Duff v. Du Bose

14 S.W.2d 911, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 269
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 1, 1929
DocketNo. 1780.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 14 S.W.2d 911 (Duff v. Du Bose) 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
Duff v. Du Bose, 14 S.W.2d 911, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 269 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

WALKED, J.

This suit was instituted by appellees against appellant to cancel a mineral and oil lease executed by them or their privies on April 29, 1919, to him on 50 acres of land, a part of a larger tract of 500 acres owned by them on the I-Iicks-Shropshire survey in Et. Bend county. This larger tract had been subdivided into smaller tracts, and the 50 acres in controversy comprised block No. 5, containing 20 acres, block No. 10, containing 20 acres, and the south half of block 21, containing 10 acres. Appellant answered by pleading specially his defenses, setting forth in minutest detail the things done by him and his assigns under the lease, pleading that these acts were sufficient to save the leasehold from forfeiture and to give him a vested interest therein. Simply on the pleadings, without hearing any evidence, the trial court held that the legal effect of the facts pleaded by appellant was to divest him of all rights under the lease and to reinvest ap-pellees with the ' title thereto, and entered judgment accordingly. The question presented by this appeal is: Did appellant plead himself out of 'court by confessing facts which entitled appellees to judgment canceling the lease? The following is a brief statement of the facts pleaded by appellant. He thus summarized the conditions of the lease in controversy:

“Said lease provided that the lessors therein, in consideration of the sum of Ten Dollars ($10.00) cash paid by B. G. Duff, lessee, did lease, let and demise the fifty (50) acres above described, and did grant, let and demise the *912 fifty (50) acres above described, and did grant, transfer and assign to tbe lessee, subject to the royalties stated, all oil, gas and other minerals on or under, and full rights of ingress and egress to and over, the premises aforesaid, intending to convey to lessee subject to the terms thereof not only all of the oil, gas and sulphur and other minerals under said land, but also to grant to him all rights of ingress and egress held by lessors on and over other tracts theretofore owned or held by lessors or under which lessors own the mineral right's in said Five Hundred (500) acre tract above mentioned.
“Said instrument provided that the said lessors made the said grant to lessee, his heirs and assigns, for the purpose of exploring the same for the producing of oil, gas and other minerals therefrom and to that end also granted the exclusive right of drilling and operating thereon for oil, gas and other minerals, together with the right-of-way for and the right to lay pipe lines to convey water, oil, gas and coal produced from the leased premises, to drill and operate any wells or mines, and to drill for oil, together with such other privileges as were reasonably requisite for the conduct of said operations, all upon the following conditions:
“That lessee should,' within ninety (00) days from date begin operations for the drilling of a well on said land and conduct same with reasonable diligence in a bona fide attempt to discover oil or gas until such well might be completed or abandoned.
“That in case lessee should fail to comply with the foregoing stipulations in the above paragraph, he should forfeit bach to lessors all his rights thereunder.
“That after the completion of said well, lessee should have the right to make as many more attempts to find oil or gas as he should please, provided that such attempts should be successive in the sense that until oil or gas be found not more than sixty (60) days should elapse between the cessation or abandonment of work on one well and the beginning of work on another; and provided further that after the completion or abandonment of the first or any subsequent well, if same should prove unproductive, lessee should have the right at any time within sixty (60) days after the completion or abandonment of such well to pay to lessors stipulated rentals per acre, and in case of such payment or deposit, the time of lessee, his heirs or assigns, in which to begin the drilling of the next well might be extended for a period of six (6) months to run from the date of such payment, and that similarly lessee might from time to time make payments on or before the expiration of each such extension of six (6) months, and thereby extend the time in which to begin another well on said premises, provided the aggregate of such extensions should not .exceed a period of three (3) years to date from the completion or abandonment of said first well or subsequent wells; and provided further that said Duff, his heirs or assigns, should have the right to pay and retain such extension on the whole or parcels of said land to be designated by him, and any tract or tracts on or with reference to which said Duff, his heirs or assigns, should fail to make payment within the time stipulated should thereby be released and all rights thereunder be forfeited to lessors, their heirs or assigns.
“That if oil or gas be discovered on said land in paying quantities, lessee should have the right to produce same, and such right should remain in effect so long as oil, gas or other minerals ‘can be produced from same in paying quantities, and provided lessee shall in such event further develop the said land for the production of oil, gas or other minerals as may be justified under the circumstances. If lessee fails to comply with this provision, this lease shall terminate.’
“(This is one of the most material provisions of the lease.)
“Said lease further provides:
“ ‘At any time after the completion of said well, Lessee shall have the right to surrender this lease, and on such surrender shall be discharged from all obligations hereunder, but upon such surrender lessee shall have the right to retain any producing well or wells, together with the five-acre tract, or tracts, on which any such wells are located, it being agreed that each producing well shall earn and hold five acres, the same to be laid off as nearly in the form of a square with the well in the center, as is possible. Lessee shall have the right to drill as many more wells in such retained tracts as he pleases so long as oil, gas and other minerals can be produced from any such tracts in paying quantities, provided, however, that lessee shall pay a royalty as herein stipulated on the production from any such retained tracts:’
“That if oil be .produced in paying quantities by operations thereunder, lessee should deliver to lessor one-sixth of the oil saved' from that produced.
“Royalties were provided as to gas and sul-phur and all other minerals.
“That if any well producing oil in paying quantities should be brought in on adjacent property within one hundred (100) feet of the line of any of the tracts covered hereby, lessee should drill such offset well on the tracts above leased as should be necessary to properly protect the interests of the lessors and of the lessee thereunder.
“That failure to do and perform any or all of the conditions set forth in said instrument rendered same null and void and at the option of lessors.
“That all conditions and terms thereof should'extend to the heirs, executors, legal representatives and assigns of all the parties thereto.”

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Related

Struss v. Stoddard
258 S.W.2d 413 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1953)
Duff v. Du Bose
27 S.W.2d 122 (Texas Commission of Appeals, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 S.W.2d 911, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duff-v-du-bose-texapp-1929.