Eagle Gas Co. v. Doran & Associates, Inc.

387 S.E.2d 99, 182 W. Va. 194, 109 Oil & Gas Rep. 575, 1989 W. Va. LEXIS 227
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 19, 1989
Docket18744
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 387 S.E.2d 99 (Eagle Gas Co. v. Doran & Associates, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Eagle Gas Co. v. Doran & Associates, Inc., 387 S.E.2d 99, 182 W. Va. 194, 109 Oil & Gas Rep. 575, 1989 W. Va. LEXIS 227 (W. Va. 1989).

Opinion

NEELY, Justice:

In 1962, Eagle Gas Company, the plaintiff below, entered into an oil and gas lease with the owners of the oil and gas on a 140 acre tract in Harrison County. The 1962 Lease was granted for a term of ten years from 6 April 1962 and as long thereafter as the lessee either searched for or produced oil or gas. No wells were drilled on the 140 acres within the ten-year primary term of the 1962 Lease; consequently, it expired by its own terms in the Spring of 1972.

In the Fall of 1972, Eagle Gas sought to renew the 1962 Lease. A new lease instrument (“the 1972 Lease”) was signed by Eagle’s President on 24 October 1972 and was mailed to the two owners of the oil and gas rights, one of whom lived in Ohio and the other in Virginia. Although the 1972 Lease was executed by the owners, it was not returned to Eagle Gas after it was signed. Indeed, the record is silent concerning what happened to the 1972 Lease until it was found in November, 1980 among the effects of one of the owners who had died four years before.

The 1972 Lease provided for quarterly delay rental payments at the rate of $25 per quarter — exactly the same delay rentals payable under the 1962 Lease. Delay rental checks were sent to “David S. Lowe, Agent” at a McConnelsville, Ohio address through and including July of 1978, even though David Lowe died in 1974, and even though Eagle Gas learned in December, 1976 that David Lowe was dead. Upon learning of David Lowe’s death, Eagle Gas did not secure a new agency agreement from the cotenants of the oil and gas, but in 1978 began sending quarterly rental checks to Huntington National Bank, Trustee.

The record is unclear whether Robert Lowe, the other lessor, received any delay rentals under the 1972 Lease. His widow “never saw” delay rental payments from the time she signed the 1972 Lease until Mr. Lowe died in July of 1976. After checks started going to the Huntington National Bank, Robert Lowe’s successor received no portion of the delay rentals until after this action was begun. Nonetheless, rental checks tendered between David Lowe’s death in 1974 and Robert Lowe’s death in 1976 were endorsed by Robert Lowe.

Doran & Associates, Inc., the defendant below, is an oil and gas production company which, at the times relevant to this action, was active in the development of oil and gas properties in Harrison County and elsewhere. Before 1980, Doran had developed a production area of Harrison County known as the “McDonald field.” In early 1980, Doran wanted to “step-out,” or expand, the McDonald field. Among the properties that Appellant identified for potential development was the 140-acre tract of land covered by the unrecorded 1972 Lease to Eagle.

Doran’s lease broker prepared a preliminary abstract of title and determined that the oil and gas was owned by two trusts. Huntington National Bank of Columbus, Ohio was Trustee of one of the trusts; Marjorie Lowe of Sedona, Arizona was Trustee of the other trust. Each trust owned an undivided one-half interest in the oil and gas. Additionally, Doran’s lease broker had a Harrison County lawyer prepare a written title report on the 140-acre tract. Both the lease broker’s work product and the attorney’s title report indicated that the property was not under lease at the time.

After obtaining these two sources of information concerning the ownership of the oil and gas underlying the 140-acre tract *196 and its availability for leasing, Doran’s lease broker contacted one of the owners of the oil and gas — Huntington National Bank, Trustee — in the Spring of 1980. After approximately three months of intermittent negotiations, the Bank executed a lease of its undivided one-half interest on 19 June 1980. This lease was recorded in the Harrison County Clerk’s office on 3 July 1980.

The trust administered by the Huntington National Bank had been created by David Lowe, one of the two cotenants who executed the original 1962 Lease to Eagle. Included among the assets of the trust were fractional interests in four oil and gas properties in the Clay District of Harrison County, including an undivided one-half interest in the 140 acres. During the lease negotiations between Doran and the Bank, the Bank’s Trust Real Estate Officer informed Doran’s Vice President that the David Lowe Trust has been receiving payments from Eagle. The Bank personnel did not know why these payments were being made; however, Doran’s lease broker assisted the Bank personnel in determining that the payments probably were rental payments on one of the David Lowe Trust properties. The Bank had no record of any oil and gas lease on any of the trust properties; so, on 15 April 1980, the Bank’s Trust Real Estate Officer called Eagle to determine whether Eagle had a current lease.

Eagle’s employee informed the Bank’s Real Estate Trust Officer that Eagle did not have a lease of the 140-acre tract involved in this action. Consequently, the Bank’s Real Estate Trust Officer concluded that she had the authority to execute an oil and gas lease in favor of Doran. Ultimately, these facts will be the cynosure of our holding in this case. Although, as we shall soon see, the other one-half interest in the oil and gas acquired by Doran was acquired under conditions that would have placed a reasonable person on notice that there was a cloud on the title, the first one-half interest was acquired by Doran as a bona fide purchaser for value without notice of any defect.

After procuring the half interest lease from the Huntington National Bank, Doran obtained another title opinion report on the 140-acre tract. In that report, Doran’s title attorney advised Doran that the title examination had revealed “various prior leases” of the 140-acre tract and that one of those prior leases was a 1962 Lease in favor of Eagle that had been granted for a term of ten years from 10 April 1962 “and as long thereafter as said land is operated in the search for or production of oil and gas.” Appellant was advised by counsel to conduct an examination on the ground to determine if any activities were being pursued under any of these prior leases. An examination was made by Doran, but no activities were discovered.

Notwithstanding the existence of two attorneys’ title opinion reports, the absence of any visible oil and gas operations on the ground, and second-hand information from Eagle itself that Eagle did not have a current lease on the 140-acre tract, Doran’s Vice President concluded that, before procuring a lease on the other one-half interest, it would be prudent to have direct contact with Eagle to assure himself that Eagle did not have a lease. Consequently, Doran’s Vice President, James Taylor, accompanied by Doran’s lease broker, went to Eagle’s office and met with Eagle’s corporate secretary, Rw. Howard. Mr. Taylor told Mr. Howard that Doran had a half-interest lease on the 140 acres and showed Mr. Howard where the property was located on a map. Mr. Taylor then asked Mr. Howard if Eagle had a lease on that tract.

Mr. Howard sent an assistant to check Appellee’s records, who left the room and then came back and beckoned Mr. Howard out of the room also. After several minutes, Mr. Howard returned and said “we have a lease on the property.” Mr. Taylor’s initial reaction to Mr. Howard’s assertion was that of disbelief. Mr. Taylor then asked for a copy of the lease, to which Mr. Howard responded: “It’s not our policy to give out copies.” Mr.

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387 S.E.2d 99, 182 W. Va. 194, 109 Oil & Gas Rep. 575, 1989 W. Va. LEXIS 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eagle-gas-co-v-doran-associates-inc-wva-1989.