Eysenbach v. Cardinal Petroleum Co.

1925 OK 32, 236 P. 10, 110 Okla. 12, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 751
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 9, 1925
Docket11474
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1925 OK 32 (Eysenbach v. Cardinal Petroleum Co.) 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
Eysenbach v. Cardinal Petroleum Co., 1925 OK 32, 236 P. 10, 110 Okla. 12, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 751 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff commenced its action against the defendant in the district court of Tulsa county, for damages based upon the alleged breach of a contract in failing to drill two oil and gas wells.

The contract sued upon hears the date of January 24, 1919, and in substance provided; Plaintiff sold and assigned its complete interest in oil and gas leases covering about 500 acres of land situated in Pittsburg county. Okla., to Che defendant, upon the following conditions: (1) For the sum of $1,000 cash in hand paid, and the additional sum of $14,000 to be paid by the defendant to the plaintiff upon the approval of the title. (Title was later approved by the defendant and the iurther cash consideration of $14,-000 paid.) (2) The defendant agreed to-commence the immediate drilling of a well on the 500. acres of land and in the event the well Should produce gas in the capacity of two- and a half million cubic feet, the defendant should pay to the plaintiff the sum of $5,000 additional, and upon the completion of the first well, whether same was a dry hole or produced gas in the amount above set forth, the defendant bound himself to commence drilling a second well upon said property, and if it proved to be of like production, or greater, the defendant should pay to Che plaintiff the further sum of $5,-000, thus making the total purchase price the sum of $25,000. (3) It was further agreed between the parties that in the event the first well should produce not less than 50 barrels of oil per day, the defendant should pay to the plaintiff the additional sum of $10,000 on the purchase price of Clie leases. (4) It was further expressly provided by the terms of the contract that in-no event should the total payment made under the contract equal more than $25000 as the purchase price for the.leases. (5) That with the $15,000 cash paid on Che consideration, if the first and' second wells were gas producers in not less than the figures named, the total- payment provided for would constitute the full consideration, or if the first well should produce oil in not less than the amount named, the payment of the $10,000, plus the $15,000, would constitute full payment, or, if the first well produced gas in the amount named, and the second well produced oil in the quantity named, a payment of only $5,000 wculd be required, as the contract specifically provided that the total consideration -should in no event exceed $25,000.

*13 The de emlani .filed his answer to the action. in substance, as follows: That by reason of third parties who were strangers to the contract drilling dry wells upon adjoining properties, such development proved that the 00o acres of leases would be nonproduc-ing property, and defendant was thereby relieved from drilling the one or more oil and gasi wells provided in the contract. That the plaintiff had brought in prior to the sale and assignment of the leases to the defendant, a gas well of the capacity of about 17 million cubic feet of gas upon the acreage in question, and the defendant alleges that the plaintiff’s-agent, in offering the sale of the leases to him, represented, to the defendant that the property was situated upon a gas dome, and would with development result in satisfactory gas production to the defendant, and relying upon these statements, the defendant was thereby induced to enter into the contract sued upon by the plaintiff. The defendant further alleged that subsequent geological, surveys of the property disclosed nonbearing oil and gas formations, and therefore the statements of the plaintiff were false and fraudulent, and that he was released from drilling the one or more wells on the property/, and was entitled to recover damages against the plaintiff by reason of said fraudulent statements for the consideration already paid for the property. If is apparent from the record that the agent who made the statements possessed considerable Knowledge of structural formations, and was experienced in oil and gas production. The record further discloses that the defendant had engaged in oil and gas developments for some 15 or 20 years, and possessed somewhat similar Knowledge about structural formations, and oil developments. The court denied the defense of fraud to the action, and the defendant has assigned as error the ruling of the court on this point.

In passing on this question it is enough to say that the record discloses that the plaintiff’s agent and defendant possessed about equal Knowledge concerning the subject-matter of the contract, and both stood on equal ground to pass judgment on the. value of the property for oil or gas production. Therefore the representations so made by plaintiff’s agent would not constitute actionable fraud in this suit, and the court did not commit error in refusing to submit this defense to the jury. Long v. Woodman. 58 Me. 49; Williamson v. Holt, 147 N. C. 515, 61 S. E. 384; Warner v. Benjamin (Wis.) 62 N. W. 179; First National Bank v. Swan (Wyo.) 23 Pac. 743.

The defendant assigns further error because the trial court refused to permit him to excuse his breach of'the contract to drill the wells on ihe property in question by showing that the gas well then on the property had decreased in production from about 17 m.j.u,.n eub.e ieet to about 2 million cubic-feet, and by further showing the drilling of wells on adjacem property which were dry lmles; lire defendant urging that the matters he offered to prove showed conclusively that oil and gas production in paying quantities would not be found upon the property. In offering this defense the defendant overlooKed his promise in writing to maKe or cause to be made certain explorations upon the property in question. The defendant was b< und to use good faith in mahingi such explorations, and the plaintiff, had a right to hold the defendant to the requirements of the contract in this respect. Nor could the defendant excuse his failure to drill one or more wells upon the property as required by the terms of the contract because the gas well on the property at the time he purchased it had fallen off in production, and wells drilled on adjacent property were dry holes. The defendant agreed in writing to maKe the tests upon the property he purchased from the plaintiff, and the plaintiff had as much right to insist upon the performance of this portion of the contract as the other provisions for the sale of the property. Ardizonne et al. v. Archer et al., 72 Okla. 70, 178 Pac. 263: Chamberlain v. Parker. 45 N. Y. 569.

The defendant assigns error in that the court did not submit the proper measure of damage to the jury in the trial of this cause, and presents this question directly, and in substance through various assignments of error.

Section 2852, Rev. Laws 1910, being section 5976, Comp. Stat. 1921, provided:

“For the breach of an obligation arising from contract, the measure of damages, except where otherwise expressly provided by this chapter!, is the amount whb*h will compensate the party aggrieved for all the detriment proximately. caused theieby, or whiph in the ordinary course of things, would be lihely to result therefrom. No damages can be recovered for a breach of e< ntracL, which are not clearly ascertainable in both their nature and origin.”

And this provision of the law, we think, clearly authorizes the recovery of damages for breach of contract, such as the one we are here dealing with.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 32, 236 P. 10, 110 Okla. 12, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 751, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/eysenbach-v-cardinal-petroleum-co-okla-1925.