Collins v. Mount Pleasant Oil & Gas Co.

118 P. 54, 85 Kan. 483, 1911 Kan. LEXIS 101
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 7, 1911
DocketNo. 17,201
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 118 P. 54 (Collins v. Mount Pleasant Oil & Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins v. Mount Pleasant Oil & Gas Co., 118 P. 54, 85 Kan. 483, 1911 Kan. LEXIS 101 (kan 1911).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Johnston, C. J.:

This was an action to set aside an oil-and-gas lease which Timothy Collins and his wife executed and delivered to E. T. Browning and H. A. Cartwright on March 23, 1904. The lease was duly [484]*484•assigned to the Mount Pleasant Oil and Gas Company, the appellant herein. Some of the substantial terms ■of the lease were that, on the payment of $160, the lessees should have the exclusive right, for five years from the date thereof, to enter upon the leased lands, ■consisting- of Í60 acres, and drill and operate for oil •and gas; that the lessees should deliver to the lessors, in tanks, at the wells, without cost, one-eighth of all oil produced on the premises, and, also, to purchase it at the market price if the lessors should so desire. It was ■also stipulated that “if oil and gas be found in paying quantities in any well drilled the privilege of operating shall continue as long as oil or gas shall be produced in paying quantities, and when abandoned for such purposes this grant shall cease and no longer be binding on either party”; and that the lessees should have the right to remove any machinery or fixtures placed on the premises by them. There was another provision that “this lease shall become absolutely null and void after one year, unless the second parties shall commence drilling a well within that period, or pay, in lieu thereof, an annual cash rent of $160, commencing on March 23, 1905, to be deposited in Yates Center National Bank, at Yates Center, Kan., and if no drilling is done within five years from date of this lease, the second ;parties agree to release same of record, and the first ;parties to retain the cash payment named herein as liquidated damages.”

During the interim between the date of the lease, . March 23,1904, and the following October, the appellant • drilled five wells on the leased land, all of which showed ■oil, were shot, cased, and capped, but no oil was ever ■ pumped or taken from them. In the month of October, 1904, all tools, derricks and drilling appliances were removed from the land and no further work of development or operation has been done. The cost to .appellant, the lessee, of sinking the five wells was [485]*485about $8000 and for which it received no returns, inasmuch as no oil was ever pumped or sold.

This action was commenced on April 15, 1909, five years and twenty-two days after the date of the lease, and four years and five months after the work of drilling had ceased and the derricks and tools were removed from the premises. The petition sets out the above facts and alleges that the lease is void by reason of its having expired; that its terms and conditions were broken and not complied with by appellant; that appellant has abandoned the premises in that no drilling or further operation of any kind had been done for about four years and six months; that no gas was discovered; that some oil was found but not in paying quantities; that if the wells contained oil .when drilled they have, by reason of appellant’s failure to operate them, become ruined and exhausted on account of the proximity of continually operated wells on adjoining lands with the necessary resulting drainage of the oil from under appellees’ land. It was finally alleged that the- gas-and-oil lease in question, being a matter of record, was a cloud upon the title and a hindrance to the sale or further leasing of the land, and the prayer was that the lease be declared null and void and that the appellant, or any one claiming under it, be perpetually enjoined and barred from setting up or asserting any' interest, claim, estate or property in or to the land adverse to appellees.

The answer admitted the substantial facts as set forth above, and further alleged that each well, when pumped, would produce five barrels of oil per day, but that at the time of the completion of the wells there had been a general slump in oil all over the country, when all development ceased, and it became impossible- to operate the wells on a paying basis; that it had diligently endeavored to find a market for the oil and to procure the building of a pipe line into the territory but had been unable to do so, and. that, under the cir[486]*486cumstances, the production of oil from the wells would have been without profit to either party. It asked that the lease should not be canceled, and if it should be held that it had failed in not digging other wells that its equitable rights be protected by a segregation to its use of the land occupied by the wells which it had dug, or, at least, that it be allowed to go upon the land and remove the casing from the wells and thus recover a part of its investment.

The reply was a general denial, and the issues were tried to the court, which, upon the testimony, rendered judgment in favor of plaintiffs, declaring the lease void, clearing the cloud from the title and allowing defendant nothing by way of reimbursement for its expenditure of $8000. A motion for a new trial was denied and the defendant appealed.

Two provisions are found in the lease relating to forfeiture but only one of them has any bearing on this controversy. The provision that the lease should become void after one year unless the lessee should begin drilling a well within that period is immaterial because of the fact that five wells were drilled within six months after the execution of the lease. The other one, the application of which, it is conceded, ends the rights of appellant, provides that if oil or gas was found in paying quantities the right to operate should continue as long as oil or gas should be produced in paying quantities “and when abandoned for such purposes this grant shall cease and no longer be binding on either party.” No gas was ever found on the land and, according to appellees’ testimony, oil was never found in paying quantities, and it is contended that, although more than five years has elapsed since the lease was executed, no pumping of oil has ever been done and there has been no production whatever. Now the contract between the parties contemplates that the lessees shall riot only explore and discover but that if oil in paying quantities is discovered they shall operate [487]*487and- produce oil so that the lessors can have their share of the oil produced. It is said in behalf of appellant that the wells would have been profitable if the price of oil had remained where it was when the lease was made, but that it fell from $1.16 per barrel to 28 cents per barrel and that the wells could not have been operated with profit at any time since 1904. The appellant expended a large sum of money in exploration and in casing the wells drilled, and it insists that a cancellation of the lease is inequitable. It is not enough that appellant should explore and find oil but the contract requires it to operate the wells. When the appellant abandoned operations and failed to produce oil in paying quantities its rights under the contract ceased and the lease was no longer binding on either party. Fluctuations in the price of oil might justify the appellant in ceasing operations for a reasonable time, but here there has been no operation and no pumping of the wells to demonstrate what the product of the wells might be. Oil wells have been drilled on adjacent land and some oil has been taken from them, though it does not appear that they have been operated with profit.

In Howerton v. Gas. Co., 81 Kan. 553, 106 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
118 P. 54, 85 Kan. 483, 1911 Kan. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-mount-pleasant-oil-gas-co-kan-1911.