Connellee v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.

54 S.W.2d 577
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 14, 1932
DocketNo. 926.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 54 S.W.2d 577 (Connellee v. Magnolia Petroleum Co.) 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
Connellee v. Magnolia Petroleum Co., 54 S.W.2d 577 (Tex. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

LESLIE, J.

This suit was instituted by Earn T. Connel-lee and others June 7,1930, for the value of oil alleged to have been taken from the plaintiffs’ land under a lease contract executed by the plaintiffs in favor of the Magnolia Petroleum Company. The defendant interposed various defenses, among them general denial and res adjudicata. The trial resulted in an instructed verdict in favor of the defendant, and from a judgment thereon this appeal is prosecuted.

The wrong charged to the defendant is that it took the plaintiffs’ oil without paying therefor under the one-eighth royalty provision of the- lease. More specifically, the plaintiffs’ theory as alleged is that the defendant, by making use of a mechanical device known as a vacuum pump, took out of the wells on plaintiffs’ land the lighter, more volatile and more valuable portions of the oil, and thus depleted the supply which would or- could have been produced naturally, and also decreased the gravity of the oil left in the ground, thereby making it heavier and in a condition that a large part of it could never be recovered. In other words, plaintiffs take the position in this suit that, whatever casing-head gas the defendant is entitled to under the lease for the sum of $25 per well per annum, the same at most would be merely the amount of casing-head gas that would have “flowed naturally” from said wells, and not the amount of such casing-head gas as was produced by the vacuum pump. It was alleged that the amount of such casing-head gas produced naturally would have been less than 5 per cent, of the amount which was taken by the vacuum pump, and that the defendant fraudulently confused and mixed said products and became accountable to the plaintiff for all the oil and/or gasoline produced by said vacuum pump, and that the plaintiffs were entitled to á one-eighth part of said production, or the value of such an amount, thus produced.

The defendant claimed title by purchase of all the oil, gas, and casing-head gas in place, as well as when recovered and brought to the surface. Its plea of res. adjudicata was based on another suit between the same parties, and growing out of their respective rights and duties under the covenants of the same lease here involved, and which these plaintiffs executed and delivered to the defendant on October 29, 1917. The former suit, its issues and final result appear to have been fully pleaded by both plaintiffs and the defendant on the trial of this case. The plaintiffs proceeded on the theory that the pleadings, judgment, etc., on the former suit disclosed that the instant one was based upon a separate and different cause of action and therefore not subject to the plea of res adjudicata, and the defendant offered the same upon the theory that the same issues of facts and law between these litigants were adjudicated in the former suit and resolved against the plaintiffs, and that, if said issues were not directly involved in the former suit, they were directly incidental to and connected with that catise of action and could and should have been pleaded and determined therein.

The original suit was filed December 15, 1924, later tried, and judgment rendered in favor of the defendant, Magnolia Petroleum Company. An appeal was prosecuted to the Court of Civil Appeals, and the judgment of the trial court reversed. 279 S. W. 597. Error was prosecuted to the Supreme Court, and that court reversed the judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals in an opinion to be found in 11 S.W.(2d) 158. After the original opinion by the Supreme Court, defendants in error made a first and second motion for rehearing, in each of which an opinion was also written by the Supreme Court, and they are to be found in 14 S.W.(2d) 1020, and 20 S.W.(2d) 758. By reference to these opinions a history may be had of the original suit, as well as a clear statement of its object and purimse. In these opinions will also be found the provisions of the oil and gas lease out of which this litigation grows. The statement of facts contains several hundred pages, and it would not serve a useful purpose to undertake to set out in *579 this opinion a detailed statement of the issues and the testimony presented hy this record.

For convenience, and to facilitate a ready understanding of the opinion,- two or three brief provisions of the oil and gas lease will be quoted. Among other considerations to be hereafter noticed, .the lease recites that the grantors, plaintiffs in this suit, for a consideration of $7,620, “granted, sold and conveyed” to the grantee, defendant herein, “all the oil, gas and other minerals in and under the following lands,” the same being described, as well as the interest of each plaintiff therein. With the other rights and privileges under the lease went the “right to enter thereon, open mines, drill wells, lay pipelines and erect all structures and appliances necessary or convenient in searching for, producing, earing for, storing and removing any oil, gas or other minerals found thereon,” etc. The lease further provided, in usual form, that, when the grantee completed a well that was a “producer of oil or gas, * * * this grant shall remain in force for the full term and period herein provided, without the payment of any other sums of money or other things than the royalty herein agreed upon and specified; namely, l/8th of all oil produced and saved, to be delivered free of charge into tanks or pipelines to the grantors’ credit; for each well producing gas only, sold or used off the premises, $200.00 per year; for casing-head gas when sold or used off the premises, $25.00 per year for each well, the payment for gas to be made quarterly in advance; for all other minerals, l/Sth of the net profit thereof.”

The plaintiffs’ right of recovery for defaults alleged in this suit rests primarily on the one-eighth oil royalty provision above. In an answer to the defendant’s plea of res adjudicata, the plaintiffs contend specifically that this action is solely for the oil produced in the easing-head gas by the use of the vacuum pump, and that their right to such oil as was so produced was not considered litigated or determined in the former suit between these parties.

By reference to the pleadings in the former suit, and a careful reading of the opinions rendered therein by our Supreme Court, it is at once apparent that the object of that suit was to recover as for oil under the one-eighth oil royalty clause such amount or the value thereof of the g’asoline recovered by manufacturing process from the casing-head gas produced and saved from the wells drilled by the defendant on plaintiffs’ lands. In the former suit the gasoline claimed to be oil was taken from the casing-head gas as a whole, and our Supreme Court held, on the facts of the former case, that the Magnolia Petroleum Company, defendant here, was, under the terms of the lease, the owner of and entitled to the casing-head gas, together with all of its Constituent elements, including the modicum of oil carried by it in a vaporous form. That the plaintiffs, having parted with the casing-head gas for a valuable consideration, they are not entitled to recover a one-eighth of the gasoline manufactured from such gas as damages, or the value of that amount of such manufactured product.

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54 S.W.2d 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/connellee-v-magnolia-petroleum-co-texapp-1932.