Ellingson v. Shaw

138 P.2d 947, 114 Mont. 550, 1943 Mont. LEXIS 40
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1943
DocketNo. 8351.
StatusPublished

This text of 138 P.2d 947 (Ellingson v. Shaw) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellingson v. Shaw, 138 P.2d 947, 114 Mont. 550, 1943 Mont. LEXIS 40 (Mo. 1943).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ERICKSON,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is from a judgment in favor of the plaintiff in a quiet title action involving oil and gas lands. The interests *552 the plaintiff sought to extinglish arose mainly out of a certain drilling agreement made between herself and George M. Shaw and K. C. Morton on October 7, 1939. The main point in contention here however is not the original drilling agreement but an alleged second agreement extending the time for the completion of the wells.

The original contract provides that Shaw and Morton shall drill two wells in 1940, and if they do not drill these wells during the year 1940, then their lease is terminated except as to the wells drilled or in the process of drilling and five acres surrounding each. One well was completed in 1940 but nothing was done on the other well until December 2, 1940, when Morton went to see the plaintiff to ask for an extension of time. The explanation for the extension was that, while the well could still be drilled in that month, yet Morton preferred to have Sid Porter do the drilling and Porter could not start right away.

According to Morton’s testimony the plaintiff said that she wanted to see the well drilled as soon as possible, but if he had the well started in 1940 and had done sufficient work to assure her that he meant to complete the well, then it would be all right and she would not bother them. He further testified that she told him she would think about the whole proposition and give them a letter to the same effect the next day. The plaintiff did write the letter and it is as follows:

‘ ‘ Great Falls
Dec. 3rd, 1940
Mr. Morton and Mr. Porter
Kevin, Montana
Gentlemen:
After thinking over our conversation I still feel that I really do not wish to extend the time. But if drilling is started and I know that you plan to go ahead and complete the well, and in the event that the well is almost completed and the weather is so that it is impossible to finish, I most certainly will not *553 bother you in any way. But feel it should be a reasonable time.
Very truly yours.”
On December 7th Morton replied to plaintiff as follows:
“Mrs. Leta Ellingson
Box 96, Great Falls, Montana
Dear Mrs. Ellingson:
Thanks for your letter of December 3rd regarding completion of this next well which we are now starting.
In accordance with our conversation with you on Dec. 2nd, we have already dug a cellar for the rig, moved part of the rig and part of the tools to the new location and unless weather gets too bad we intend to keep it going until the well is finished.
You stated in your letter that if drilling is started and you know that we plan to go ahead and complete the well, and in the event that the well is not yet completed that you will not have any objection to our having additional time in which to finish and you feel it should be a reasonable time. We appreciate your writing this to us because we are now able to complete the deal for the casing on this well.
It is our intention and we are very willing to work steady and keep the well going strictly in accordance with your letter, except of course for severe weather.
As soon as we spud in I will let you know in order that you might have a chance to come up and visit the well.
Yery sincerely yours,
Keith C. Morton”

On December 31, 1940, the well was spudded in and drilled to a depth of 16 feet. Nothing thereafter was done until January 21,1941, when the well was drilled to 110 feet. On February 11th the plaintiff gave notice of cancellation informing the defendants of her intention to declare the forfeiture. About 110 feet of the 1,700 feet had been drilled on the date of the notice. The driller, however, went ahead and drilled an additional 50 feet on February 26th. The well was completed on April 14, 1941. It was a dry hole.

*554 It is the defendants’ contention that the plaintiffs waived the provision requiring the completion of the second well during .1940 and agreed to extend the time for completion. The defendants urge that they relied upon this agreement to extend the time and proceeded to the completion of the second well, spending large sums of money in so doing.

The plaintiffs answer this contention by saying that the letters and conversation amounted only to a departure from the original contract to the extent that the well did not have to be entirely completed in 1940; that the second agreement went only so far as to say that if the well was almost completed in 1940 but weather conditions prevented the completion, then the balance could be drilled in 1941. The facts show, plaintiffs argue, that there was only a “token” beginning of the well in 1940 and the delay in drilling from that time on was due to other things than the weather and thus the defendants breached the second agreement.

"While the parties differ as to the terms of the extension agreement, for the purpose of this decision we will accept as correct defendants ’ version as set out in their letter of December 7th in reply to plaintiff’s letter of December 3d- — both of which are set out above. In their letter defendants say they understand that if they have started drilling in 1940, and even though the well is not completed in that year, there will be no forfeiture of the lease if they “work steady” and “keep it [the drilling] going until the well is finished,” unless weather gets too bad, and to complete the well in what plaintiffs think is a reasonable time. The drilling was not actually started until the last day of 1940 when they drilled 16 feet, though there were twenty-four days left in that month after defendants’ letter on the 7th. While it might be said that this was a sufficient starting of the well in 1940 according to defendants’ version of the agreement, there might be some question of compliance even with this requirement in view of the language “in the event the well is not yet completed” in 1940 which *555 would indicate that both parties understood that a substantial amount of work should have been done in that year. The court from the facts certainly was justified in finding that there was no compliance with the part of the agreement requiring that defendants proceed steadily with the work, weather permitting, after the expiration of the year. No drilling was done after December 31, 1940, until January 21st when defendants drilled to 110 feet. That was all that had been done at the time of the notice of cancellation of February 11th. It can hardly be said that this is working “steady” or keeping “it going until the well is finished,” under defendants’ version of the agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
138 P.2d 947, 114 Mont. 550, 1943 Mont. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellingson-v-shaw-mont-1943.