Davenport v. Doyle Petroleum Corp.

1942 OK 132, 126 P.2d 57, 190 Okla. 548, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 139
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 7, 1942
DocketNo. 30289.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1942 OK 132 (Davenport v. Doyle Petroleum Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davenport v. Doyle Petroleum Corp., 1942 OK 132, 126 P.2d 57, 190 Okla. 548, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 139 (Okla. 1942).

Opinion

ARNOLD, J.

C. J. Davenport commenced this action against the Doyle Petroleum Corporation in the district court of Grady county, Okla. The trial court sustained a demurrer to the evidence, and the plaintiff appealed. '

The parties will be referred to herein as they appeared in the trial court.

The plaintiff was the owner of 160 acres of land located in Grady county, Okla. A short time prior to May 18, 1937, defendant, through its agent, R. M. Hufflne, and its attorneys, Melton, McElroy & Vaughn, entered into negotiations with the plaintiff for the purchase of an oil and gas lease on said land. On May 18, 1937, the plaintiff executed an oil and gas lease on 120 acres thereof to the defendant and immediately forwarded said lease to the attorneys for the defendant, attaching thereto certain specified instructions.

The oil and gas lease was a regular producers’ 88 form lease except in addition to the printed provisions thereof there was included the following typewritten clause:

“Notwithstanding the preceding printed part of this lease, lessee agrees within 60 days from date to begin the actual drilling of a test well for oil or gas on or offsetting the above land, and prosecute such drilling with due diligence to a depth of 3,000 feet unless oil or gas in paying quantities is found at a lesser depth. For failure to commence, prosecute and/or complete said test well, this lease, at the option of lessor, shall terminate.”

On May 19, 1937, the attorneys for the defendant forwarded to plaintiff a cashier’s check in the amount of $120 and advised plaintiff that the lease had been forwarded to the defendant for its signature. On June 7, 1937, said attorneys, by letter, advised the plaintiff that the lease properly executed by the defendant had been returned to their offices. In said letter they advised, also, “We hold same subject to your agreement.”

*549 On June 22, 1937, upon request, said attorneys advised the plaintiff that a derrick had been erected on lands offsetting the said 120 acres. On July 15, 1937, the attorneys, in answer to a request by the plaintiff as to what progress had been made, advised him that it was impossible for the defendant to commence actuál drilling within the 60-day period prescribed in the lease, and requested that an extension of 30 days be granted. On July 16, 1937, the plaintiff, by letter, advised said attorneys with reference to such extension, as follows:

“I agree that actual drilling may be postponed to August 1; if, in the meantime, the company has, in your opinion, proceeded with due diligence in preparation for actual drilling and you will so advise me, the actual drilling may be further postponed to August 18.
“This waiver of time of commencement of actual drilling is on condition that the obligations of the company to drill a test well as required by our contract is in no wise affected except as to the time when actual drilling shall be commenced.”

Actual drilling was not commenced within the extended time, and on September 14, 1937, the plaintiff filed this action for damages against the defendant for failure to drill the well as required by the terms of the lease. The lease in question and the letter of instructions transmitted by mail to the attorneys for the defendant have been before this court before. Davenport v. Doyle Petroleum Corporation, 187 Okla. 40, 100 P. 2d 445. Therein we held:

“. . . The printed portion of the lease is an ordinary ‘unless’ type lease whereby, at his option, defendant could drill or pay or forfeit, but the added typewritten paragraph, which was part of the consideration for execution of the lease, constituted a drilling contract and expressly gave plaintiff the option to terminate the lease in the event defendant breached the covenant to commence drilling a test well on or offsetting plaintiff’s land within 60 days. The express grant to plaintiff of the option to terminate did not preclude him from maintaining an action for damages for breach of the covenant to drill.”

In the foregoing construction of said lease we held that this lease constituted a contract to drill, which if not complied with would subject the defendant to damages; that the plaintiff thereby was given an option to terminate the lease if the defendant breached its covenant to drill; that the option in the lease contract to terminate by the plaintiff did not preclude him from maintaining an action for damages based on a breach of the covenant to drill.

. The sole contention made by the plaintiff, stated in his language, is that he, “for a paid consideration, granted to defendant the right to elect within 30 days whether it would enter into the contract tendered by plaintiff’s proposal, by which the defendant became bound to drill a test well; the method of election was specified in the option granted. Within 30 days defendant performed every act required to show its election. From such facts a mutually binding contract was created.”

The only contention made by the defendant is that the restrictions placed on the physical delivery of the lease to the defendant constituted a condition precedent; that actual physical delivery was never made and that for this reason the contract never became binding.

The letter of instructions accompanying the delivery of the lease to defendant’s attorneys was in part as follows:

(1) “That I be paid by May 22nd the sum of $120.00 to cover the option of Doyle Petroleum Corporation to obtain the enclosed lease by having its proper officers, duly authorized, to execute the same within 30 days from this date, and redeliver the same to you, and that you within 10 days after its execution by said company certify to me that same has been executed and redelivered to you.
(2) “That you be authorized to deliver the same to the Doyle Petroleum Corporation whenever you are convinced that the actual drilling has been commenced within the time required by said lease and certify to me in writing that said company has actually begun such drilling.
*550 (3) “Time is of the essence of this proposal in all respects.”

Section 9427, O: S. 193T, provides:

“If a proposal prescribes any conditions concerning the communication of its acceptance, the proposer is not bound unless they are conformed to.”

Section 9428, O. S. 1931, provides:

“Consent is deemed to be fully communicated between the parties as soon as the party accepting the proposal has put his acceptance in the course of transmission to the proposer, in conformity to the last section.”

Section 9429, O. S. 1931, provides:

“Performance of the conditions of a proposal, or the acceptance of a consideration offered with the proposal, is an acceptance of the proposal.”

The plaintiff proposed that if the Doyle Petroleum Corporation would pay him $120 by May 22nd he would grant it the option to obtain the lease accompanying the proposal. In addition the proposal designated three things to be done by the Doyle Petroleum Corporation.

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Bluebook (online)
1942 OK 132, 126 P.2d 57, 190 Okla. 548, 1942 Okla. LEXIS 139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davenport-v-doyle-petroleum-corp-okla-1942.