Gillespie v. American Zinc & Chemical Co.

93 A. 272, 247 Pa. 222, 1915 Pa. LEXIS 811
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 2, 1915
DocketAppeal, No. 120
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 93 A. 272 (Gillespie v. American Zinc & Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gillespie v. American Zinc & Chemical Co., 93 A. 272, 247 Pa. 222, 1915 Pa. LEXIS 811 (Pa. 1915).

Opinion

OriNiON by

Mr. Justice Potter,

In this bill in equity, filed by Robert G. Gillespie, against the American Zinc and Chemical Company, he prayed for an injunction to restrain the defendant from interfering with him and his employees in drilling oil wells on two tracts of Jand described in the bill. A preliminary injunction was awarded and subsequently defendant filed an answer. The case was put at issue and tried, the material facts being found substantially as follows: In 1901 one W. W. Vance leased from M. M. Acheson and wife the exclusive right of drilling and [224]*224operating for petroleum, oil and gas, upon a tract of 185 acres of land in Smith Township, Washington County, Pennsylvania, for a term of two years, and as much longer as oil or gas should he found there in paying quantities, with certain privileges as to the use of water, laying of pipe lines, and the erection and removal of machinery and fixtures. Shortly after its execution, this lease was acquired by Robert G. Gillespie, the plaintiff. In 1905 he also leased from J. W. Hervey, the owner of 125 acres adjoining the Acheson tract, all the oil and gas in and under the Hervey tract, for a period of ten years, and as much longer as oil or gas should be found there in paying quantities, with the usual privileges as to water, pipe laying, fixtures, etc. In April, .1913, the American Zinc and Chemical. Company, the defendant, became the owner of both the Acheson and Hervey tracts, together with the underlying coal.

The plaintiff has expended about $90,000 in developing oil upon these farms, six oil wells having been drilled on the Acheson land, and eight on the Hervey land. These wells produced various amounts of oil, ranging from three barrels to twenty-five barrels per day. Thirteen weils are still in operation, which average less than one barrel per day. Up to the present time the total realized by plaintiff from the two leases, amounts to about $77,000, which is about $13,000 less than the cost of production. When defendant purchased the farms in April, 1913, and for some time before, the average production for the thirteen wells in operation, was less than one barrel per day, and no well had been operated on either of the farms for two years and a half, and defendant had reason to believe that it would not be profitable for plaintiff to drill any more wells there. It was defendant’s purpose to establish on the land a large industrial plant and to obtain a supply of fuel therefor, by mining the coal under the surface, which it purchased at the same time that it purchased the farm. When defendant was engaged in constructing its contemplated [225]*225improvement, plaintiff announced his intention of drilling two additional wells, one on the Acheson farm, and the other on the Hervey farm. The former well he proposed to drill within the limits of the water reservoir, which defendant had begun to construct, and the latter he proposed to drill on the site of one of defendant’s contemplated buildings, for which grading had already been done. Plaintiff hauled and deposited at the points selected for the two new wells, lumber for the purpose of construction and his rig-builders started to lay the foundation timbers. Thereupon defendant’s employees, under the direction of its superintendent and against the protest of plaintiff’s superintendent, removed the lumber and rig-timbers outside the limits of the reservoir and from off the building site. Plaintiff then filed the present bill. After the preliminary injunction had been granted plaintiff moved his lumber and timbers back to the reservoir site, and drilled a well through the oil sands, but at the time of the hearing it did not appear whether or not the well would be productive. Up to that time it was not. Nothing further was done towards drilling the other well. The trial court found that a shifting of the wells a distance of 150 feet away from the location first selected by plaintiff’s superintendent, would have placed them where they would not in any way have interfered with defendant’s improvements, and so far as human judgment could predict, would have given to plaintiff equally good chances of obtaining oil. There had been friction between the respective superintendents of the parties, and considerable ill feeling existed between them, which doubtless had much to do with their inability to reach an amicable understanding. The court below dismissed exceptions filed by plaintiff to the adjudication of the trial judge, and refused to grant a permanent injunction as prayed for in the bill, but entered the following decree:

“1st: That the plaintiff, R. G. Gillespie, has not forfeited or abandoned his vested interest in the oil and gas [226]*226under either the Acheson or the Hervey farm or his right to drill such additional-wells through the surface thereof as may be reasonably necessary to obtain that oil or gas, and that his agreements of lease, under which he claims, have not been terminated and ended.

“2d: That the plaintiff, R. G. Gillespie, has the right to drill such additional wells as may be reasonably necessary in any location on said tract of land that will not unnecessarily interfere with, harass or annoy the defendant company in the occupancy of the surface for the purposes for which it now holds the same, and also has the right to maintain his necessary pipe lines and rights of way to and from his producing wells.

“3d: That it is the defendant company’s duty, if in the occupancy of the surface for its purposes it interferes with any right of way of the plaintiff, to supply another right of way that will answer the plaintiff’s purposes, or to pay to him the expenses which he shall reasonably incur in providing for himself such right of way.

“4th: That R. G. Gillespie, the plaintiff, and the American Zinc & Chemical Company, the defendant, each pay one-half the costs of this proceedings.”

The court retained the bill for the purposes of execution, and for the prevention of any further wrongful action in the premises by either of the parties.

Plaintiff has appealed and his counsel have filed sixteen assignments of error; in fifteen of them complaint is made of the dismissal of exceptions to the adjudication, and one is to the final decree. The appellant sought to restrain defendant from interfering not only with the two wells which he located, but also with the drilling of any other wells upon the lands included in the leases. The court below could not have sustained this claim without holding that appellant had the absolute right, without regard to the rights of the lessor of the land and his successors, to locate wells at any point on the demised premises, except on the ten acres surrounding the buildings reserved in the Acheson-lease, [227]*227and in the space of 300 feet about the buildings, which was excepted from the Hervey lease. The Acheson lease contains a provision that the “operations (are) to be conducted so as to interfere the least with farming privileges.” No such provision appears in the Hervey lease. The court below held, and made the finding part of the decree, that appellant had not forfeited or abandoned his vested interest in the oil and gas under either of the tracts, and that he had the right to drill such additional wells as might be reasonably necessary at any location on said tracts of land, that would not unnecessarily interfere with, harass, or annoy the defendant company, in the occupancy of the surface. In reaching this conclusion we feel that the court below gave to appellant everything to which he could justly lay claim.

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Bluebook (online)
93 A. 272, 247 Pa. 222, 1915 Pa. LEXIS 811, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillespie-v-american-zinc-chemical-co-pa-1915.