Duke v. Stewart

230 S.W. 485, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 206
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 19, 1921
DocketNo. 679.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 230 S.W. 485 (Duke v. Stewart) 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
Duke v. Stewart, 230 S.W. 485, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 206 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

WALKER, J.

This suit was brought by V. M. Duke and wife against John S. Stewart, P. H. Briant, D. F. Boyles, W. A. Myrick, J. W. Oliver, F. E. Creale, H. T. Straiti, E. F. Simms, E. F. Simms & Co., Magnolia Petroleum Company, and tbe Texas Pure Oil Refining Company, to cancel an oil lease executed by appellants to John S. Stewart, who beld tbe same for the benefit of himself and P. H. Briant, and assignments made by Stewart and Briant and their assigns “on tbe grounds of failure to comply with tbe terms of tbe lease, and abandonment for failure to develop with reasonable diligence." Tbe original lease was as follows:

“State of Texas, County of Harris.
“This contract made and entered into between V. M. Duke and wife, H. R. Duke, parties of the first part, and John S. Stewart, party of the second part, witnesseth:
“(1) Parties of the first part have leased and let unto the party of the second part for the purposes of development and production of oil and gas, subject to the provisions hereof, the following described land, in Harris county, Texas, to wit: A tract of land containing about 126 acres, upon which parties of the first part now reside, being bound on the west and south by Goose creek, and the land of John Gaillard, on the east and north by the land of Fred Pel-ley and the Wiggins heirs, save and except a strip of about ten acres heretofore sold to C. E. Morgan and five acres reserved and hereinafter more particularly described, which five acres are absolutely reserved from this lease.
“(2) Parties of the second part shall begin actual operations on said land within 90 days from the delivery hereof, and in the event such operations are not commenced within said period then at any time thereafter parties of the first part may, by notice in writing and delivered to parties of the second part, require such commencement within 30 days after delivery of such written notice, and unless parties of the second part shall commence operations within 30 days after receipt of such notice this lease shall be forfeited. All lines must be protected as against producing wells completed on adjoining lands.
“(3) Parties of the second part shall pay to parties of the first part the sum of $100.00 per month, payable in advance monthly until oil in paying quantities is produced on said land, and until the lessor’s royalty oil shall amount in value to $100.00 per month, and this lease shall remain in effect as long as such operations are continued or as long as oil in paying quantities is produced on said land.
“ (4) Of the oil produced and saved from said land parties of the second part shall deliver to parties of the first part one-eighth as royalty free of all expense to parties of the first part, the same to be delivered from settling tanks and into pipe lines as parties of the first part may direct, but if parties of the first part desire their portion of such oil delivered into tanks or other storage, said tanks or storage shall be furnished by said parties of the first part, otherwise said royalty oil may be run into pipe line by parties of the second part and paid *486 for on run tickets according to the prevailing custom of the oil field, and parties of the second part guaranty payment of said royalty oil in cash. Oil used for fuel in the conduct of operations on said land may be so used without charge.
“(5) Parties of the second part shall have the right of ingress and egress upon said land and shall order their manager or employés to respect and protect the fences of first parties and to close all gates as found, and may assign and sublease said premises in whole or in part, and parties of the second part may place and construct all necessary machinery, tanks, reservoirs, pipe lines and apparatus on said land, and remove same at any time within sixty days after termination hereof, but such tanks to be used only for oil produced on this lease and not for adjoining land.
“(6) If gas is produced and sold from said land, parties of the second part shall pay to parties of the first part one-sixth of all money received from sale of gas.
“(7) It is understood that there is reserved from provisions of this lease five (5) acre strip beginning on Goose creek at the northeast of said ten (10) acre tract heretofore sold to G. E. Morgan; thence running along the north line of said Morgan tract to this northeast corner; thence in a northerly direction to a point on Goose creek, parallel with the Morgan north line and thence down Goose creek to the place of beginning, shall include five acres, of land. It is agreed that no well shall be drilled within 500 feet of lessors’ present residence until oil in paying quantities has been found on said leased land.
“(8) It is distinctly understood, agreed and stipulated that every provision, condition and requirement contained herein is a material one and enters into the consideration of this lease, and failure of the lessee herein, styled parties of the second part, to perform any of said conditions, requirements and provisions or a breach of any such terms, condition and requirement shall forfeit and terminate this lease at the option of the lessors or their assigns herein. It is further agreed that the terms, provisions and stipulations herein contained shall apply to and bind the lessor and the lessee, their heirs, executors, legal representatives and assigns and any transfer of said lease shall be binding in all its terms and conditions on the assignee or transferees thereof, as well as upon the original parties thereto.
“Witness our hands in duplicate originals this 12th day of February, 1916.
“[Signed] V. M. Duke.
“H. R. Duke.
. “John S. Stewart.”

On the 9th day of September, 1916, Stewart and Briant subleased 16 acres of the land conveyed to them under the original lease to B. F. Boyles. On the 15th of October, 1916, Boyles assigned a lease to H. T. Straiti, who, on the 8th day of January, 1917, assigned a half interest to E. F. Simms. Appellants make the following statement as to the development of the 16 acres:

“Here is what Straiti-Simms or E. F. Simms & Oo. did towards developing the 16 acres: The only well on the entire tract which produced oil was the one put down by Simms on the 16 acres. This well was completed in February, 1917, and produced oil until June, 1919. No other well was put down on the 16 acres; one was started, but never finished. Duke received a little over $200 per month while the well produced. In June, 1919, the well was plugged, and has produced nothing since.”

We also adopt their statement of the development of the balance of the land covered by the original lease, to wit:

“On September 29, 1916, Stewart and Briant assigned to the Magnolia Petroleum Company 102.8 acres, out of the lands leased by Duke to Stewart. Here is what the Magnolia Company did to develop the 102.8 acres: They started to drill, and lost their first well. They produced no oil, and moved everything off. They quit drilling and gave up the well, as Duke said, T think, in April, 1917,’ but were a couple of months moving their stuff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
230 S.W. 485, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 206, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duke-v-stewart-texapp-1921.