Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co. v. Bartlesville Zinc Co.

288 F. 273, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2137
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 27, 1923
DocketNos. 2933, 2934
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 288 F. 273 (Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co. v. Bartlesville Zinc Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Co. v. Bartlesville Zinc Co., 288 F. 273, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2137 (3d Cir. 1923).

Opinion

WOOLLEY, Circuit Judge.

By the bill in equity filed in this suit the plaintiff zinc companies sought an injunction permanently enjoining the defendant oil company from disconnecting certain of its natural gas wells from the plaintiffs’ pipe line and from refusing to furnish them with gas through their pipe line drawn from wells in an area belonging to the defendant and known as the “Smelter Primary Zone.’.’ The court entered a decree granting substantially- the prayers of the bill and providing, inter alia, for the connection- of the plaintiffs’ pipe line with the defendant’s gas wells throughout'the area or zone from which the plaintiffs are entitled to collect and the defendant is bound to supply gas under a contract made by the oil company with the’ Smelter Gas Company and known as the Smelter Gas Contract. From the decree both parties appealed; the .defendant from the decree at large, as it reflects the, main issue; and the plaintiffs from a single provision affecting the performance of the affirmed contract.

AppeaP of the Indian Territory Illuminating Oil Company.

After a long and labored study of the record and briefs — immense in size and out of all proportion to the issues involved — we have arrived at the conclusion of the learned trial judge. As we have reached our judgment by the same channels of reasoning,- we shall, to avoid repetition, adopt his opinion as our own. It reads as follows :

Lynch, District Judge. In my memorandum upon the motion for a preliminary injunction in this case granting the preliminary restraint asked for, I stated that the principal issue seemed to be whether there is in existence a contract requiring the defendant to supply gas fuel to the plants of the plaintiffs at Bartlesville, Oklahoma. .
Such a contract is claimed by the plaintiffs to be in existence (1) by virtue of a “legal” renewal of a written contract and (2) by renewal thereof by agreement of the parties.
The “legal” renewal claimed is the renewal of a contract, cjated August 31, 1912, between the defendant and the Smelter Gas Company á corporation.
The, Smelter Gas Company was incorporated under the laws of Oklahoma by John H. Brennan, general counsel of the defendant company the.,,entire stock of the corporation being subscribed by the plaintiffs herein as. follows: Bartlesville Zine Company — 60%; National Zinc Company — 10%. " ' .
The formation of the Smelter Gas Company was incident to negotiations which resulted in. a contract providing for the defendant’s supplying to the [275]*275Smelter Company for the use of the Bartlesville Zinc Company, National Zinc Company and Lanyon-Starr Company, which latter company was after-wards acquired by interests controlling the Bartlesville Zinc Company, gas fuel required by the three smelter companies in the operation of their Bartles-ville Smelters. Prior to the making of the Smelter Gas Contract, the gas fuel used by these smelters was obtained from other sources.
The defendant when it entered into the Smelter Gas Contract was in the possession and control of certain oil and gas rights in approximately 689,000 acres of land belonging to the Osage Indian Tribe and situated in what is known as the Osage Indian Keservation under and by virtue of a lease known as the “Foster lease” terminating March 16, 1916. The defendant originally had the oil and gas rights in approximately 1,600,000 acres of this Osage territory under a lease dated March 16, 1896, which has been referred to as the “original Foster lease.” The “original Foster lease” running for a period of ten years was, by the Act of Congress of March 3, 1905, extended for a period of ten years from and after March 16, 1906, to the extent of 680,000 acres. It was while the defendant was operating under the extended lease (the “Foster lease”) that the Smelter Gas Contract was entered into, under which contract gas was to be taken from certain zones located in the 680,000-acre tract. As provided in the contract the defendant, from the date of the making thereof, regularly and uninterruptedly furnished through pipe lines laid by and belonging to the Smelter Gas Company large quantities of gas to the plaintiffs, for which the plaintiffs paid at the rate of 4 cents per thousand cubic feet until March 16, 1916, when the rate was increased to 7 cents per thousand cubic feet because of additional royalties awarded the Osage Indian Tribe by the Interior Department of the United States, the leasing of this Indian land being under Government supervision. From March 16, 1916, to date, the plants of the plaintiffs have secured most, if not all, of the gas fuel consumed by them through the pipe lines connected with the gas acreage held by the defendant under its lease.
[i] In my opinion on the preliminary injunction I expressed the view that the plaintiffs, being the real parties in interest, were entitled to prosecute this suit. The facts clearly indicate that the Smelter Gas Company acted simply as the agent of the plaintiffs for the purpose of obtaining this gas supply; that such agency was not only at all times known to the defendant but defendant’s representatives actually created it for that purpose. The defendant demands, under threat of shutting off plaintiffs’ gas supply, a higher rate per thousand cubic feet of gas furnished than is provided for in the contract. Hence this suit.
Plaintiff seeks the specific performance of their alleged contract. They pray for a permanent injunction enjoining the defendant from disconnecting certain gas wells from the pipe line owned or controlled by the plaintiffs; from ceasing to furnish gas to the plaintiffs; from interfering with the connection of new gas wells; from selling or turning over the gas from such new gas wells to others or from in any manner interfering with the furnishing of gas by the defendant to the plaintiffs’ smelters under the provisions of the alleged contract. If there is a contract in existence by reason of a legal renewal of a former contract, the relief prayed for by the plaiutiffs should be granted. If, however, there is not in existence a contract by reason of such a legal renewal, then it becomes necessary for the Court to determine whether the relations created by the contract are still in existence because of an agreement which plaintiffs allege was entered into between the parties on January 31, 1916.
So, in taking up the question of “legal renewal,” it would seem that there should be considered the situation the parties had in mind and which they sought to protect, the language of the contract and the conduct of the parties subsequent to the making of the contract for the purpose of determining whether the parties themselves placed a practical construction thereupon showing what they intended by the terms used.
The defendant had a/ lease of oil and gas rights covering a large acreage. The plaintiffs were not interested in securing from the defendant oil or oil rights. Their smelters had been constructed for the consumption [276]*276of gas and it was gas and gas only that they, through the Smelter Gas Company, sought to obtain from the defendant. The defendant under the Smelter Gas Contract was to provide gas from a certain part of a gas acreage of which the defendant was then in control and possession. This control and possession was at the time limited to a period of about 3% years.

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Bluebook (online)
288 F. 273, 1923 U.S. App. LEXIS 2137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/indian-territory-illuminating-oil-co-v-bartlesville-zinc-co-ca3-1923.