Consumers Gas Utility Co. v. Wright

44 S.E.2d 584, 130 W. Va. 508, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 62
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 14, 1947
Docket9934
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 S.E.2d 584 (Consumers Gas Utility Co. v. Wright) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Consumers Gas Utility Co. v. Wright, 44 S.E.2d 584, 130 W. Va. 508, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 62 (W. Va. 1947).

Opinion

Riley, Judge:

Consumers Gas Utility Company, a corporation, which had filed its bill of complaint in the Circuit Court of Ritchie County against Charles B. Wright and others, partners, doing business' as Ranger Gas Company, prosecutes this appeal from a decree denying the relief prayed for, and dismissing the cause.

From the allegations of the bill it appears that at the time of the execution of the contract involved in this suit, plaintiff corporation, hereinafter referred to as “utility” was engaged in producing, purchasing and distributing natural gas for heat and light to a number of municipalities in Ritchie County, and to that end owned and operated a number of gas wells and purchased natural gas from individuals, and, in emergencies, from other public *510 utilities; that its plant consists of pipe lines, meters, regulators, connections, and other equipment, and that defendant, hereinafter referred to as the “company,” the lessee in a lease for oil and gas on a tract of land owned by one Lena Carr, had a short time prior thereto completed a producing gas well on the leased property. The bill further alleges that the parties litigant had on September 6, 1945, entered into an agreement whereby the company, in consideration of covenants on the part of the utility, sold to the utility, and the latter bought and agreed to take, at fifteen cents a thousand cubic feet, for a period of five years, and as much longer thereafter as gas is produced in paying and marketable quantities from the lands “all the natural gas that may be produced” by the company “from well [s] now drilled and any and all wells hereafter drilled,” the marketing thereof to begin upon execution and delivery of the contract.

Under the aforesaid contract, which is incorporated in the bill, the company was to furnish, construct and maintain all necessary gathering lines and fittings to connect any producing well on said lands to the meter, and to install all drips and devices to separate any fluids from the gas in the gathering lines necessary to deliver the gas in a dry and marketable condition. All gas was to be measured by orifice, proportional or positive meter or measuring devices of equal accuracy, and all meters and appurtenant fixtures and structures properly to protect the same were to be installed or erected by the utility at the well free of costs to the company, the location thereof to be selected by mutual agreement. Both parties were to have access to the meters; the utility was to read them and was to remove the gauge charts, etc. Provision was made for challenges as to the accuracy of the meters; and, further, the utility was to take gas nine months of each year, and so much longer as a market could be found therefor. The company agreed not to dispose of gas to any other company or person during the existence of said contract; and further that should it desire to surrender its lease prior to termination of its agreement with the utility, the latter *511 was to have the right to an assignment therefor. The utility was also given the right to shut in any well or wells and remove the meter and lines if production for a period of thirty days should fall below ten thousand cubic feet a day until such time as the company should, by additional wells or repair of old wells, bring production up to the specified standard.

The bill further alleges that as a result of the contract the utility purchased 14,117 feet of two-inch pipe line, and expended a considerable sum of money on labor, connections and fittings, for rights of way and overhead expenses in laying said line from the gas well to its nearest main distributing line; that a No. 4 Emco meter was installed on October 28, 1945, at a point on the line of the utility, mutually agreed upon by the parties, some three thousand feet from the well “and the gas from said well turned into plaintiff’s said line”; that shortly prior to November 16, 1945, well No. 2 was completed; that this latter well was located near the utility’s line and about nine hundred feet from well No. 1; and that on the last-mentioned date the gas from well No., 2 was turned into the line. It is further alleged that a “drip” was installed, but not buried, about half way between the two wells to care for well No. 1; that no drip was installed between well No. 2 and the meter; and that due to the company’s failure to provide proper drips, moisture collected in the lines, so that on December 24, 1945, the meter froze.

The bill further charges that in January, 1946, due to failure of the meter to register properly, an adjustment was made, and the company was fully paid for the failure of the meter to register properly at the contract price; that on May 3, 1946, the utility was notified by representatives of the company that the gas would be shut off if certain conditions were not met; that on May 4, 1946, the utility found that the gas had actually been cut off from the line; that on an investigation on May 18, the meter was registering fast; that on May 24, 1946, the utility “found the gas shut in said wells and locked by padlocks”; that *512 the gas has not been turned into the lines since that date; that by reason of the failure to carry out and perform the said contract as hereinbefore pleaded, the utility was without a sufficient supply of gas to meet the requirements: of its customers; and that the utility as a result thereof was required to purchase gas from the Hope Natural Gas Company at thirty-three cents a thousand cubic feet, in order to meet the regular requirements of its customers.

A number of letters, written on behalf of the utility by its attorney, seeking a settlement, are incorporated in the bill of complaint, with the further allegation that same were unavailing; and that as a result resort to the courts has become necessary. It is also alleged that an action at law for breach would be wholly inadequate.

The prayer of the bill of complaint is (1) for an injunction commanding the company “to forthwith turn the gas from its said wells into the” gas line of the utility, and. that it be restrained and enjoined from again shutting in or turning off said gas, except as provided by the contract of September 6, 1945; (2) that the company be directed to specifically perform and carry out such contract according to its terms; (3) that the amount, if any, due and owing to the defendants for gas heretofore produced from their said wells and delivered to the plaintiff under said agreement,, be ascertained and adjudicated, and, if necessary for that purpose, the cause be referred to a commissioner in chancery or to a special master commissioner; and (4) for general relief. An amended demurrer to the bill having been sustained, the plaintiff not desiring further to-amend, the chancellor entered the decree complained of.

The circuit court in a written opinion, made a part of the record, formulates the issue, raised by defendant’s demurrer, into the following question: “Does the contract pleaded impose a duty on the defendants to deliver all the gas that can be produced by their wells to the plaintiff or does the contract merely impose a duty upon the defendants to deliver to the plaintiff all the gas which the defendants wish to produce and market? The defendants *513

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 S.E.2d 584, 130 W. Va. 508, 1947 W. Va. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/consumers-gas-utility-co-v-wright-wva-1947.