Gray v. Merritt

276 S.W. 187
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedOctober 14, 1926
DocketNo. 691-4244
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 276 S.W. 187 (Gray v. Merritt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Merritt, 276 S.W. 187 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1926).

Opinion

HARVEY, P. J.

This case is here on writ of error to the Court of Civil Appeals for the Eighth supreme judicial district, sued out by plaintiffs in error C. F. Gray and J. E. Spencer against defendants in error O. F. Merritt and J. W. Jewell for the purpose of having reviewed by this court a judgment entered herein by said Court of Civil Appeals reversing the judgment of the trial court herein and remanding said cause for another trial.

The facts forming the basis of suit and other relevant matters shown by the record are substantially as follows:

On May 6, 1922, said C. F. Merritt held an oil lease on a certain tract of five acres of land in Eastland county, in the vicinity of which tract a number of oil wells had been drilled by other operators, and a strata of oil sand found at a depth of approximately 2400 or 2500 feet. The said C. F. Merritt and J. W. Jewell, desiring, as partners in the enterprise, to drill a well on said tract of land for the purpose of finding and producing oil therefrom, entered into negotiations with said O. F. Gray and J. E. Spencer with the view of making a contract with said last named parties of the nature and effect of the contract that was thereafter entered into between said parties as hereinafter shown. During all such negotiations all the parties to such contract knew the depth at which oil had been found in such other wells that had been theretofore drilled by other operators in the vicinity of said five-acre tract of land, as above shown, and agreed, understood, and contemplated that, if oil were to be found and produced from said five-acre tract of land; it would be necessary to drill to the approximate depth of such other wells in that vicinity, to wit, approximately 2400 or 2500 feet, and that there was no probability or prospect of finding oil on said five-acre tract of land at a materially lesser depth.

All of said parties, having discussed the foreg'oing matters among themselves, and having same in contemplation at the time, made and entered into a joint contract on May 6, 1922, wherein and whereby the said Merritt and Jewell agreed and bound themselves “to drill an oil well” on said five-acre tract of land, and “to pay all expenses of drilling said well and to furnish all tools, pipe, etc., necessary for the drilling of same.” Under and by the terms of said contract said Gray and Spencer agreed and were bound to furnish “all the material and labor necessary for the erection of a standard derrick to be located on said five acres of land” for the [188]*188use of said Merritt and Jewell in drilling said oil well. And in consideration of such obligation on the part of said Gray and Spencer to furnish said derrick, as above stated, they were to be “entitled to a one-sixteenth interest in said well, or to receive one-sixteenth of the gross- production thereof,” etc.; and, as additional evidence of the rights of Gray and Spencer in the joint enterprise, said O. P. Merritt, as part and parcel of such contract, assigned to Gray and Spencer “an undivided one-sixteenth working interest in all oil, gas, and other minerals in and under that may be produced” from said tract of land. Such contract so made and entered into by'and between said parties is evidenced by two instruments of writing executed contemporaneously with each other, and in the same transaction, on May 6, 1922; one of said instruments showing the obligations and contractual rights of the respective parties to the contract, as hereinabove stated, and the other showing the assignment of said one-sixteenth '“working interest” to Gray and Spencer as above stated.

Within two weeks after the date of said contract said Gray and Spencer completed and delivered into the possession and control of Merritt and Jewell the derrick which they were obligated by said contract to furnish in said enterprise, and Merritt and Jewell thereupon took possession and control of said derrick, and began using same in the drilling of a well on said five-acre tract of land. The value of said derrick, when completed, as aforesaid, was found by the jury to be $3,000. When said derrick had been completed and furnished as above stated, the said Merritt and Jewell began the drilling of a well on said five -acres of land, as above stated, and continued such drilling operations therewith until about the first part of August, A. D. 1922, whén they ceased such drilling operations, and, without the fault or consent of Gray and Spencer, abandoned the further drilling of such well, and have not since such time conducted any drilling operations on said tract of land. The depth reached in the drilling of such well when same was abandoned by Merritt and Jewell, as above stated, was approximately 1000 or 1200 feet. The said Merritt and Jewell did not prosecute with due diligence the drilling of a well on said land to a depth where it was contemplated and understood by the parties to such contract, at the time of the making of the contract, that oil was probably to be found, to wit, to a depth approximately 2400 or 2500 feet, but they have abandoned such contract, without legal excuse, and had so abandoned same when this suit was filed.

On January 9, 1923, said Gray and Spencer, as plaintiffs, filed this suit to rescind said contract on account of said nonperformance and abandonment of same by Merritt and Jewell, and to recover of said last-named parties the sum of $3,000, being the value of said derrick furnished by them to Merritt and JeweE in pursuance of said contract. At the time of filing of such suit said plaintiffs procured the issuance and execution of a writ of attachment, which was levied upon certain property of said defendants.

Upon the trial of the case before the trial court, with the aid of a jury, judgment was rendered in favor of Gray and Spencer for the sum of $3,000, as sued for, with foreclosure of the attachment lien, and against defendants, Merritt and Jewell, on their cross-action for damages. The judgment rendered by the trial court does not in express terms declare said contract rescinded, nor does it in express terms declare rescinded said assignment of the one-sixteenth “working interest” by Merritt to Gray and Spencer. But the pleadings and evidence of plaintiffs Gray and Spencer show such “working interest” to be practically worthless, and that they have derived no benefit therefrom, and that they “offer to do full equity in the premises, under the direction of the court” in regard to said one-sixteenth “working interest.”

We have not. undertaken to set out in detail the pleadings of the parties, nor the evidence, but have only set out the substance of such relevant facts established by the verdict and judgment rendered in the trial court, as we deem sufficient to a proper understanding of the questions of law which we shaU now proceed to discuss.

The terms of the written contract obligated Merritt and JeweE to “drill an oil weE” on said tract of land. The term “oil well,” as used in such written contract, is ambiguous, and of uncertain meaning, and the written terms of the contract of .themselves furnish no test* by which the meaning of such term may be determined. The written terms of such contract do show that it was contemplated that the “oil well” to be drilled by Merritt and Jewell might probably eventuate in a “dry hole,” and express provisions are made to govern the rights of the parties in such event. But the point or depth at which the “oil well” shall be deemed a “dry hole” under the terms of the contract is not shown by the face of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
276 S.W. 187, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-merritt-texcommnapp-1926.