Freeman v. Magnolia PeTroleum Co.

165 S.W.2d 111
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedSeptember 21, 1942
DocketNo. 5462
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 165 S.W.2d 111 (Freeman v. Magnolia PeTroleum Co.) 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
Freeman v. Magnolia PeTroleum Co., 165 S.W.2d 111 (Tex. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

This suit was filed January 7, 1941, by appellant M. H. Freeman, for himself and as independent executor of the estate of Wayne Freeman, deceased, and also as next friend for certain heirs of Wayne Freeman, deceased, joined by Naona Freeman, surviving wife of Wayne Freeman, against appellees, the Magnolia Petroleum Company, a corporation, Lawrence R. Hagy, D. D. Harrington, and Stanley Marsh, who appear from the record as constituting the partnership of Hagy, Harrington & Marsh. The purpose of the suit was to cancel an oil and gas lease that had been executed by the Freemans to George E. Mager on April 7, 1930, and duly 'assigned to appel-lees, covering three specified tracts of land located in Sherman and Hansford Counties, comprising in the aggregate 7,499 acres. The lease recited a cash consideration of $1,000 and royalties therein provided, as well as the agreements of the lessee therein contained, and provided for a primary term of ten years and as long thereafter as oil, gas, or other minerals should be produced from the leased land. The royalties which the lessee agreed to pay to the lessor in the event oil, gas, or other minerals were discovered and produced were: (1) One eighth of the oil; (2) twenty-five per cent of the market value gt the plant of gasoline manufactured from gas produced at any well or wells drilled on the land; (3) one eighth of the amount received and collected by the lessee from the sale of gas at the wells; (4) a royalty of fifty dollars per year on each gas well from which gas only was produced while gas therefrom was not sold or used off the premises, and while said royalty was so paid said well should be held to be a producing well under paragraph number two of the lease;- and (5) on all other minerals mined and marketed one eighth, either in kind or value, at the well or mine except that the royalty on sulphur was fixed at fifty cents per long ton. These provisions were contained in section number three of the lease.

The record shows without dispute that the appellees drilled one well near the center of the 7,499-acre body of land in an effort to discover and produce oil, gas, or other minerals, which resulted in the discovery of a large amount of gas, such well being capable of producing as much as eighteen million cubic feet of gas per day. None of the gas was ever marketed, sold, or used off the premises and no other wells were ever drilled thereon. Appellants pleaded that appellees were not engaged in operations for mining, drilling, or reworking any well or mine on the land at the end of the primary term of ten years, namely, April 7, 1940, and never thereafter began any kind or character of operations for the drilling of any well but completely ceased their operations for a period of nine months after the primary term provided in the lease had expired, and that by reason thereof the lease terminated at the end of the primary term and appellees therefore had no further rights in, or title to, the land. They prayed that the lease be in all things canceled and held for naught, that the asserted claim of appellees to the premises be removed as a cloud on the title and, in the alternative, that appellees be required to commence the drilling of wells on the land, complete the same with due diligence, and prosecute such operations until a well shall have been drilled on each forty acres.

At the close of the testimony appellants urged a motion for a peremptory instruction in their favor upon the grounds that gas only having been discovered on the land and the same not having been sold or used off the premises and appellees not having paid or tendered the fifty dollars before the expiration of the primary term of the lease, and no further operations for the discovery or production of oil, gas, or other minerals having been prosecuted by appellees after the primary term of the lease had expired, the lease was forfeited when the primary term expired and they were therefore entitled to a peremptory instruction requiring the jury to return a verdict in their favor. The court overruled the motion and submitted the case to the jury upon special issues.

In answer to the special issues the jury found: (1) That the gas well on the premises was completed December 22, 1939; (2) that appellees did. not fail to use reasonable diligence in drilling additional wells for gas and marketing same from the 7,499 acres prior to January 1, 1941, and subsequent to April 7, 1940, the end ;of the primary term of the lease; (3) that appel-lees had not abandoned the premises prior to January 1, 1941, for the purposes of the [114]*114exploration, development, and production of oil and gas; (4) that a reasonably prudent person engaged in oil and gas production would not have performed additional drilling for gas or marketed gas from the premises prior to January 1, 1941, and subsequent to April 7, 1940, the end of the primary term of the lease; and (S) under all of the circumstances a prudent operator would not have drilled an additional well, or wells, for gas on the leased premises.

After the verdict was rendered, appellants filed and urged a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto based upon virtually the same grounds as their motion for a peremptory instruction, which was likewise overruled and the court rendered judgment in favor of the appellees, decreeing that appellants take nothing by their suit. Appellants duly excepted to the judgment and, their motion for new trial being overruled, they have perfected an appeal to this- court, contending that the judgment of the court below is erroneous and should be reversed because of the refusal of the court to grant their motions for a peremptory instruction and judgment non obstante veredicto, together with their requests for the submission of certain special issues which pertained to the same questions included in their motions.

The controlling questions presented by the briefs are: First, that the oil and gas lease in question was not an absolute conveyance of the minerals in the land but conveyed a determinable fee which would lapse for lack of production of oil, gas, or other minerals after the primary term of ten years from April 7, 1930, and it was necessary, therefore, that appellees have a producing well on the land from which they were actually producing oil, gas, or other minerals on April 7, 1940, in order to extend the lease beyond that date; secondly, that it was necessary for appellees to pay or tender before the end of the primary term, or in advance, the royalty of fifty dollars per year specified in the lease as royalty upon a gas well from which the gas was not sold or used off the premises, in order to preserve the lease under that provision for the payment of royalty and establish the well as a producing well; thirdly, the court erred in refusing to permit their counsel to argue to the jury the question of lack of diligence on the part of appellees in failing to establish and maintain a plant to treat the gas and remove from it vapors, the removal of which was necessary before the gas could be transmitted through pipe lines; and, fourthly, that the court erred in refusing to permit their counsel to argue to the jury, in effect, that appellees were negligent in failing to provide a pipe line through which the gas produced from the well in question could have been transmitted to a market.

The law with reference to the nature of the title acquired by the lessee in an ordinary oil and gas lease is well established in this State.

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Bluebook (online)
165 S.W.2d 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-magnolia-petroleum-co-texapp-1942.