Gartner v. Missimer

290 P.2d 827, 178 Kan. 566, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 505, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 329
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedDecember 10, 1955
Docket39,844
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 290 P.2d 827 (Gartner v. Missimer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gartner v. Missimer, 290 P.2d 827, 178 Kan. 566, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 505, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 329 (kan 1955).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Robb, J.:

This was an action for damages resulting from a breach of contract by failure of defendants to drill an oil and gas well to the Arbuclde lime on the farm of plaintiffs. Judgment was for plaintiffs and defendants have appealed.

The plaintiffs will hereafter be referred to as appellees and the defendants as appellants.

Appellees’ petition, appellants’ second amended answer, and a reply set out the issues in the case. The facts, briefly stated, were that appellees owned 265 acres of land in Montgomery county and on August 12, 1952, this land was leased to appellants whereby *567 they agreed to drill one Bartlesville well within sixty days, one additional Bartlesville well within ninety days, one Arbuckle well within six months, and one additional Arbuckle well within one year if production were found in the first Arbuckle well. There were producing Bartlesville wells on all sides of appellees’ land and some of them were on the land of appellees which was located across the road to the south. Appellants drilled the first Bartlesville well, which was dry, and the second Bartlesville well, which was sandfracted and pumped for several months. From production on the latter well appellees received a check for $11.12 on November 5, 1952, and another for $18.90 on February 6, 1953. An Ar-buckle well was never drilled and as a result the lease was abandoned in June, 1953, but was not released of record until February 3, 1954.

During tiie trial one witness testified that the Bartlesville sand was found at a depth of 900 feet and the Arbuckle formation would be 375 to 425 feet deeper; cost of drilling a well to the Arbuckle formation would be $7,000 to $7,500. Another witness testified the cost of drilling would be $2.00 per foot to the Bartlesville sand and $7.00 per foot to the Arbuckle. A third witness said it would cost $2.50 to the Bartlesville sand and $7.00 to the Arbuckle. Appellee, George Gartner, testified in his own behalf that had an Arbuckle well been started, the royalty interest would have been about $20.00 per acre.

Appellants filed a demurrer to appellees’ evidence on the ground the evidence did not prove damages and that any evidence of damages attempted to be proved was speculative, uncertain, and not capable of proof. This demurrer was overruled.

There was a contention by appellants that appellees did not have good title to the land, but the record before us contained testimony of expert witnesses for appellants which admitted that the title not only was good, but that Sinclair had been running oil from the land for a long time.

Appellants’ evidence showed the two Bartlesville wells had been drilled; that a laboratory report indicated the second well was not a commercial producer; they had proceeded with setting and cementing pipe plus refracting, which had cost $14,000 and caused a net loss to appellants of $10,452.47; there had been an Arbuckle test in the vicinity which had resulted in a dry hole, but the record failed to show definitely that there was knowledge of this on behalf of appellees.

*568 There was further testimony by one witness on behalf of appellants that with a small rotary one of the Bartlesville wells could have been drilled down to the Arbuckle formation for $2,000 to $2,500. Another witness, who had drilled an Arbuckle well in the vicinity, stated it would cost $3,000 to $3,500.

There was a conflict between the testimony of appellee George Gartner and that of appellant Carl Missimer. Gartner stated he had written letters requesting appellants to drill three wells, but Missimer testified Gartner had said,

“. • • you boys have spent a lot of money down here and you have been awfully nice about it, he said I won’t ask you to drill an Arbuckle well because these two wells are low, and we have had the test on the other hundred feet, and I don’t believe there would be any production.”

Missimer said his memory was hazy but he thought in a conversation he had with Gartner two or three months after the time for drilling the Arbuckle well had expired, Gartner had asked when appellants were going ahead with the drilling. Missimer had asked Gartner if he would execute a new lease, but they agreed a new lease was not necessary.

Testimony of appellant Schroeder was that Gartner had said the Arbuckle situation didn’t look good to him, he didn’t see much use in drilling an Arbuckle well there; it would be a waste of money; no release in writing was necessary because appellants had kept their word, had tried hard, had spent a lot of money and they could depend on him. Schroeder further testified that the cost of cleaning up the lease and moving out had been included in the cost of the well.

From the record it appears that another witness for appellants, on cross-examination, stated it was his opinion that the limes would not carry oil on the Gartner lease, but that he did not believe it could be determined whether oil would be obtained in the Bartlesville sand without drilling a well.

At the close of all the evidence the trial court refused to give an instruction upon motion of appellants directing the jury that it could find only nominal damages for the alleged failure to drill the Arbuckle well. The trial court instructed the jury and counsel submitted their arguments. Instructions No. 10, 11, 12, and 13, and a statement of appellees’ counsel in his closing argument were objected to by appellants. These objections were overruled. Special interrogatories were submitted and appellants objected to the sec *569 ond. That was overruled. A motion to set aside the verdict and an answer to a special question, as well as a motion for new trial were filed, argued, and overruled. Judgment was rendered on the verdict of the jury for $3,500. This appeal followed.

The specifications of error were that the trial court erred in overruling appellants’ demurrer to appellees’ evidence and in not entering judgment for appellants; in overruling appellants’ motion for a directed verdict and that only nominal damages could be allowed; in entering judgment for appellees against appellants in the sum of $3,500; in overruling the motion for judgment and to set aside the answer to a special question; in overruling the motion for new trial; in overruling objections by appellants to instructions No. 10,11, 12, and 13; in failing to give appellants’ requested instruction that only nominal damages could be allowed; and in overruling appellants’ objection to the statement of appellees’ counsel that, “The measure of damages is the cost to find out whether there is oil down there under that land. . . .”

The first question for us to consider is the sufficiency of appellees’ evidence to withstand a demurrer. The demurrer in this case was based on the question of damages and not on the usual and general question that the evidence failed to constitute a cause of action. Therefore, we need not go into the general rule except to say that if there is any evidence in support of and favorable to the establishment of appellees’ damages, then we consider only that evidence and disregard any that is unfavorable. We must further accept all evidence of damages introduced by appellees as true. (Myers v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
290 P.2d 827, 178 Kan. 566, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 505, 1955 Kan. LEXIS 329, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gartner-v-missimer-kan-1955.