Gray v. Schoonmaker

119 F.2d 1010, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4672
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 22, 1941
DocketNo. 7547
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 119 F.2d 1010 (Gray v. Schoonmaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. Schoonmaker, 119 F.2d 1010, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4672 (7th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

BRIGGLE, District Judge.

From a decree of the District Court, directing surrender and cancellation of a certain oil and gas lease upon 120 acres of land in Wabash County, Illinois, and dismissing for want of equity a counterclaim of defendants, seeking specific performance of an oral agreement on the part of plaintiffs to execute a certain oil and gas lease on a separate 288 acre tract of land, defendants appeal.

Plaintiff William W. Gray, as trustee of the estate of Allen Gray, deceased (hereinafter referred to as plaintiff or Gray), and others to whom he had later conveyed some of the real estate here in question, filed their bill seeking to cancel and remove as a cloud upon their title a certain oil and gas lease given by plaintiff to the defendants on December 21, 1938, covering 120 acres, lying in Section 15, Township 3, South, Range 14 West, in Wabash County, Illinois. As a basis for such cancellation plaintiffs asserted failure on the part of defendants to perform a certain drilling covenant contained in the lease. Defendants answered, admitting their failure to perform the drilling covenant, but alleged that plaintiffs had excused performance in consideration of defendants completing a test drilling upon adjoining lands (not owned by Gray) which developed a dry hole. Defendants further alleged the plaintiffs had in further consideration of the drilling of the test well and in lieu of the lease upon the 120-acre tract agreed to give them another lease covering the 288-acre tract referred to and located in Section 14, adjoining said Section 15; that although they had offered to release the 120-acre tract, in return for a like lease covering the 288-acre tract, plaintiff had repudiated his agreement and refused to give the lease. The asserted agreement covering the 288-acre tract was concecledly an oral agreement and defendants relied upon performance to remove it from the operation of the Statute of Frauds. The performance relied upon was the drilling of the test well on land adjoining the 120-acre tract.

The facts: In November, 1938, the defendants who were engaged in the oil business entered into certain negotiations with the plaintiff, trustee as aforesaid, who was then the owner of a tract of some 1,048 acres of land commonly known as the Gray Farm, and located in Wabash County, Illinois. This land included both the 120-acre and the 288-acre tracts heretofore referred to. Defendants’ negotiations with plaintiff also contemplated the acquiring by defendants of other leases, notably one from Edith B. Helm, who owned some 700 acres, lying both immediately south and immediately north of the Gray Farm. Included in the Helm tract was the entire northwest quarter of Section 15, which had already been leased to one George Negley and others. Controversy exists as to the character and extent of the conversations between plaintiff and defendants, defendants asserting that plaintiff agreed on numerous occasions to lease his entire tract to defendants, and plaintiff asserting to the contrary. In any event, the transactions took form by the defendants’ obtaining an assignment of the Neg-ley lease upon the Helm land in the northwest quarter of Section 15 (and other lands), and by the defendants’ obtaining from Mrs. Helm an oil and gas lease upon her lands not then under lease. The proposed Gray lease to the defendants, whatever its extent, was dependent upon defendants’ procurement of the Helm and Negley leases. After obtaining contracts with Helm and Negley, defendants then called upon Gray to perform. After considerable bickering, Gray on December 21, [1012]*10121938, tendered to defendants a lease upon the 120-acre tract heretofore referred to, but informed defendants that he would not at that time execute a lease upon the 288racre tract in Section 14. This latter tract had in the meantime taken on added interest by reason of the discovery of a producing well across the river in Indiana. The tendered lease provided for the drilling of test wells upon the 120-acre tract.

The Negley lease which was being assigned to defendants covered in excess of 1,000 acres, including the northwest quarter of Section 15, aforesaid, and while not containing an affirmative covenant to drill a test well, provided for forfeiture in the event such a test should not be commenced upon said tract within thirty days. The Helm lease, likewise, contained no affirmative drilling commitment, but provided for forfeiture in the event lessees should not commence the drilling of a test well within 120 days on the “Cole Farm.” The “Cole Farm” consisted of about 280 acres already covered by the Negley lease, and included the northwest quarter of said Section 15. The 120-acre tract referred to, and covered by the Gray lease, consisted of three 40-acre tracts — the northeast quarter of the southwest quarter, the southwest quarter of the northeast quarter, and the northwest quarter of the southeast quarter of Section 15. It will thus be seen that the “Cole Farm” cornered into the Gray 120 acre tract.'

After considerable controversy, defendants accepted the Gray lease on the 120-acre tract, and as the District Court found, entered into an oral understan'ding and agreement whereby Gray informed defendants that he would relieve them of the covenant to drill a test well on the 120-acre tract, if they would proceed with and complete a test well in the southeast corner of the southeast quarter of the northwest quarter of Section 15 (Cele Farm), with the further proviso that if such test well proved to be dry he would then give defendants a lease upon the 288-acre tract aforesaid. Defendants proceeded with the test well, at approximately the location agreed upon, adjacent to the Gray land, and the same proved to be dry. The defendants thereupon called upon Gray for performance of his oral agreement to give them a lease upon the 288-acre tract which he declined to give. Defendants rely upon the drilling of this test well to remove the oral agreement from the operation of the Statute of Frauds.

The District Court’s findings of fact covered the foregoing, but much more elaborately and in much greater detail. Defendants do not object to any of the lower court’s findings except Finding No. 11, set forth in full in footnote.1 Under [1013]*1013this finding the District Court concluded that under the Negley lease defendants, while they were not obliged to drill a test well had an option to do so, and that the location thereof was a matter of their own choice and, having selected the location prior to the execution of the Gray lease and having exercised their option to drill, that the same must be held to have been located and drilled under the terms of the Negley lease and not in pursuance of the Gray agreement. It is to be noted that the contract for drilling was entered into and the actual drilling commenced some four days before the execution of the Gray lease. While the drilling was optional, it was necessary for defendants to drill the test in order to come into full enjoyment of the Negley leases. The District Court held that neither the drilling nor the location was any consideration for Gray’s oral promise, but rather the same was without consideration and that stich drilling could not be relied upon to take the oral contract in reference to the 288-acre tract out of the operation of the Statute of Frauds.

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In re the Estate of Field
11 Misc. 2d 427 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
119 F.2d 1010, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-schoonmaker-ca7-1941.