Grooms v. Minton

250 S.W. 543, 158 Ark. 448, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 445
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedApril 30, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 250 S.W. 543 (Grooms v. Minton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grooms v. Minton, 250 S.W. 543, 158 Ark. 448, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 445 (Ark. 1923).

Opinion

McCulloch, C. J.

Appellees are the owners of a tract of land, containing 40 acres, situated near Harrisburg, in Poinsett County, and on August 7, 1919, they executed to a group of persons residing in that portion of the State, who are the appellants in the present case, a mineral lease of the land, authorizing the exploration for and development and production of oil, gas, coal and other minerals.

The lease contract is, in most respects, similar to the form generally in use and like those involved in other cases decided by this court, with the exception of a certain clause, which will be set forth later. The contract provided, in substance, that for the consideration of the sum of one dollar, paid by the lessees, and in further consideration of the covenants “hereinafter contained on the part of the second parties,” the premises are leased for a term of ten years for the purpose of mining for oil, gas, coal and other minerals, and removing the same when mined. The privilege is given to lay pipe lines and place machinery to be used in mining, and the lessees are required to pay royalty upon the production of any of the minerals mentioned. There are other provisions with reference to the manner in which the pipes should be laid and the location of drilling operations as to distance from houses and barns. Two of the clauses of the contract read as follows:

“It is agreed that this'lease shall remain in force for a term of ten years from this date, and as long thereafter as oil, gas or coal, or either of them, is produced therefrom by the parties of the second part, their successors or assigns.”

“It being in the minds of the parties thereto that there has been no prospecting for oil, gas or coal, or lignite, etc., in Northeast Arkansas in many years, and may not be for many years to come, unless extraordinary inducements are made; therefore, this lease is given partly to encourage or make possible the prospecting for oil, gas, coal, etc., in this territory. It is understood and agreed that, if no prospecting or drilling for oil, gas, lignite- or coal, etc., is commenced in the above mentioned territory within a period of five years from this date, this lease will be null and void; provided, however, that this lease may be kept in force for a period of two years longer by the payment to first parties by second parties or their successors, annually, in advance, ground rent at the rate of ten cents per acre per annum, which the first parties hereby bind themselves to accept when tendered; and it is agreed that the commencing of a well as above provided shall be and operate as a full liquidation of all rent, under this provision during the remainder of the term of this lease; and it is agreed that the commencing of a well as above provided shall be considered as a part consideration for ¿his lease.”

Appellants acquired leases covering other lands in the same locality, and later subleased a considerable quantity of the lands to one Scott under a special contract whereby the latter agreed to begin drilling, and, pursuant to the contract, Scott drilled one or more wells, which produced nothing, and proved to be dry holes. The land leased from appellees was not, however, embraced in the lease to Scott, and no mining or drilling operations have been conducted on that land. It is conceded that there has been no discovery of oil, gas or other minerals in that portion of the State, and that the territory is wholly undeveloped as to the discovery and production of minerals.

Appellees instituted the present action against appellants in the. chancery court of Poinsett County on April 6, 1921, seeking a cancellation of the lease on the ground that its execution was procured by fraudulent misrepresentations concerning the intention of the lessees with respect to the time for drilling an oil or gas well on the land in question, and also on the ground that there had been a forfeiture on account of the failure of appellants to begin drilling a well on the land within a reasonable time. Appellants answered, denying the charges of fraud arid disputing the alleged ground of forfeiture.

The chancellor held in the final decree that, notwithstanding the specifications of the contract, there was an implied covenant on the part of appellants, as lessees, to begin operations on the land in question within a reasonable time, and that this covenant had not been performed by commencing operations in apt time, and cancellation of the lease was decreed on that ground. There were no findings made by the chancellor with respect to the charges of fraud in procuring the lease. We have, however, fully considered the testimony on the issue as to fraudulent misrepresentations, and find that the charges of fraud are not sustained by the evidence.

The decree is defended by counsel for appellee on the ground that there is no mutuality in the covenants contained in the contract, that the consideration of the payment of one dollar is not sufficient to support the contract, and that the decree for cancellation was justified on that ground. The validity of the contract is not attacked on that ground in the pleadings, and it does not appear, from the recitals of thé decree, that the chancellor passed on that question, but it is debated by both sides in the briefs, and we must assume that it was treated as an issue below.

Counsel for appellees attempt to distinguish this case from former decisions upholding similar contracts on the ground that, in the former decisions, the length of time specified for commencement of operations (one year) is so much shorter than the time specified in the present contract (five years) that it materially affects the question of consideration. Lawrence v. Mahoney, 145 Ark. 310; Epperson v. Helbron, 145 Ark. 566; Rogers v. Magnolia Oil & Gas Co., 156 Ark. 103; Guffey v. Smith, 237 U. S. 101. The distinction sought to be made is not sound, for the time specified for commencing operations is not unreasonable, in view of -the fact that the territory is wholly undeveloped. The contract itself recites reasons which are sufficient to make the specified time reasonable, and therefore the differences in time as to the contract in other cases referred to do not afford sufficient reason for holding that the consideration failed because of the additional length of time given for beginning operations. We think that the 'contract, so far as concerns the consideration, is governed by the cases cited above, and that it is a valid contract based upon sufficient consideration.

This brings us to a consideration of the question upon which the chancellor based his decree, namely, that, notwithstanding the fact that the contract specified the time for commencement of operations, there was an implied covenant on the part of appellants to begin operations in the development of minerals on this particular land within a reasonable time, and that, there having been no operations begun within a reasonable time, the lease should be canceled. The court evidently based its conclusion on the decisions of this court in Mansfield Gas Co. v. Alexander, 97 Ark. 167, Mansfield Gas Co. v. Parkhill, 114 Ark. 419, and Millar v. Mauney, 150 Ark. 161, and counsel for appellees defends the correctness of the decree on the authority of those decisions.

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Bluebook (online)
250 S.W. 543, 158 Ark. 448, 1923 Ark. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grooms-v-minton-ark-1923.