Grubstake Inv. Ass'n v. Southern Natural Gas Co.

20 F.2d 1, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2448
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 1927
DocketNo. 4840
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 20 F.2d 1 (Grubstake Inv. Ass'n v. Southern Natural Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grubstake Inv. Ass'n v. Southern Natural Gas Co., 20 F.2d 1, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2448 (5th Cir. 1927).

Opinion

BRYAN, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit in equity to enforce rights under an original and supplementary contract for the supply of natural gas. Both sides, appellee in the bill, and appellants in their answer, prayed for specific performance of the contract and for an accounting. In addition, the bill sought an injunction, which was granted, against interference by appellants with appellee’s rights to drill gas wells upon the land described in the original contract.

On October 13,1921, appellants, being the owners'of oil and gas leases covering 50,000 acres of land upon which natural gas had been developed, located an average distance of about 65 miles from San Antonio, Tex., entered into a contract with one W. M. Sweet-man, under the terms of which they conveyed to him all their interest and estate in gas in wells then upon said property, and in wells that might thereafter be drilled thereon, subject to the faithful performance by him, or his assigns, of certain obligations, including the construction within 18 months of a 12-ineh pipe line from the gas field to San Antonio; the taking of all gas which could' be disposed of in San Antonio; and the payment of five cents per 1,000 cubic feet for all gas so taken. Sweetman agreed to advance appellants $2,000 per month until the completion of the pipe line, to be expended in drilling additional gas wells, and to be deducted at the same rate out of monthly settlements for gas after the completion of the pipe line. Section 10 of the contract reads as follows:

“First parties [appellants] agree that when a sufficient volume of gas to meet the requirement of second party [Sweetman] cannot be delivered at the meter or meters stationed at the gas well or wells at natural pressure of one hundred fifty (150) pounds per square inch, when connected to second party’s pipe lines, and second party does not thereupon elect to subject said gas to artificial pressure, second party shall thereupon have the right to resort to other gas than that purchased hereby or hereafter included herein, in which event, however, first parties shall have the right to take possession of such gas and dispose of it in such manner as they may see fit, unless second party in such contingency shall agree to take all of the gas which first party can furnish at prevailing pressure of wells although it be less than full requirements of said second party.”

Sweetman further agreed “to pay for a minimum of 3,000,000 cubic feet of gas per day at 5 cents per 1,000 cubic feet, beginning upon completion of the line to the city of San Antonio, regardless of a less amount of gas actually taken therefrom, payments to be made monthly as above provided.” Appellants, on their part, agreed to use reasonable diligence in the drilling of additional gas wells in an effort to maintain a reserve of 80 per cent, in excess of the requirements of Sweet-man, the party of the second part, and, in the event such a reserve should not be maintained by them, that the party of the second part should have the right, after notice, to obtain any deficiency from third parties, and also to drill the necessary wells on the land described in the original contract, charging the reasonable cost thereof to appellants, provided it had not theretofore been reasonably demonstrated that further drilling would be useless.

The contract was to continue for ten years upon completion of. the pipe line, “and for as long as first party can deliver the gas as above mentioned.” On May 3,1922, Sweetman and his associates entered into a contract with the San Antonio Public Service Company, which had a franchise from the city of San Antonio to supply that city and its inhabitants with gas, under the terms of which contract they agreed to supply as much gas as the public service company should sell and desire to use as fuel in its power plant, the gas to be delivered in pipe lines at the city gates at a pressure of not less than 45 nor more than 55 pounds above atmosphere. On August 26, 1922, appellants and Sweetman entered into [3]*3a supplementary contract, by •which they modified the original contract “to the extent that the second party hereto [Sweetman], his heirs, or assigns, shall be authorized to acquire, without reference to the ability of the first parties hereto [appellants] to furnish the requirements of the second party as in their aforesaid contract [of October 13, 1921] specified, the maximum of 365,000,000 cubic feet of natural gas per annum (to be taken annually) from the properties situated in Bexar county, Texas, known as the 'Gas Ridge,’ as provided in contract of even date herewith,” with the Gas Ridge Development Company and others; “it being understood that the aforesaid contract between the parties hereto, of date October 13,1921, is hereby modified only in the respects herein specifically provided and in no other respect.”

As consideration for that contract, appellants were to receive one cent per 1,000 cubic feet for natural gas which should be taken from the Gas Ridge field. Sweetman and his associates assigned the original and supplemental contracts to appellee, the Southern Natural Gas Company.

Before the original contract was entered into, appellants had developed three gas wells, and believed that a practically inexhaustible supply of gas could be developed on their land. San Antonio was the nearest and only available market for gas, but there was no pipe line loading from the land of appellants to it. At the time the original contract was made, the parties to it understood, not only that Sweetman would construct the necessary pipe line, but also that he would undertake to enter into a contract with the San Antonio Public Service Company which would contain in substance the provisions that were in fact subsequently made as to quantity and pressure at San Antonio.

Appellee constructed the pipe line within the time agreed upon at a cost of approximately $1,000,000, and advanced $28,000 to appellants at the rate of $2,000 per month. In December of 1921, or January of 1922, appellants brought in another gas well, making four in all. When the supplementary contract was entered into on August 26,1922, appellants still believed that the wells on their land were capable of producing gas far in excess of appellee’s requirements. The pipe line was completed and gas turned into it in November of 1922, and until January of 1923, the wells of appellants delivered, under natural pressure, gas in sufficient quantity, and with sufficient pressure at the point of delivery, to supply all the requirements of appellee and of the Public Service Company. But after that period the supply gradually diminished until September of 1923, when the wells of appellants ceased to put any gas into the pipe line. The requirements of the Public Service Company were a daily average of 7,-000,000 cubic feet of gas. A pressure at the wells of 125 pounds would deliver that quantity of gas at San Antonio at a pressure of 45 pounds above atmosphere. A pressure at the wells of 150 pounds would deliver 8,500,000 cubic feet at San Antonio at a pressure of 50 pounds above atmosphere. Appellee paid for all gas which it received, but, after the failure of appellants’ wells, refused to make any further payments, although the wells in the Gas Ridge field have since continued to supply gas. In March of .1923 appellants wrote to appellee that they were unable to furnish a sufficient volume at a natural pressure of 150 pounds to meet its requirements, and called upon appellee to decide whether it would subject the gas to artificial pressure or take it at the prevailing pressure.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F.2d 1, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2448, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grubstake-inv-assn-v-southern-natural-gas-co-ca5-1927.