there was some oil, to wit, 112 barrels, discovered in the first well drilled, this was not a discovery of oil within the meaning of the contract. He held that the parties meant to say that $25',000 would be paid upon the discovery of an oil field; that is, upon the finding of oil in paying quantities.

Appellants contended below, and contend here, that this construction does violence to the contract; that what the parties intended to agree to, and what they did agree to, was to pay $25,000 when either of the three indicia of the presence of an oil field, cap rock, salt, or oil, was discovered in the first or any subsequent well. Whether the District Judge was right in his construction of the contract is the sole question on this appeal.

It is undisputed that appellees did discover, that is, find, oil; that is, some oil, in the first well that was drilled. If the ease is to he determined upon the literal meaning of the words, it is plain that the District Judge was wrong. He thought that correct interpretation required the language to be construed in the light thrown upon the words by their use in the industry with which the contract had to do, and the special circumstances which attended its making. He thought this was a ease in which “the principal apparent purpose of the parties should be given the greatest weight in determining the meaning to he given the words they used.” Restatement of the Law, Contracts, § 236. He turned the case on his view of what this purpose was.

We think that he was right in refusing to decido the cause upon the detached dictionary meaning of the terms used. In the field of contract law, perhaps more than in any other, the “letter killoth, the spirit giveth life.” It is therefore the office of interpretation to fully illumine words used in contracts that their meaning may be found. It is often almost, if not quite, true that in contracts words mean what their users choose them to mean, neither more nor less, for it is true of most words that their shades of meaning are many, and that they take their color and content from the context and the subjeetmatter in connection with which they are used. “Interpretation of words, and other manifestations of intention forming an agreement is the ascertainment of the meaning to be given such words and manifestations.” Restatement of the Law, Contracts, § 236.

It is therefore settled that, though the “ordinary moaning of language throughout the country” is the meaning which prima facie interpretation gives to the words of a contract, and their plain meaning may not be distorted to force a desired construction, whenever a word having different shades of meaning is used, that meaning will be given to it which the context in which it is found, the business to which it relates, the circumstances under which it is used, show, in the light of the principal apparent purpose of the parties, that it was intended to have.

Recognizing that this is so, neither appellants nor appellees are contending for a dry construction. Each insists that, in accordance with these settled rules, the contract should be interpreted to mean what they contend for. Each recognizing the force of the rule that, “where the law gives to certain words an established meaning, this meaning is less readily controlled by the standard of interpretation otherwise applicable than is the meaning of other words” (Restatement of the Law, Contracts, § 234), endeavors to fix upon the disputed' words “oil is discovered” an established legal meaning. Each turns to decisions on the law of oil and gas in which interpretation has consistently given great effect to “the principal apparent purpose of the parties,” perhaps greater than in almost any other field of contract law. Cosden Oil Co. v. Scarborough (C. C. A.) 55 F.(2d) 634, 635; Cole Petroleum Oil Co. v. U. S. Gas & Oil Co. (Tex. Sup.) 41 S.W.(2d) 414; Texas P. Coal & Oil Co. v. Bratton (Tex. Civ. App.) 239 S. W. 688, 689; Sawyer v. Potter et al., 223 Ky. 359, 3 S.W. *408 (2d) 758. Appellees claim that these decisions settle that the principal purpose of the parties to obtain oil implies into the contract, where it is unexpressed, that oil should be found in paying or commercial quantities. Appellants point to the fact that these eases are all of development contracts between lessors and lessees where the prime consideration is the production of oil, and not, as here, speculative trading contracts between sellers and buyers of leases; that the dominant purpose in the eases cited which gave the words the meaning there contended for was the production of oil from the property, the prime consideration moving to the lessor for his lease, whereas the principal apparent purpose here of the contracting parties is the finding of such a favorable showing as would indicate, not the actual, but the apparent, presence of a field. They also cite decisions under the mineral statutes, McShane v. Kenkle, 18 Mont. 208, 44 P. 979, 33 L. R. A. 851, 56 Am. St. Rep. 579; U. S. v. Ohio Oil Co. (D. C.) 240 F. 906, 998, holding that discovery requires, not the finding of minerals in paying quantities, but tbe presence of indicia of mineral deposits which would reasonably presage their finding.

Coming to the words of the contract, appellees argue that the District Judge was right in finding that the parties, by using the word “encounter” as to cap rock or salt, and the word “discovery” as to oil, meant to use the first in the physical sense of making contact with the second, in the economic or commercial sense of development in paying quantities. Cole Petroleum Co. v. U. S. Gas & Oil Co., supra.

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Bluebook (online)
63 F.2d 406, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 3447, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cocke-v-vacuum-oil-co-ca5-1933.