Cooke v. Gulf Refining Co.

53 So. 874, 127 La. 592, 1910 La. LEXIS 870
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 28, 1910
DocketNo. 18,065
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 53 So. 874 (Cooke v. Gulf Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooke v. Gulf Refining Co., 53 So. 874, 127 La. 592, 1910 La. LEXIS 870 (La. 1910).

Opinion

BREAUX, C. J.

Plaintiff brought this suit to have a lease, signed by her on the 6th day of February, 1907, annulled.

The grounds upon which she attacks the lease under which the defendant holds or claims to hold are that it was agreed between her and her lessee that the latter would begin boring for oil or gas within 30 days of the date of the lease on the land plaintiff described in her petition.

She avers that defendant did not comply with the contract.

She also avers that defendant failed to bore a well within 12 months and another within two years; that defendant defaulted in nearly everything connected with drilling and completing the wells promised.

Another ground of nullity alleged is that the contract contained a potestative condition, as the defendant lessee had it entirely within its power whether to exploit or not to exploit the property.

Furthermore, that the lease is fatally defective because it is without a term; that it was to continue, according to the conditions of the contract, only to the extent that oil oi-gas were found in paying quantities; that oil and gas have not been found in paying quantities.

That the lease was void for want of consideration and want of mutuality.

Defendant admits the lease and alleges compliance on its part with its terms; that plaintiff received the written lease, which one of its employés had prepared, and that plaintiff held it without signing it for about three months; and that during that time defendant had bored a well, and that it assumed that the lease would be signed as of the date that it was handed to the plaintiff by one of its employes.

It appears that it was not signed as of that date through oversight.

The issues are generally fairly well stated.

We note that the number of acres leased were 80, and that plaintiff had lands adjacent.

One year is stated as the term.

It is a fact that the lessee had at its option the right to drill on one or more of the following sections, to wit, sections 29, 30, 31, 32.

The time limit to begin was 30 days.

As a consideration, defendant agreed to pay, and the plaintiff to accept, $40 cash; in addition, one-eighth of the products of the well, ánd the defendant was to pay $100 on each producer of gas, and one year was the time within which operations were to begin, according to one clause, and, in another, two years are mentioned.

The defendant reserved the right to extend the term of the lease by paying $40 semiannually.

[596]*596The contract of lease cannot be referred to as being a model of brevity and clearness.

The lessor leases the exclusive right of drilling for oil, together with a right of way to lay pipes to carry water, oil, or gas in operating the wells.

Another paragraph has the habendum clause generally inserted in all deeds of sale, i. e., the general habendum “to have, to hold.”-

At times the act has features of a lease, and at others of a sale.

Considering it as a whole, it is a lease.

The difference in the end is not considerable as relates to rights of parties, whether considered as a lease or a sale.

In the next place, by analyzing the contract, one finds that the text is anything but definite about terms, and it is wanting in matter of dates; even the date of the act is involved in uncertainty.

The lessee, it is stated in the act, was to begin to drill one well for oil or gas within 30 days from the date of the lease on other sections of land than those leased.

This, we infer, was somewhat in the nature of an experimental drilling on other lands lessor fancied had oil or gas. It was part consideration of the lease. It was an obligation to drill which lessee assumed.

The difficulty about the first well is that lessee had already, at the date the lease bears, drilled a well on one of the sections last referred to.

In this respect defendant lessee’s contention is that three months before the date of the lease its agent handed the contract to be signed by lessor.

The latter, availing herself of the privilege which “under advisement” implies, kept it for three months.

At the end of that time, she signed it, dated it of even date with the date she signed the deed.

During the three months preceding the date of the lease, the defendant, lessee, bored for oil. A well was drilled; it proved dry, and in consequence, to use an expression of the day, not an interesting proposition.

It — this well — was forgotten; at any rate it is not mentioned in the deed.

Lessee’s position is that the lease should have been dated in November when it was handed to plaintiff, lessor, for her signature, and when she took the document “under advisement” to determine whether she should sign it.

As it is, despite the date, upon insufficient and unsatisfactory testimony, defendant (lessee) would have us read the act, “well to be drilled,” as expressed in the contract, to well “already drilled.” . •

The lessee’s officer or agent wrote the contract; it is taken as written. The defendant did not prove that an error or oversight has been committed.

We have to construe acts as written. Conceding for the discussion that the contract of lease should have been dated in November, at the time it was delivered to plaintiff by defendant’s agent, as above mentioned, it does not appear that the well was drilled within 30 days from November. It was drilled in January, over 30 days after. And then it must be said that it would be extraordinary if plaintiff chose to stipulate for a well that had already been drilled. The contract provided for a well to be drilled. We accept this as a correct statement of the contract.

In the respect just stated, there was a failure in performance of obligation on the part of the defendant, company, the lessee.

The act was never signed by the lessee. This was not made a point in the case, and for that reason no further mention will be made of that fact.

We pass from the well to be drilled in 30 days from the date of the act to the well to be drilled in one year.

As well state here that the lease provided [598]*598for three wells; one to be drilled in 30 days, another in 12 months, and still another in 24 months.

Now as to the 12 months’ well: The lessor, plaintiff, expressly granted to the petroleum company, defendant, the right at any time before one year to begin operations of drilling a well for oil or gas.

This condition was not fulfilled by defendant, and as to the third well we will anticipate issues to state that five or six days before the end of the year the defendant began to drill a well, and about three months after the expiration of two years of the lease it was “brought in” as a gas-producing well.

Defendant’s contention at this point is that the delays that have occurred have been condoned by carrying out the alternative proposition of the deed regarding delays.

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Nabors v. Producers' Oil Co.
74 So. 527 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1917)
Gulf Refining Co. v. Hayne
70 So. 509 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1915)
Spence v. Lucas
70 So. 796 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1915)
Cooke v. Gulf Refining Co.
65 So. 758 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1914)
Rives v. Gulf Refining Co.
62 So. 623 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1913)

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Bluebook (online)
53 So. 874, 127 La. 592, 1910 La. LEXIS 870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-gulf-refining-co-la-1910.