Crandall v. Moss

252 S.W.2d 491, 1 Oil & Gas Rep. 1752, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1771
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 2, 1952
Docket4865
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 252 S.W.2d 491 (Crandall v. Moss) 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
Crandall v. Moss, 252 S.W.2d 491, 1 Oil & Gas Rep. 1752, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1771 (Tex. Ct. App. 1952).

Opinions

PRICE, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment of one of the District Courts exercising jurisdiction in Dallas County.

H. S. Moss, hereinafter called appellee, in a trial before the court without a jury recovered a several judgment against Mrs. Claire Wofford Crandall and her husband; Mrs. Pearl H. Wofford, a widow, in her official capacity as executrix, and Mrs. Julia W. Mayfield and her husband, all hereinafter referred to. as appellants, in the sum of $1770.43 each, the judgments not being separate as to husbands and wives. Involved was an alleged overpayment to defendants under an oil lease covering 160 acres of land in Nueces County.

In substance appellee alleged that on October .31, 1936, appellants executed and delivered to appellee Moss, J. B. Stoddard, Nathan Adams and Bush Wofford as lessees, an oil and gas lease on 160 acres of land in Nueces County. It is averred that Bush Wofford died and his wife, Pearl H. Wofford as such and as independent executrix succeeded to his interest. Bush Wof-ford was alleged to have owned an interest on the land and was both lessee and lessor.

The lease, in addition to the usual royalty of ⅛ interest contained this clause:

“4th. In addition to the foregoing-reserved royalty interest, -and in addition to the valuable consideration paid for this lease, the lessor reserves to themselves, one-eighth of the remaining seven-eighths of any oil produced and saved from that part of the hereby leased premis.es which may be proved productive., said productive areas to contain ten acres, or more in the discretion of lessee, and as nearly in squares as possible, until there has been delivered into the pipeline, free of cost, to the credit of lessor oil of the market value (meaning the market value at the time the oil runs are delivered into the pipe line to which lessee may connect it or his wells) of Five Hundred ($500.00) Dollars per acre for the acreage proven productive in tracts as aforesaid, whereupon this reservation of title to said one-eighth of seven-eighths of the entire production shall terminate, as to that particular tract, and said interest shall vest in the lessee, or their assigns.”

That after the execution and delivery of said lease three producing wells were, drilled on the land, one well on each of three forty-acre tracts out of the large tract, the Railroad Commissioner by order having provided for a density of wells on the 160 acres of land of forty acres. On the remaining forty-acre tract a well was drilled but same turned out to be a dry hole, and from this tract there never has since the date of the lease to the present time been any production. Subsequent to the drilling of the three producing wells in question, Bush Wofford and appellee Moss conveyed their interest to a corporation named Bayside Oil & Gas Company, of which Bush Wofford owned one-third of the stock and appellee Moss the other two-thirds. This corporation subsequently dissolved and the lease on the said 160 acres revested in appellee Moss and Bush Wofford, Moss’s interest being two-thirds and Wofford’s one-third. On the royalty of one-eighth of seven-eighths, as provided in clause 4 of the lease, appellants were paid $70,622.62, whereas they were only entitled to royalty in the sum of $60,000; that appellants were only entitled out of production to $500 per acre on that portion of the lease on which there was production; that .there was proven production on 120 acres and that the balance of 40 acres remaining was proven to be non-productive, a dry well having been drilled thereon; that the $70,622.62 was remitted to appellants .by the Republic Oil Refining [493]*493Company, which had purchased the oil, and was paid by the direction of Bayside Oil & Gas Company; that there was an overpayment of $10,622.62. It is, averred payment to appellants by the Republic Oil Refining Company on account of said oil payment of the sum of $70,622.62 was unauthorized by plaintiff as to all amounts in excess of $60,000, and was unauthorized by the terms of the original reservation of said oil payment; that appellee is entitled to recover two-thirds of said oil payment.

Appellant Pearl PI. Wofford answered' by general denial and in substance set up that as a representative of her husband, if plaintiff was correct, that when the payment of $60,000 was made that she then became entitled to more than the amount paid to her from the oil payments, and pled that all payments were made to her out •of said money of seven-eighths working interest with full knowledge of plaintiff Moss, and on the ord'er and with the consent of plaintiff, and without plaintiff having ever indicated in anywise the-productive acreage covered by said lease to be anything less than the entire 160 acres. Appellant Mrs. Mayfield and her husband answered by general denial and that payments were made with the full knowledge ■on the order and with the consent of ap-pellee. Appellants Claire Wofford Cran-dall and husband and W. R. Wofford answered by general denial, set up that ap-pellee Moss designated -the entire 160 acres as acreage proven productive under the terms of fhe lease, and that all payments were voluntarily made with the knowledge and consent of appellee. By cross-action they asserted that appellee owed' on the acreage the sum of $80,000 and sought to recover the unpaid balance.

The facts in this case are practically undisputed. The facts were mostly stipulated facts. It was stipulated in substance - that the lease on the 160 acres was made as alleged that under the Bayside’s order the sum of $70,622.62 had been paid toy the Republic Oil Refining Company out of one-eighth of the seven-eighths working interest held by appellee Moss and Bush Wof-ford in the lease; that the order to the Republic Oil Refining Company was to pay one-eighth of-seven-eighths of the oil.runs until notified by appellee and Bush Wofford to cease; that up to the time the $70,622.62 had- been paid no such notice had been served on the Republic Oil Refining Company.

It is our opinion that under clause 4 of the lease, which we have heretofore quoted, that of course the payment was to be made only from the proceeds of -actual production, and that appellee was entitled to segregate in accordance with paragraph 4 of the lease the land on which there was actual production from the land on which there was no production; that appellants were entitled in liquidation of their rights under the oil payment to one-eighth of seven-eighths of the oil produced until the sum of $500 for 120 acres amounting to $60,000. Appellee does not in any way question this. Here involved is the forty acres upon which no producing well has been drilled and upon which there has been •a well drilled which turned out to toe a dry hole and which perhaps indicated that, the forty acres was non-produotive. In our opinion the undisputed evidence shows that appellee was only legally bound to deliver one-eighth of the seven-eighths on 120 acres of land until the sum of $60,000 had been paid therefor. This conclusion, however, in our opinion does not settle this case. Appellee’s petition does not aver that at the time over-payments were .directed to be made that he was not cognizant, of the facts. His averment is that the Republic Oil Refining Company made the payments without authorization. This averment was not proven, in fact it was proven that the payments were made as authorized by appellee’s predecessor in interest.

Appellee voluntarily caused the overpayment to be made.

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Crandall v. Moss
252 S.W.2d 491 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1952)

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Bluebook (online)
252 S.W.2d 491, 1 Oil & Gas Rep. 1752, 1952 Tex. App. LEXIS 1771, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crandall-v-moss-texapp-1952.