Hill v. Black Gold Petroleum Co.

1938 OK 447, 83 P.2d 164, 183 Okla. 468, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 315
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 13, 1938
DocketNo. 28176.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1938 OK 447 (Hill v. Black Gold Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Black Gold Petroleum Co., 1938 OK 447, 83 P.2d 164, 183 Okla. 468, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 315 (Okla. 1938).

Opinion

DAVISON, J.

This action was instituted by E. P. Hill and Bessie Hill in the court of common pleas of Oklahoma county against the Black Gold Petroleum Company. The plaintiffs’ petition asked for damages in the sum of $300 for injury to their residence and $2,000 for' damage to the surface right of their lot and premises alleged to have been caused by placing and retaining certain improvements thereon in connection with the operation of an oil well located in the same block. Judgment on the pleadings was rendered in favor of the defendant. Plaintiffs appealed.

The plaintiffs’ cause of action is based upon what they call a “contract and agreement” entered into on July 27, 1935, a copy of which was attached to the petition and is as follows:

“Black Gold Petroleum Company “Oklahoma City, Okla., July 27, 1936 “Mr. E. P. Hill,
“Oklahoma City, Oklahoma.
“Dear Sir: •
“This will confirm our agreement of recent date wherein we have agreed and do hereby agree to pay you the sum of One Hundred Seventy Eive ($175.00) Dollars, for damages to your premises, being Lot 6, Block 25, Howes Capitol Addition to Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, including cutting out four trees, moving fence, etc., incidental and necessary to the drilling of a well for oil and gas by us on said Block 25, Howes Capitol Addition, said payment to be construed as full payment for any and all damages done to your property relative to the foregoing in connection with the drilling of said well.
“It is understood and agreed that after said well has been drilled that we will leave your premises in the same condition as at the .present time save and except the foregoing and subject to reasonable use thereof in moving in and moving out drilling machinery and equipment.
“You will note your acceptance of the foregoing in the space provided therefor below.
“Yours very truly,
“Black Gold Petroleum Company “By
“President
“Accepted:
“Erank P. Hill”
In the petition it is alleged:
“That prior to the 27th day of July, 1936, the defendant had drilled an oil and gas well in block 25 of Howes Capitol addition to the city of Oklahoma City, Oklahoma. That in order to operate said well it was necessary for the defendant to have space to place its power house, tanks, motors, slush pits and other machinery necessary and incident to the proper and successful operation of said oil well. That after said contract was made and entered into and the said defendant did not enter upon. the premises of these plaintiffs it caused to be erected a sheet-iron house 10 x 10 and about 12 feet high, housing an electric motor. That said structure is placed upon the rear of the lot of these plaintiffs. That the defendant erected a concrete wall about four feet high, banking the same up with dirt, covering a large portion and area of the back yard of these plaintiffs.”

It is further alleged that plaintiffs erected a brick dwelling house on lot 6, block 25, and lived in same and that the entire surface of said lot is necessary and useful to the plaintiffs for the purpose of a full enjoyment of their home and property.

It is further alleged in the petition:

“That the said defendant in drilling and producing the oil in said block used heavy machinery and power, and that in operating the same, the surface of the earth was caused to vibrate to such an extent that the walls and foundation of the house of these plaintiffs located on lot 6, block 25, were cracked and the ceiling damaged.”

The plaintiffs further allege in their petition :

“That contrary to the express terms and conditions of the written agreement made and entered into by and between the plaintiffs and defendant, the defendant has failed, refused and neglected to make any compensation to these plaintiffs for the damage done to their house, or for the damage done to the surface rights by virtue of the placing of sheet-iron house and concrete wall upon the said lot. and that the action of said defendant in placing said sheet-iron house and constructing the concrete wall has damaged the property of *470 these plaintiffs in the sum of $2,000, and that by reason of the cracking and damage done to the walls and ceiling of the house these plaintiffs are further damaged in the sum and amount of $300.”

To the petition the defendant filed its amended answer admitting the execution of the letter attached to the petition as Exhibit A and dated July 27, 1936, “claimed by .plaintiffs to be their contract with the defendant.”

For further answer defendant alleged that the first paragraph of the “letter” had been executed, in that the $175 provided for as damages to the. premises described in the petition had been paid, as per the receipt attached and marked" defendant’s Exhibit “A.”

Further answering, the defendant alleged that a mistake was made in the second paragraph of the letter in that the word “drilled” therein should have been “abandoned” and that such mistake was mutual; that prior to the execution of the letter contract of July 27, 1936, defendant made and entered into a community oil and gas lease covering lots 1 to 10, inclusive, in block 25, Howes Capitol addition to Oklahoma City, which included the lot described in plaintiffs’ petition; that thereafter defendant selected lots 6 to 10, inclusive, for the purpose of drilling a well, using same for slush pits, machinery, and equipment incidental to the drilling and operation thereof; that thereafter and prior to the letter of July 27, 1936, it was mutually agreed between the defendant and the authorized agent of the plaintiffs, as well as the owners of other lots embraced in the drilling site, that they were to receive $175 per lot for damages occasioned by and incident to the drilling of the well, as set out in the first paragraph of the letter, and that it was further mutually agreed that after the well was “abandoned,” defendant would leave the premises of each lot owner in the same condition as prior to the drilling, save and except the damages paid for and subject to the reasonable use thereof in moving in and out drilling machinery and equipment so as to restore all of such lots after the abandonment of the well; that by the inadvertence and mutual mistake in writing, the word “drilled” instead of the word “abandoned” was used; that defendant stands ready to perform under the contract as agreed upon.

Defendant further alleged that in the event it is found that a mistake has not been made as alleged, then the letter contract is separable and divisible in its terms and provisions; that the first provision thereof, providing for payment of $175 for damages to .premises of the plaintiffs, has, as alleged, been complied with, and executed ; that the provision of the letter contract dealing with leaving the premises in the same condition after drilling óf the well is illegal, null and void, for want of consideration.

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Bluebook (online)
1938 OK 447, 83 P.2d 164, 183 Okla. 468, 1938 Okla. LEXIS 315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-black-gold-petroleum-co-okla-1938.