J. M. Guffey Petroleum Co. v. Jeff Chaison Townsite Co.

107 S.W. 609, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 555, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 492
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 17, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 107 S.W. 609 (J. M. Guffey Petroleum Co. v. Jeff Chaison Townsite Co.) 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
J. M. Guffey Petroleum Co. v. Jeff Chaison Townsite Co., 107 S.W. 609, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 555, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 492 (Tex. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Chief Justice.

This is a suit by appellee against ■appellant to recover damages for the alleged failure of appellant to use due diligence in the development of a tract of 5-37/100 acres of oil land belonging to appellee and held by appellant under an oil lease, and for failure to use reasonable care to protect said leased property from drainage by oil wells operated on adjoining tracts of land.

The petition contains two counts. Under the first count damages are claimed for a failure to produce as much as 30,000 barrels of oil per month, from a well known as “Chaison well No. 1,” situated on said leased premises, for the year beginning March 1, 1903. This claim is based on a contract dated the 34th of February, 1903, and providing, in substance, that the defendant should take from the well on the land as much as 30,000 barrels per month, or pay to Mrs. Clara Chaison (who then owned the leased block) as much as $400 per month, provided the said well could, by the use of reasonable diligence, be made to produce as much as 30,000 barrels of oil per month during said year. It was alleged that the defendant had negligently allowed said well to sand-up and get out of order, and ’had negligently failed to make the well produce as much as 30,000 barrels per month during the months of July, August, September and October, 1903, and had failed to pay to the plaintiff, the assignee of Clara Chaison, the said $400 per month for said months, except the sum of $133, and a judgment was demanded for the $1,600 less this $133.

In the second count it is alleged that the defendant’s assignor leased this land, along with several other tracts, from Mrs. Clara Chaison and J. M. Hebert, joint owners, in 1900. That thereafter the land had been partitioned, and this block No. 1 of 5-37/100 acres had become the individual property of Mrs. Clara Chaison, and she became.entitled to all the royalties accruing from the operation of the same. That the lease contract provided that one-tenth of all the oil produced and saved should be paid to the lessor as royalty. That the defendant entered upon said land, and produced oil, but that it did not drill sufficient wells thereon to fully develop it and make it produce as much oil as it should have been made to produce. That there were numerous wells drilled on lands immediately adjoining this tract, and that these wells drained the oil from under block No. 1, and it was the duty of the defendant to drill offset wells along the line or margin of the said block No. 1, so as to protect the wells from drainage through these adjoining wells. Damages are claimed under this count in the sum of $48,500.

Defendant answered by general demurrer and special exceptions, general denial and several special pleas. Among other special defenses, the defendant pleaded that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover any damages for failure to drill additional wells for the *559 purpose of making the land produce more oil, or for the purpose of protecting the land from drainage by wells on adjacent tracts, prior to March 1, 1903, because, on February 24, 1902, Mrs. Clara Chaison, who was then the owner of this tract, in order to get a lárger price than the market value of oil at that time, entered into a written contract with defendant, settling all differences up to date of the contract, and up to March 1, 1902, by agreeing to accept fifteen cents per barrel for all the royalty oil accruing to her up to that date, and agreed that the defendant should not be required to take more than 20,000 barrels of oil per month from the well which was on the land at that time, during the year ending March 1, 1903, and that the defendant would pay her for the one-tenth of said 20,000 barrels per month, twenty cents per barrel, or $400 per month, during said year, provided the said well could, by the use • of ordinary diligence, be made to produce that quantity of oil; the defendant claiming that, at the time this contract was made, the market price of oil was less than ten cents per barrel, and that the agreed price of twenty cents per barrel was made in consideration partly of excusing the defendant from further development during said year. The defendant further pleaded the statute of limitations as to part of the demand of plaintiffs.

There was a trial before a jury, which resulted in a verdict, under the first count, for the sum of $860, with interest, and under the second count, for $22,260.

On motion for new trial, the court having announced to plaintiff’s attorneys that unless they would remit all of the verdict in excess of $12,000 the motion for new trial would be granted, the plaintiff’s counsel filed a remittitur of $11,120,- and thereupon the court entered a judgment for the plaintiff for the sum of $12,000 and interest, and overruled the motion for a new trial.

On May 14, 1900, J. M. Hebert and Clara Chaison executed a lease contract to A. F. Lucas. This contract of lease embraced fifty acres more or less, the east end of the John Douthit survey (which fifty acres included both the Chaison block and the Hebert block), and 500 acres, more or less, of the P. Humphries survey. It is executed by J. M. Hebert and Mrs. Clara Chaison as executrix of the estate of Jeff Chaison, deceased. This lease is in the ordinary form of oil land leases, the lessee agreeing to properly develop the land and to give the lessor one-tenth of all the oil taken therefrom. There is no express covenant as to the number of wells which shall be sunk and no express covenant that offset wells shall be sunk to protect the oil from drainage by wells on adjoining property.

On the 13th of April, 1901, Mrs. Clara Chaison, Charles J. Chaison and all the other heirs of Jeff Chaison, deceased, and J. M. Hebert, made a. partition as between themselves, and by this instrument the Douthit survey embraced in the lease, is divided, and J. M. Hebert is awarded lots 2 and 4 of 5-27/100 acres each, and Clara Chaison and the heirs of Jeff Chaison, deceased, are awarded lots 1 and 3 of this Douthit tract.

On the 24th of April, 1901, Charles J. Chaison and the other children of Jeff Chaison, deceased, made a partition agreement with *560 Clara Chaison, by which Charles J. Chaison and the other heirs of Jeff Chaison, deceased, released to Clara Chaison all their right, title and interest in block No. 1, containing 5-27/100 acres of the Douthit survey, being the land in controversy. This instrument gives to Clara Chaison, on the 24th of April, 1901, title in severalty to this block, as against the children of Jeff Chaison, deceased.

By these instruments, and prior to and including the 24th of April, 1901, there was a complete partition effected between the joint owners of the land embraced in the original lease, and Mrs. Clara Chaison had become the absolute owner, as against all her co-tenants, of block No. 1 of the Douthit tract.

On the 29th of April, 1901, all of these distributees and the J. M. Guffey Company, a partnership composed of J. M. Guffey, John H. Galey and A. F. Lucas, entered into a contract reciting these partitions, and reciting the different tracts that each party had been awarded, and the J. M. Guffey Company relinquishes and releases from the lease all the premises allotted to the heirs of Jeff Chaison, deceased, being lot 3 of the Douthit survey, and said instrument contains this recital:

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107 S.W. 609, 48 Tex. Civ. App. 555, 1908 Tex. App. LEXIS 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-m-guffey-petroleum-co-v-jeff-chaison-townsite-co-texapp-1908.