Hankey v. Kramp

5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 439
CourtWood Circuit Court
DecidedApril 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 439 (Hankey v. Kramp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wood Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hankey v. Kramp, 5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 439 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

King, J.

(orally.)

In the court of common pleas, of Wood county, Ohio, Peter Kramp brought an action against John R. Hankey and others upon a written agreement or lease which he claims to have made to the defendants for some of his lands, by which he granted to them the privilege and right to enter upon certain premises and mine for gas and oil.

[440]*440One of the provisions of that instrument was, that should gas be found in sufficient quantities to justify marketing the same, the consideration in full to the party of the first part was to be one hundred dollars per annum for the gas from each well so long as it was sold therefrom. The lessees of this lease sold and assigned it, and the parties who acquired their interest entered upon the premises and did mine for gas and oil, and in doing that, they drilled some gas wells from which gas was obtained.

They connected these wells up with a pipe line which conveyed gas to the village of Bowling Green, being the line of The Peoples Gas Company. They had other wells upon the line and marketed the gas from such wells as they had to the village of Bowling Green for some period of time,

The petition states that they marketed the gas from the six wells in question, during the year ending December 19,1893, for which they became indebted, under the provisions of the lease, to the plaintiff, Kramp, in thé sum of six hundred dollars with interest from December 19, 1893.

The petition was filed some time after December 19, 1893 — about the 5th of April, 1894. There was an answer filed to the petition in which they admit the ownership of the plaintiff to the lands; the execution and delivery of the lease or contract; that defendants took possession of the lands; that they drilled a number of wells; that there was a stipulation in the lease that if gas should be found in sufficient quantities to justify marketing, the consideration in full to plaintiff should be one hundred dollars per annum for the same from each well so long as the same shall be sold; and they deny every other allegation in the petition.

They claim but one well did produce gas in sufficient quantities to justify marketing the same, and that gas was only sold from one well, and that they had offered to pay plaintiff for the one well at the rate of one hundred dollars per year, and they were all the time willing and are now willing to pay the one hundred dollars.

The case went to trial and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for five hundred dollars and some interest, the jury having found from the testimony that five of the wells drilled were producing gas and that the gas was being used and marketed by the defendants.

Several errors are assigned.

'It is claimed that there was some evidence admitted that was improper and that the court erred in its charge.

The only thing in the way of evidence that need be noticed is an exception taken to an answer in a a deposition. The witness was asked what he had been told by one of the defendants that he should say to the plaintiff if the plaintiff should ever ask him what the defendants were going'to do about taking this gas, and the witness said that one of the defendants had told him he should say to the plaintiff something that might mislead him as to what they were about to do with the gas. We do not think that evidence was material, and cannot see how it tended to prove anything, yet we do not think it was so prejudicial to the defendants that The principal errors claimed are to the charge of the court. The evi- ■ dence shows there were six wells drilled, and these six wells were connected and run into the pipes of the gas company, and through these pipes to the connections put in to furnish gas to the residents of the village of Bowling Green, and for probably a year before the commencement of this suit, in April, 1894, gas had been furnished by these parties ■who were in the occupancy of these premises to patrons in the village [441]*441of Bowling Green, and they had sold quite a large amount of gas; and it •was clearly demonstrated if there was any gas at all flowing from these wells that there was nothing to prevent it from flowing into the main pipe which supplied the village and mingling with the other gas, if any, which the defendants owned.

If the wells produced no gas there was nothing to flow into the. main pipe, but if the wells did produce gas, then it must be that it flowed into the main pipe, and it was upon that question that the evidence hinged, and the plaintiff relied largely upon the fact that these wells were connected up and so remained for more than a year.

It was shown that they were not connected up on the 19th of December, but there was nothing to show that they were not connected on the 27th of December, a matter of ten days later. It was claim,ed by the defendants below that they must have been connected on the 19th or else the plaintiff would not be entitled to recover for a year’s rental.

The court charged the jury upon that proposition, and this is complained of: “ that if the gas from these wells had been used for a year before the commencement of this suit the plaintiff was entitled to recover for that year from any and all wells from which gas had been furnished in paying quantities for one whole year prior to the bringing of this suit,” and in the construction of this contract we concur. We think that was correct, and that a verdict and judgment rendered upon that theory would be a verdict and judgment upon the plaintiff’s right of action which had accrued to him up to the bringing of this action on the 19th of April, 1894.

The defendants submitted certain requests which were refused, and I will read two or three of them:

1. “The defendants are not bound to pay for gas used under the boilers in pumping the oil wells on plaintiff’s farm under the lease”.
2. “The plaintiff cannot recover in this case for the year beginning December 19, 1892, if no gas was sold from the plaintiff’s wells until after the 27th day of December, 1892.” That I have referred to and disposed of.
8. “Even if the plaintiff might be under some circumstances entitled to recover pay for the gas used by the defendants in drilling and operating the wells upon his land, he cannot recover for the same in this suit nnder the clause providing for a rental of one hundred dollars per year for the gas sold from each well.” We think the court properly refused that one.

Now, as to the first request. There was some evidence to show, or it was claimed by the defendants, that while this gas was connected and run into the pipes which supplied the village of Bowling Green, there was not very much of it in quantity, and they claimed in fact that outside of one well there was not any more gas than would be sufficient to operate the wells themselves, and for the purpose of operating the machinery necessary to be operated on this lease, they piped gas from other wells which they owned on adjoining property, what is called the Wilcox well, I believe, and that the amount which they so procured from all the wells was not more than sufficient to run their own, and that although they sold it, they ought not to be required to pay for it since they had to furnish gas from other wells in its place to operate this lease. This is the ground of the first request.

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5 Ohio Cir. Dec. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hankey-v-kramp-ohcirctwood-1896.