Harris v. Cobb

38 S.E. 559, 49 W. Va. 350, 1901 W. Va. LEXIS 40
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 38 S.E. 559 (Harris v. Cobb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Cobb, 38 S.E. 559, 49 W. Va. 350, 1901 W. Va. LEXIS 40 (W. Va. 1901).

Opinions

McWhorter, Judge:

By deed dated July 25, 1896, Rachel A. Myers and James Myers, her husband, conveyed with general warranty to Elizabeth J. Harris, the wife of B. E. Harris, a tract of about fifty-two acres of land in Tyler County, which deed contained the following clause: “The parties of the first part reserve unto themselves and do not convey by this deed the equal one-half part of the usual royalty of one-eighth of all the petroleum or oil in and underlying the tract of land hereby conveyed,” which deed was recorded in the clerk’s office of the county court of Tyler County on the day of its date. On the 23rd day of January, 1897, Elizabeth J. Harris and her said husband by deed of lease of that day granted to James Lowry the exclusive right to operate and drill for petroleum and gas, to lay pipe lines, etc., on the said tract of land, for the period of five years from the date of the lease, and so long thereafter as oil or gas could be produced in paying quantities. “The party of the second part (James Lowry) his heirs or assigns, agrees to give the party [352]*352of the first part one-eighth part of all the petroleum obtained from said premises as produced in the crude state, the said one-eighth part of the pertoleum to be set apart in the pipe line running said petroleum to the credit and for the benefit of the said party of the first part.” James Lowry by deed of assignment transferred and conveyed the same to James S. Glenn and Eugene M. Cobb, who assigned a portion thereof to L. E. Mallory. The last three named took possession and operated said leasehold and produced oil in paying quantities. On the 29th of January, 1898, Elizabeth J. Harris, L. E. Mallory, E. M. Cobb and James S. Glenn executed a division order, whereby they certified their ownership of the wells on the said leasehold and authorized the Eureka Pipe Line Company until further notice to receive for transportation and storage oil from said wells for said parties in the proportions named, to-wit: to Elizabeth J. Harris, one-eighth royalty, to L. E. Mallory and E. M. Cobb each seventy-thirty-seconds, and James S.Glennfourteen-thirty-seconds, subject to their usual terms and conditions. Elizabeth J. Harris filed her bill in the circuit court of Tyler County against Eugene M. Cobb, James S. Glenn, L. E. Mallory, Eachel Myers, James Lowry and the Eureka Pipe Line Company, alleging the facts aforesaid, claiming under the reservation or exception in the said lease the one-eighth of all the oil produced in the crude state to be set apart in the pipe lines to her credit; that by the reservation in the said deed from Eachel A. Myers and husband the said Myers is entitled to another one-sixteenth of all the oil produced or to be produced from said tract of land; that notwithstanding her right to receive the full one-eighth of all the oil so produced and notwithstanding the division order in which said Cobb, Glenn and Mallory agreed that she should receive the one-eighth, yet they have not delivered'the same to her, nor have they permitted the Eureka Pipe Line Company to deliver the same to her, but have induced said company to refuse to so deliver it to her, and prays that the defendants Cobb, Glenn and Mallory, and each of them, be required to answer her said bill and be required to discover, and say and disclose how much petroleum oil has been produced from said tract By them or either of them, and the value thereof at the respective times when produced and run into the pipe lines of said company, and that they and each of them may discover, say and disclose to the [353]*353court the amount of the royalty oil, to-wit, the one-eighth royalty and the value thereof, belonging to plaintiff produced and run into said pipe lines, and which they refuse to deliver, that she have a decree therefor, and that said defendants be required to perform, abide by and execute the covenants and agreements contained in said lease and that a special receiver be appointed if necessary to receive and take charge of said royalty oil under the direction of the court, and for general relief, which bill was sworn to. The defendant Lowry demurred to the bill, and filed his answer, and defendants Cobb, Glenn and Mallory filed their joint demurrer and answer, and Rachel A. Myers filed her demurrer and answer, in all of which demurrers plaintiff joined and to the answers replied generally. The deposition of B. F. Harris was taken and filed on behalf of plaintiff, and on the 17th day of August, 1899, the cause was heard upon the said pleadings, the bill taken for confessed as to Eureka Pipe Line Co., when the court overruled the demurrers, and ascertained that by the deed of January 25,1896, the defendant Myers in conveying the tract of about fifty-two acres of land to plaintiff Harris excepted and did not convey the equal one-half part of the usual royalty of one-eighth of all the petroleum or oil in and underlying the said tract of land; that plaintiff Elizabeth J. Harris by her lease of January 23, 1897, to James Lowry leased and demised to said Lowry the said tract of land for the purpose of drilling and operating the same for the production of petroleum oil and gas, in which she reserved and the said Lowry agreed to give and yield to her the one-eighth part of all the oil produced and obtained from said land as produced in the crude state, to be set apart to her credit in the pipe lines; that said Lowry assigned and transferred said lease to the defendants Cobb and Glenn and subsequently and before this suit said Cobb and Glenn assigned and transferred an interest therein to said Mal-loy, and that the three last named defendants in pursuance of said lease entered upon and developed said tract and produced therefrom oil in paying quantities; that said operators have never delivered or paid any royalty of such oil to any one, and ascertaining that of the oil produced and to be produced from said land Rachel A. Myers is entitled to the one-sixteenth, the plaintiff Elizabeth J. Harris to one-eighth of fifteen-sixteenths, and the defendants Cobb, Glenn and Mallory to the [354]*354remainder thereof, that is to say, that Rachel A. Myers is entitled to eight-one hundred and twenty-eighths of such oil, plaintiff to fifteen-one hundred and twenty-eights and the said Cobb, Glenn and Mallory together to one hundred and five-one hundred and twenty-eighths, and decreed its distribution accordingly, and it was decreed that the Eureka Pipe Line Co. deliver and pay over to said parties in said proportions the oil hereafter to be run into said pipe lines, and that of the royalty oil, now in the pipe lines said company should deliver to plaintiff an amount equal to fifteen-one hundred and twenty-eignths of all oil produced from said land and run into said lines, and shall then pay and deliver to said Rachel Myers the remainder, or eight-one hundred and twenty-eighths of the whole of said oil, if there be so much in the pipe lines, it being intended to dispose of the royalty oil accumulated during the pendency of the suit. The cause was referred to a commissioner to ascertain and report the amount of oil produced from said land and run into the pipe lines, the value thereof, and to whom the same has been paid and delivered, and in what proportion, and on motion of plaintiff K. S. Boreman was appointed a special receiver, of the royalty oil three-sixteenths, to take charge of and sell the same at the best price obtainable when and as often as in his judgment should be prudent. From this decree the defendants Eugene M. Cobb, James S. Glenn and L. E. Mallory appealed, and say the court erred in decreeing that Elizabeth J. Harris is entitled to more than her proportionate part of the one-eighth of the oil reserved in her deed of lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 S.E. 559, 49 W. Va. 350, 1901 W. Va. LEXIS 40, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-cobb-wva-1901.