Imo Oil & Gas Co. v. Chas. E. Knox Oil Co.

1926 OK 842, 250 P. 117, 120 Okla. 13, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 360
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 19, 1926
Docket17270
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1926 OK 842 (Imo Oil & Gas Co. v. Chas. E. Knox Oil 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
Imo Oil & Gas Co. v. Chas. E. Knox Oil Co., 1926 OK 842, 250 P. 117, 120 Okla. 13, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 360 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

THOMPSON, C.

This action was commenced in the district court of Garfield county, Okla., by the Imo Oil & Gas Company, a corporation, plaintiff in error, plaintiff below, against the Charles E. Knox Oil Company, a corporation, and Charles K. Knox, defendants in error, defendants below, to prevent defendants in error from drilling an oil well on a 10-aere tract adjacent to 150 acres leased for oil and ga's mining purposes by the plaintiff in error.

The parties will be referred to as plaintiff and defendants as they appeared in the lower court.

In the amended petition, filed by plaintiff on December- 14, 1925, among other things, it is alleged that one B. E. Hoy is the owner of the southwest quarter of section 31, town *14 ship 22 north of range 3, in Garfield county, Okla.; that the plaintiff is the owner of an oil and gas mining lease upon all of said Section, save and except the northwest 10 acres thereof; that at the time R. E. Hoy purchased the said quarter section, he took the title thereto subject to an oil and gas mining lease upon the whole quarter section then held by the Empire Gas & Fuel Company, a corporation; that the Empire Gas & Fuel Company drilled one well locatea on the northwest 10 acres; that upon the failure of the Empire Gas & Fuel Company to further drill, R. E. Hoy, brought an action in the district court of Garfield county to cancel the oil and gas lease on the entire quarter section, which action resulted in a judgment in favor of R. E. Hoy against the Empire Gas & Fuel Company, canceling the lease as to'the 150 acres now held by the plaintiff under an oil and gas mining lease, but that in said judgment it was ordered, adjudged, and. decreed that the 10 acres in the northwest quarter of the said quarter section was reserved to the Empire Gas & Fuel Company on account of the well then located thereon, and the title to the remaining part of the said 160 acres was quieted in the said R. E. Hoy, .and the Empire Gas & Fuel Company was dispossessed of all interest in.the remaining 150 acres; that well No. 1 was disconnected October 26, 1925, but was later cleaned out and shot in November, 1925, and then abandoned; that the said R. E. Hoy leased the 150 acres for oil and gas mining purposes to the plaintiff, and* the plaintiff drilled three producing wells thereon at an expenditure of large sums of money: that the Empire Gas & Fuel Company had assigned their rights to the oil and gas lease on the 10 acres, reserved to 'it in said judgment, to the defendants, and that the defendants are now engaged in making preparations to commence the drilling of an oil well immediately against the line of said lO’-acre tract adjoining the plaintiff’s lease, and that they have heretofore completed the drilling of well No. 2t upon said 10' acres, which well is producing a large volume of high grade crude oil, and located within 16 feet and three, inches of plaintiff’s well No. 3, and that the location of defendants’ well No-. 3 is 22 feet from plaintiff’s line; that the defendants’ well No. 2 is draining the oil, and the one defendants are preparing to drill would also drain the oil out from under the lands covered by plaintiff’s lease; that the defendants are without right- in the premises and had no right to drill their No. 2 or to drill any other wells upon the 10 acres reserved by the judgment. A copy of the judgment is attached, and a plat showing the location of the wells of plaintiff and defendants is also attached as exhibits and made a part of the petition.

The defendants filed separate demurrers upon three grounds: That the petition did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; that there is a defect 'of parties defendant; and that the plaintiff has mo legal capacity to sue.

Upon a hearing of the demurrers the court sustained the demurrers, and the plaintiff declined to plead further, and elected to stand upon its amended petition, and the court thereupon dismlsseu the action and rendered judgment against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendants for costs, to which action of the court the plaintiff duly excepted and the cause comes regularly upon appeal to this court for review.

The question presented by attorney for plaintiff in error in his brief is based solely upon the contention that the 10-acre reservation, described im the judgment to the Empire Gas & Fuel Company, was for the purpose of protecting well No. 1, drilled by said company, amd that the said Empire Gas & Fuel Company, or its assigns, had no right to drill other wells upon the acreage. An examination of the judgment discloses in the final order that the lease on the entire 160 acres was canceled as to 150- acres of the tract and the 10 acres in the northwest corner were reserved to the Empire Gas & Fuel Company in the following language:

“* * * The said defendant company shall retain such rights and interest in said land as was and is conferred by said lease; and no other rights or interest shall be exercised or .remain in said defendant company upon any of the remaining part of said southwest quarter (S.W.%) of section thirty-one (31), township twenty-two (22), north, range three (3) W. I. M.”

Whatever may appear in the journal entry preceding the final order, commencing with the word, “Wherefore,” that part of the journal entry following the words, “It is by the court ordered, adjudged, and decreed,” as copied above, controls and is the final' order of the court as to said cause. The language of the court is plain and unambiguous, and the Empire Gas & Fuel Company retained all rights guaranteed to it in the original lease, that is to say, the right to sell, transfer, assign or operate the same.

The record discloses that it sold and assigned its leasehold interest in the 10 acres to the defendants in this case; that the defendants were drilling well No. 2 on the 10 acres *15 on the 17th clay of August, 1925, the date the original petition was filed in this cause; that said well had been completed at a date not disclosed, but prior to' the filing of the amended petition in this cause, which was filed on the 14th day of December, 1925. Well No. 1 had not been disconnected at the time this suit was originally filed and wort and labor continued to be performed on well No. 1 until sometime in November, 1925. The plaintiff had only such rights in the 150 acres, leased to him by R. E. Hoy, the landowner, as were guaranteed to it by the terms of its lease, and in the exercise of its rights, under its lease, as shown by the plat filed with the petition, drilled its well No. 1 within 23 feet of the east! line of the 10 acres, reserved to the Empire Gas & Fuel Company, and drilled its third well within 33 feet of the east line of the 10 acres, above referred to. So that, if there were any breach of a custom or a “gentleman’s agreement,”, the plaintiff was the first to breach it, and was guilty of the first and second offenses by crowding the east line of the 10 acres. The defendants were clearly within their rights in their attempt to guard their east line when they drilled their well No. 2 within 16 feet and three inches of the line, and, under the circumstances and facts in this ease, are entitled to drill the third well within 22 feet of the south line of the 10 acres, and the plaintiff cannot complain in equity against defendants for protecting themselves against its own aggressions.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 842, 250 P. 117, 120 Okla. 13, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/imo-oil-gas-co-v-chas-e-knox-oil-co-okla-1926.