Guleke v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.

126 S.W.2d 38
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 27, 1939
DocketNo. 4993.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 126 S.W.2d 38 (Guleke v. Humble Oil & Refining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guleke v. Humble Oil & Refining Co., 126 S.W.2d 38 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

This suit was filed by appellants to cancel an oil and gas lease held by appellee Phillips Petroleum Company on a half section of land owned by appellants and located in Moore County. The lease was executed by appellants’ grantors, J. A. Box and wife, Laura E. Box, to Humble Oil and Refining Company. After the lease was executed appellants purchased the land and appellee Phillips Petroleum Company, by assignment from the original lessee, became the owner of the oil and gas lease subject to an over-riding royalty of one-thirty-second of any oil or gas that may be produced. The lease was dated November 4, 1926, and provided for a primary term of ten years with the usual provisions for the payment of rentals annually of $320 for the privilege of deferring drilling operations after the first year. It contained a provision substantially to the effect that if, at the expiration of the primary term, oil or gas was not being produced but the lessee was then engaged in drilling or re-working operations on the land, the léase should remain in force so long as such operations were prosecuted with no cessation of more than thirty days and, if they resulted in the production of oil or gas, so long thereafter as oil or gas should be produced from the land.

Appellants alleged that no oil or gas was produced from the premises within the primary term and that no drilling operations for the discovery of oil or gas were begun until after the expiration of the primary term of the lease. They further alleged that the well' that was drilled and such operations . as were performed under the lease were performed with the intention only of prospecting for and developing production of gas.instead of oil, contending that the failure of appellee to begin drilling of the well within the contract period and its failure in good faith to prospect for and make reasonable efforts to produce oil, together with other acts and omissions not necessary here to mention, rendered the lease null and void and by virtue thereof it had expired and terminated by its own terms. They prayed that the cloud cast upon their title by the existence and registration of the lease be removed; that all apparent interest and claim of appellees be divested and for general relief.

The case was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury and at the close of appellants’ testimony,- and in response to the suggestion and motion of ap-pellees that appellants’ evidence had not made out a case that would warrant the relief for which they prayed, judgment was entered in favor of appellees, who were defendants in the trial court. No testimony was offered by appellees but their motion for judgment was granted and judgment accordingly entered in their *40 favor to which appellan'ts duly excepted and from which they gave notice of appeal.

• The case is presented in this court upon a number of assignments of error and propositions, the principal contentions being; first, that the lease terminated by virtue of the failure of appellee Phillips Petroleum Company promptly to market and utilize the gas that was produced from the well and in good faith to develop the leased premises for oil; and, secondly, that, no oil or gas having been produced during the primary term of the lease and no actual drilling having been done until after the expiration of that term, the lease terminated by its own terms.

The first of these contentions' is based upon the allegation and proof that no' gas was actually placed upon the market until some three months after the well was completed and no reason or excuse given for the delay, and further, that the well was drilled primarily as an effort to produce gas and no serious effort was made to produce oil. We think these contentions are fully answered by the fact i that the lease made no provision for any specific term in which the product of the well should be sold or in any manner utilized after it was discovered. Appellants neither alleged nor proved any dilatory tactics nor was it shown that appellees were in any manner negligent in the matter of utilizing and marketing the product of the well.

The record shows that gas was discovered in the well at a depth of 3170 feet but drilling operations continued until it reached a depth of 3408 feet. No oil having been discovered, the well was plugged back to the gas horizon of 3170 feet and there completed as a gas well. Appellants’ witness, G. B. Turner, testified, he was District Superintendent of appellee Phillips Petroleum Company. He said that the well was drilled primarily as a gas well but as a test for oil and that when the depth of 3408 feet was reached it was reported that water was in the hole and, there being no showing of oil, the well was plugged back to protect the gas formation. The lease provided that the land was being leased for the development of oil or gas and that, if either should be found, certain royalties should be paid to the Owner of the land and the rights of the lessee should continue as long as either oil or gas was produced from the land. There' is no indication that the production of oil was considered as primary to the production of gas and the record does not disclose any dereliction of duty on the part of appellee in this respect. It was shown that other wells located within the general vicinity but several miles distant from this one were producing oil but, at most, that fact could be considered only as a suggestion that oil may be present in the land covered by the lease here involved.

In so far as appellees may have failed promptly to market and utilize the product of the well or to prosecute further operations for the development of oil are concerned, being absent from the specific provisions of the lease, they could be considered only as implied covenants the violation of which gives rise to an action for damages. It has many times been held by the courts that, in oil and gas leases containing specific conditions of forfeiture, or termination, a forfeiture can not be maintained upon any ground other than those specified. It is also held, and is now a rule of law well established, that if implied covenants fully and with reasonable diligence to develop the land are breached, such breach will not give rise to an equitable suit for forfeiture or cancellation. Jacobs v. Robinson, Tex. Civ.App., 241 S.W: 241; Grubb v. McAfee, 109 Tex. S27, 212 S.W. 464; Cheek v. Metzer, 116 Tex. 356, 291 S.W. 860; Cole Pet. Co. v. United States Gas & Oil Co., 121 Tex. 59, 41 S.W.2d 414, 86 A.L.R. 719.

Moreover, in our opinion, appellants failed to establish these contentions as a matter of fact. Their witness, Turner, testified that gas in quantity of more than thirty-nine million feet per day was discovered at a depth of 3170 feet, yet drilling continued until a total depth of 3408 feet was reached. He said that the well was drilled as a gas well, but testing for oil, and that, when it was reported that water was in the hole, and no oil had been discovered, the well was plugged back to the gas horizon to protect the gas formation. Appellants alleged in their petition that gas in paying quantities was discovered in the well and, although the witness did not so state, we think it but reasonable to assume the drilling that was done after the gas formation was encountered was for the purpose of testing and exploring for oil.

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Bluebook (online)
126 S.W.2d 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guleke-v-humble-oil-refining-co-texapp-1939.