Fain v. Texas-Hanover Oil Company

354 S.W.2d 949, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2246
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 14, 1962
Docket10911
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 354 S.W.2d 949 (Fain v. Texas-Hanover Oil Company) 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
Fain v. Texas-Hanover Oil Company, 354 S.W.2d 949, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2246 (Tex. Ct. App. 1962).

Opinion

ARCHER, Chief Justice.

*951 This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court based on a jury verdict in answer to the first four Special Issues in favor of appellee and against appellant for $8,105.18, with interest at the rate of six percent from the date of judgment and for foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien as against Earl Fain, Jr. and Rupert C. Thompson, Jr., upon an undivided %2ths part of the interest of the lessee in an oil and gas lease upon the Juan Hernandez Survey No. 347 in Runnels County and certain casing and tubing and that the proceeds of a cashier’s check for $7,592.68 (fully identified) be applied to the payment of the judgment.

The appeal is founded on seven points and are that the Court erred in submitting as a fact issue the question of consent to the relocation of the well where such issue was only as to an evidentiary element; that there was neither sufficient evidence nor any evidence in support of the jury’s answer; in permitting plaintiff’s President to testify as to his intention in the execution of an agreement amounting to an accord and satisfaction of the controversy; in submitting definitions and issues amounting to a comment on the evidence; in failing to require the plaintiff’s counsel to fully open the case in argument; in allowing plaintiff interest, and finally in denying defendant a recovery on his cross action.

Texas-Hanover Oil Company, appellee herein, filed the suit, out of which this appeal grows, against Earl Fain, Jr., appellant herein, for $7,592.68 with six percent interest and for foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien on %2ths interest in an oil, gas and mineral lease, casing and tubing, and alternatively for the title and possession of the tyi2th.s interest in the lease on Survey No. 347, together with the application of the proceeds of a cashier’s check.

On June 2, 1959 Earl Fain, Jr. and others not involved in this appeal made an agreement with Texas-Hanover Oil Company to drill an oil or gas well on certain terms and conditions, none of which except item No. 1 is in question. Item No. 1 reads as follows:

“The well is to be located 3300 feet from the Northeast line and 660 feet from the Northwest line of said Juan Hernandez Survey No. 347, above described.”

The well was actually drilled and completed at another location some 2530 feet approximately from the Northeast line and it is the relocation of the well which is at issue in this appeal.

The appellee asserts that the original location was in a low place in a field and that the owner of the growing crops wanted the well at another place and that Mr. Harris talked to Mr. Fain and Mr. Cannon, the geologist on the well, by long distance telephone in New Mexico and his testimony in part is as follows:

“A I said, ‘Earl, I talked to Mr. Currie, and he has asked us to move the location of the well to a higher ground; that it will be a bog if it rains, and he would lose a lot of good valuable feed for his cattle, and they were now grazing in there, and he would appreciate it if we would move it.’ I told him I would see what I could get done. And Earl Fain said, “Well, I don’t remember what’s in the contract.’ And, I said, ‘Well Earl, I don’t remember what’s in the contract either; I don’t have it here at the house, but I do think this, that if we can accommodate the man we ought to do it.’ He said, ‘Well, Bob — you will have to talk with Bob Cannon about that; he is the geologist on that job, and if it don’t hurt the play any by moving it,’ he said, ‘that might be all right.’ So, Bob Cannon came to the phone and he said it wouldn’t make a bit of difference to move it any direction geologically it wouldn’t. So, I said, ‘Bob, I am going to move it if I can get Carson’s and Black’s permission.’ The next day I called Carson *952 and Black in Midland, and they both agreed, and I went out and moved it.
“Q Did you drill the well, then, at the changed location?,
“A Yes.
******
“Q Roger, in some of Mr. Fain’s papers filed in this case, called pleadings, he has said that in the conversation you had with him over the telephone when you were in San Angelo and he was in New Mexico, that he told you that if you changed that location it would have to be at your own risk, and you agreed to that; was anything said about that?
“A Nothing; no.
“Q Did he ever say anything of that effect to you about it until after the deal, well had been completed and capped?
“A Not until we got down to paying the bills.
“Q And are you positive which of those gentlemen you talked to first, and which you talked to last?
“A I talked to Fain first.
“Q And Cannon next?
“A That’s right.
“Q Did you talk to Mr. Fain after you talked to Bob Cannon?
“A I did not.
“Q And what was it Cannon said to you?
“A Cannon said it would not make a bit of difference if we moved the location, one location in any direction; it would not make a bit of difference geologically, and in our chances for finding oil.
“Q What was it you had said to Fain about changing the location ?
“A I told him my conversation with Mr. Currie and that I strongly recommended we change it, if it would help him, help Mr. Currie.
“Q What did Mr. Fain say?
“A And Mr. Fain says, that will be a matter, or words to that effect, the changing of the location would have to be left up to Bob Cannon; it is his deal, and he is the geologist; and I said, let me talk to Cannon, and I talked to Cannon and Cannon told me it wouldn’t effect it one way or the other.”

R. L. Cannon, the geologist on the well testified in part:

“Q Let’s get back to the telephone conversation the week of July 18, 1959; recall, if you can, and as nearly possible as you can, Mr. Cannon, what transpired in connection with that conversation.
“A Well, we were at dinner, Mr. Fain and I, and there was a telephone call for us, and Mr. Fain went to the phone and talked and came back and told me it was Mr. Harris.
“Q About how long was that that Mr. Fain was gone in answering the telephone call, long distance?
“A Well, it wasn’t a long conversation. I don’t know how long. I couldn’t tell you how long it was, but I wouldn’t consider it a long conversation.
“Q Mr. Fain came back and gave you a message? I can’t go into what he told you.
“A He told me—
“Q I can’t go into that.

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Bluebook (online)
354 S.W.2d 949, 1962 Tex. App. LEXIS 2246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fain-v-texas-hanover-oil-company-texapp-1962.