Humphreys Oil Co. v. Liles

262 S.W. 1058, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 1080
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 24, 1924
DocketNo. 4.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 262 S.W. 1058 (Humphreys Oil Co. v. Liles) 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
Humphreys Oil Co. v. Liles, 262 S.W. 1058, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 1080 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, C. J.

This appeal is prosecuted by the Humphreys Oil Company from a judgment against it for the sum of $30,690 in favor of Mrs. Lizzie Liles Windsor, R. H. Windsor, Altus Liles, R. H. Brazeal, C. H. Norman, and J. F. Nabors. Mrs. Lizzie Liles Windsor and her minor son, for whom she was the duly qualified and acting guardian, owned 144 áeres of land. Eighteen acres of said tract were under an oil and gas ledse owned by appellant. Plummer’s creek, a small ravine, entered said 18-acre tract on its north line, ran through the same, and into the Kollman tract, immediately south. This ravine was comparatively narrow, and water ran in the same continually during all the time the matters involved in this suit were -transpiring. Plummer’s creek drained a large area north of said 18-acre tract. There was situated in said area at the time a large number of producing oil wells. Some of these wells were on property belonging to Mrs. Windsor and Altus Liles, but none of them belonged to appellant. A large amount of waste or fugitive oil escaped from the many wells situated north of said 18-aere tract in the area drained by said creek. This waste or fugitive oil in large quantities flowed on the waters of said creek into and through said 18-acre tract. Mrs. Liles, before her marriage to appellee Windsor, acting for herself and as guardian for Altus Liles, entered into a lease contract with the other appellees above named, giving them the right to enter upon and occupy a part of said 18-acre tract, including said creek, for the purpose of impounding, recovering, and marketing such waste oil, subject to the rights held by appellant under its lease. The proceeds of said enterprise were to be shared by all the above-named appellees.

Appellees prepared an earthen reservoir of large capacity, and also procured and located certaimwooden and steel storage tanks convenient for use in holding and storing oil recovered from said creek until they could market the same. They also extended a plank across said creek from bank to'bank, placing the same so that the lower side thereof would be below the oil line in the flow of said creek, but so that it would not materially interfere with the lower stratum of water in such flow. This device is called in the record a floating dam. The effect of it was to hold the oil and make it accumulate on the surface of the water -above said plank or dam while the water continued to flow beneath the same. They also installed pumps and began to pump the oil so stopped or impounded by said floating dam into their reservoir and tanks, from which they marketed the same. They had been so engaged about three days when appellant placed a pump near said dam arid began to puriip the oil so stopped and impounded into its own tanks. After a few days of such pumping appellant moved its pump and located the *1060 same further.up the creek, but still on said 18-aere tract. Erom that and other positions on the upper part of said tract it continued to pump such waste and fugitive oil from said creek into its tanks and reservoirs, and appropriated all the same to its own use. Appellant also erected a line of posts across the only outlet from appellees’ said reservoirs and tanks to-the public highway. The posts in said line were set so near together that wagons could not pass between them, and were as effectual as a fence would have been in preventing ingress and egress to and from appellees’ reservoirs and tanks. In addition to pumping oil from said creek appellant, over the protest of appellees, from time tó time destroyed their said floating dams and permitted the oil stopped and impounded thereby to flow on through said 18-acre tract into said Kollman tract. Appel-lees continually rebuilt-such floating dams, and appellant continually destroyed the same, according to certain witnesses, as many as 30 times, extending over a period of several weeks. As a result of such interference appellees were practically defeated in their purpose to pump áuch oil from said creek into their reservoirs and tanks and to market the same, as they were doing before such interference, and as they would have continued to do had they not been so interfered with. All the waste oil in said creek which was not taken up and appropriated by appellant’s .pumps was. by the repeated and continued destruction of said dams caused to flow on down said creek into said Kollman tract, which was controlled by appellant. Upon said Kollman tract, a very short distance from the south line of said 18-acre tract, appellant located and operated dams and pumps, by means of which it stopped and impounded and appropriated all the waste oil in said creek which reached that point.

The case was tried before a jury on special issues. Such issues and the answers of the jury thereto are as follows:

“Question No. 1. How many barrels, if any, of the oil that has heretofore been impounded by plaintiffs on the Liles lease, excluding therefrom such oil, if any, as may have originated from any well or wells belonging to the Hum-phreys Oil Company, did the defendant, Hum-phreys Oil Company, or its agents acting under instructions from said company, take or pump away? Answer: 5,400 barrels.
“Question No. 2. How many barrels, if any, of the oil that could and would have been impounded by the plaintiffs upon the Liles lease, were caused to escape and flow down Plummer’s creek by the act of the defendant, Humphreys Oil Company, and its agents in removing and destroying the floating dam or dams erected on said creek by the plaintiffs for the purpose of impounding oil? Answer: 22,500 barrels. '
“Question No. 3. What was the value of the oil inquired about in the two preceding questions at the time same was taken, if you find same was taken by defendant, Humphreys Oil Company, or at the time same was allowed to escape, if you have answered that any did escape? Answer in the aggregate. Answer: $1.10 per barrel.

Based on said verdict, the court entered the judgment presented for review by this appeal.

The first proposition submitted by appellant as ground for reversal of the judgment complained of is as follows:

“The court submitted to the jury as question No. 2 the' inquiry as to how many barrels of oil that could and would have been impounded by the plaintiffs were .caused to escape and flow down Plummer’s creek by the action of the defendant, Humphreys Oil Company, in removing and destroying the floating dam or dams erected on said creek by the plaintiffs for the purpose of impounding oil, and there are no allegations in plaintiff’s petition to support such a charge, and since the major portion of the Verdict of the jury is based upon the findings in an'swer to this question error has been, committed, because it is not permissible for the court to charge on a matter outside of a case as made by the pleadings, and upon which the verdict might have been rendered.”

Appellees’ petition covers 20 pages of the transcript. Many of the matters com-, plained of therein are alleged in elaborate detail and with considerable repetition.

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Bluebook (online)
262 S.W. 1058, 1924 Tex. App. LEXIS 1080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/humphreys-oil-co-v-liles-texapp-1924.