Harris v. Morris Plan Co.

61 P.2d 901, 144 Kan. 501, 1936 Kan. LEXIS 116
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedNovember 7, 1936
DocketNo. 32,919
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 61 P.2d 901 (Harris v. Morris Plan Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. Morris Plan Co., 61 P.2d 901, 144 Kan. 501, 1936 Kan. LEXIS 116 (kan 1936).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Thiele, J.:

This appeal is from a judgment canceling a part of an oil and gas lease because of failure to develop under the implied covenants of the lease.

The petition alleged that in August, 1925, the plaintiffs and Mattie Harris executed and delivered to one Christy an oil and gas lease for a term of five years and as much longer as lessee produces oil and gas from the land or the premises are being developed or operated. The lease covered the south half of section 14 and the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 23, in township 27, range 7, Butler county, Kansas. Various assignments of the lease were made, and at the time the petition was filed, Phillips Petroleum Company had the lease on the southwest quarter of section 14. The records of Butler county showed that title to the lease on the southeast quarter of section 14 and the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 23 was in the Morris Plan Company and the Liberty National Bank. It is with the two hundred acres last mentioned that this action deals. In July, 1927, Christy drilled a well in the southwest corner of the southeast quarter of section 14 which produced oil in paying quantities until in 1933; that thereafter oil was not produced regularly, and during 1933 the well and production therefrom were not handled in a good and workmanlike manner, and that in June, 1934, the well was abandoned, and since plaintiffs have received no income therefrom. It also alleged that since the drilling of the above well, oil and gas were produced and marketed from lands adjoining the leased premises on the north, south and west, and that Christy and his assigns permitted drainage of plaintiffs’ lands and failed and refused to develop plaintiffs’ lands with or[503]*503dinary diligence and failed to protect these plaintiffs by drilling offset wells, etc., although request and demand were made, and that neither Christy, the defendant company nor the bank made any effort whatsoever to develop the leasehold except as to the one well mentioned; that by reason of the failure to develop, defendants breached and violated the express and implied covenants of the lease; that by reason of the premises the lease was expired and terminated, but constituted a cloud on plaintiffs’ title. The prayer was for cancellation of the lease, for quieting plaintiffs’ title and for equitable relief.

The Mills Oil Company intervened and filed its answer and alleged its ownership of the lease as to the southeast quarter of section 14 and the northeast quarter of the northeast quarter of section 23; that the well drilled in 1927 produced approximately 40,000 barrels of oil and that for some months prior to September, 1933, the average daily production was seven and one half barrels; that in September, 1933, trouble occurred at the well and it had since spent about $2,000 to overcome the trouble and was continuing its efforts. There are allegations as to developments on near-by leases, including costs and income; that since April, 1930, there was surplus oil production in Kansas; that the price was as low as thirty cents a barrel; that proration by the state and nation limited production, and that a well on the above lease would cost about $17,500, and in conjunction with other wells would cost $50 per month to operate, and that under present conditions a well drilled on the portion of the lease in controversy would not be a profitable investment. It prayed that its title under the lease be quieted and that it have equitable relief. We here observe that at no place in the answer is there any allegation that defendant intends to presently further develop the leased premises or any part thereof nor that if the court should so decree, further development would be undertaken and prosecuted.

At the trial there was no contention about the ownership of the land nor of the lease. Plaintiffs’ evidence showed the drilling of the well by Christy in the southwest corner of the southeast quarter of section 14, in 1927, and that there had been no further development, and that they had received no returns from the lease since June, 1934, and that repeated demands for development had been made, and that plaintiffs had informed Christy, the manager of the Mills Oil Company, that other persons were willing to develop imme[504]*504diately if the existing lease were released. We need not set out the testimony with respect to the amount of oil which the well produced prior to 1934. A plat was also introduced which showed existing oil wells on the leased premises and on other lands in the vicinity and that within a distance of three miles to the northeast there were at least twenty-five wells and within the same distance to the southeast there were at least thirty wells.

The intervenor’s demurrer was overruled and it offered proof respecting the existing well, its production, the trouble that arose in June, 1934, and subsequent efforts to remedy it; that the value of the seven eighths of the oil produced was over $39,000 and the cost of the well and the expense of operation over $30,000 as of June, 1934; there was also considerable testimony as to the geological structure and the thickness of the oil sand; that there was no gas or water pressure; that the oil.sand was hard and compact; that there was little drainage, and the wells on other leases were not draining the leased premises; and that a well would only get the oil from a 600-foot-square area. Defendant’s testimony was to the effect that at any price less than $1.50 per barrel a well could not be profitably drilled and operated, and that it would not be profitable for the Mills Oil Company to drill any wells on the lease in question at the time of the trial and would not have been since 1930. We shall not detail defendant’s evidence as to cost of wells nor production received from other wells in the vicinity.

The trial court held that plaintiffs were entitled to a cancellation of the lease as to the 200 acres in question except as to a ten-acre tract including the oil well drilled thereon, and rendered judgment accordingly. The intervenor’s motion for a new trial was denied and it appeals.

Briefly stated, the appellant presents four reasons why it claims the trial court’s judgment is erroneous:

1. In the absence of demand for further development, the court should have given the holder of the lease a reasonable time to develop.

2. Where there was development on a part of the base lease, and an effort to reestablish production from a well on an assigned part of the lease, should there be cancellation as to the undeveloped portion?

3. Whether, under the circumstances mentioned in (2), there should be cancellation when all the evidence was to the effect that further development would be unprofitable to the operator.

[505]*5054. Whether the evidence, the substance of which was merely there had been no development, was sufficient to sustain the judgment, without some showing of equitable circumstances warranting such relief.

Before entering upon a discussion of these questions, it seems appropriate to repeat the statement made in Greenwood v. Texas-Interstate P. L. Co., 143 Kan. 686, 690, 56 P. 2d 431:

“In consideration of an appeal in an action of the kind before us we start with the assumption that no special findings of fact having been made the trial court regarded as established all facts shown by the evidence which were favorable to the prevailing party. (Gas Co. v. Jones, 75 Kan. 18, 88 Pac. 537.)” (p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 P.2d 901, 144 Kan. 501, 1936 Kan. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-morris-plan-co-kan-1936.