Fleming Oil & Gas Co. v. So. Penn Oil Co.

17 S.E. 203, 37 W. Va. 645, 1893 W. Va. LEXIS 15
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 22, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 17 S.E. 203 (Fleming Oil & Gas Co. v. So. Penn Oil Co.) 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
Fleming Oil & Gas Co. v. So. Penn Oil Co., 17 S.E. 203, 37 W. Va. 645, 1893 W. Va. LEXIS 15 (W. Va. 1893).

Opinion

English, Pbesident :

On the 22d day of February, 1889, T. M. Jackson & Co., obtained alease from one David Jones of a tract of land containing about one hundred and forty acres, situated in Pawpaw district, in Marion county, W. Va., for oil and gas purposes, which lease was recorded in said county on the 30th day of May, 1889, and was afterwards, on the 15th day of September, 1890, assigned and conveyed by said T. M. Jackson & Co., to the South Penn Oil Company. Said lease contained the following covenant:

“The party of the second part covenants to commence operations for a test well within one year from the date hereof, at some point in said district of Pawpaw, Marion county, and complete the same within eighteen months from said commencement, provided that unavoidable delays occasioned by mishaps in drilling shall not cause a forfeiture of this lease ; and, in case said party of the second part fails to so commence and complete said test well, the lease shall be forfeited and void; and, in case said test well was a success, said phrty of the second part should commence a well on said property within two years after said test well is utilized, and complete the same in one year from the commencement thereof; and, if said party of the second part failed so to do, said lease should be forfeited and void, provided that loss of time spent in the recovery of tools lost in drilling, or unavoidable delays occasioned by any mishaps in connection with drilliug, shall not work a forfeiture of the lease.”

Under the provisions of this lease, the said T. M. Jack-[648]*648sou & Co., made preliminary surveys, in tbe fall of 1889, for the purpose of ascertaining the location of the oil belt with reference to the P. W. Youst farm ; and on the 30th day of January, 1890, the point at which the test well was afterwards drilled was located by him, and the spot pointed out to said P. W. Youst. A contract was made with one Ira DeWitt, in the fall of 1889, for the drilling of said well, by the terms of which work was to be commenced on the 31st day of January, 1890. In pursuance of said contract, said DeWitt had the timbers for the derrick which were afterwards used by him in drilling said test well cut and hewn on said Youst farm, between the 1st aiid the 6th of February, 1890; and in the latter part of January, 1890, the said De Witt contracted with one J. II. Barry to haul the machinery which was afterwards used in drilling said test well to the P. W. Youst farm, which hauling was delayed for some time by reason of the impassable condition of the roads in that locality. In execution of said contract, the said De Witt subsequently got the material and machinery upon the locality which had been selected, erected the derrick, and completed said well on the 21st day of August, 1890. A second well was commenced on said David Jones farm, on the lands described in said lease, on the 25th day of September, 1890, and was completed on the 6th day of January, 1891.

On the 28th day of February, 1890, the said David Jones leased the same tract of land to the Fleming Oil & Gas Company, of Wheeling, W. Va., for the purpose and with the exclusive right of drilling and operating for petroleum and gas; but the said lease on its face contained a covenant that “said David Jones was to be held harmless from a lease made to T. M. Jackson & Co., which expired February 22,1890.”

At the February rules, 1891, for the Circuit Court of Marion county, the Fleming Oil & Gas Company filed its declaration in ejectment against the South Penn Oil Company and David Jones for the purpose of recovering the possession of said leased premises. The defendants appeared at the February rules, 1891, and demurred to the plaintiff’s declaration, and moved to quash the notice given [649]*649the said defendants, which demurrer and motion, being considered by the court, were overruled. The defendants pleaded not guilty, and issue was joined thereon, and the case was submitted to a jury. Five instructions were asked by the plaintiff, and four by the defendant company, which instructions the court refused to give, the defendant company objecting to those asked by the plaintiff', and the plaintiff'objecting to those asked by the defendant; and .thereupon the court, of its own motion, gave the jury two instructions, which second instruction given by the court to the jury was objected to by the defendant the South Penn Oil Company.

The instructions asked for by defendant, and those given by the court, are in the words and figures, following:

“Instruction bio. 1 by defendant:

“If the jury find from the evidence that T. M. Jackson^ I. C. White, and C. L. Smith, the lessees of the defendant David Jones, by themselves, their agents or assigns, prior to the 22d day of February,'1890, located an oil well, or the point for drilling an oil well, on the land of P. W. Youst, in Pawpaw district, Marion county, W. Va., and also, prior to said date, cut and prepared upon the laud of said Youst the timber necessary for the construction of the rig or the foundation or other parts of the derrick to be erected at the point so located for the purpose of drilling or boring an oil well at said point, and that subsequently, and within eighteen months from the time said preparations were made, a derrick was 'erected, and an oil well drilled to completion at said point, said actions on the part of said Jackson, White, and Smith, their agents or assigns, were sufficient to prevent a forfeiture of such lease, under the clause therein which provides ‘that in case operations for a test well should not be commenced in one year from the date of said lease, at some point in said district of Pawpaw, and .such test well be not completed within eighteen months from the commencement of such operations, said lease should be forfeited, and the jury should find for the defendants.’ ”

“Instruction Ho. 2 for defendant:

“If the jury find from the evidence that operations for a test well were not actually begun by T. M. Jackson, 1. C. [650]*650White, and C. L. Smith, in the district of Pawpaw, in Marion county, within one year from the 22d day of February, 1889, hut that such test well Avas actually completed by them, their agents or assigns, within eighteen months from any time the said Jackson, White, and Smith, or ,their assigns, by the terms of the lease to them from David Jones, could have commenced operations for such testAvell in said district, then no forfeiture of such lease occurred, and the jury should find for the defendants.”

“InstructionDo. 3by the defendant:

“If the jury find from the evidence that the lease offered in evidence by the plaintiff, made to it by David Jones, dated February 28, 1890, contains an excejition or reservation of ten (10) acres from the operation of said lease surrounding the buildings of said Jones upon the land in controversy, and that said ten (10) acres have not been laid off or assigned by metes or bounds, or by any definite boundaries, so as to describe or identify the same separately from the residue of said land, then the jury can not render a verdict in favor of the plaintiff’ for the residue of said land, and, under the declaration in this action, should find for the defendant.”

“Instruction Do. 4 by defendant:

“If the jury find from the evidence that operations for a test well Avere not actually begun by T. M. Jackson, I. C. White and O. L.

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Bluebook (online)
17 S.E. 203, 37 W. Va. 645, 1893 W. Va. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleming-oil-gas-co-v-so-penn-oil-co-wva-1893.