J. M. Huber Petroleum Co. v. Yake

121 S.W.2d 670
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 31, 1938
DocketNo. 4943.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 121 S.W.2d 670 (J. M. Huber Petroleum Co. v. Yake) 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. Huber Petroleum Co. v. Yake, 121 S.W.2d 670 (Tex. Ct. App. 1938).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

During the year 1928 appellee, Henry Yake, leased from his brother, William Yake, three sections of land to be used by appellee as grazing land. The lease was oral and was renewed from year to year, appellee retaining possession and use of the pasture lands and grazing cattle thereon continuously up to and including the year 1937. On the -23d of February of that year appellant obtained from William Yake and others, who seem to have had an interest in some of the land, a right-of-way deed, under which it procured the right to install and maintain a pipe line for the transportation of oil or gas across the land. In the latter part of February, 1937, A. R. Tate, under a contract with appellant, entered upon the land and excavated across the same a ditch *672 some 30 inches deep and about 20 inches in width and installed therein a pipe line composed of pipe of dimensions ranging from 12¾ inches to 18 inches in diameter. The pipe line entered Section No. 2, one of the sections under lease by appellee for grazing purposes, on the south line slightly west of the center, and extended in a northwesterly direction, making its exit near the northwest corner. Approximately two-thirds of the section lies east of the pipe line, the other one-third lying west thereof. Each of the three sections was maintained by appellee under a separate fence, and he kept 52 head of cattle on this Section. No. 2. According to the evidence, the grass was better and more suitable for grazing on the east portion of the section than it was on the west portion. The watering place was on the west "side of the section and, in order to have access to the water, the cattle necessarily remained in that area' a good portion of the time.

Appellee filed this suit against appellant for damages which he alleged he suffered by reason of the ditch being left open which, he alleged, prevented his cattle from passing from the west to the east side of the section. He also alleged that, to prevent the cattle falling.into the ditch and from escaping through openings made and left in the fences, it became necessary for him to spend a great deal of time herding the cattle and made necessary considerable labor and expense in restoring the openings in the fences.

The case was submitted to a jury upon special issues and upon the verdict returned by them, judgment was rendered in favor of appellee for the total sum of $409.60, the items making up that amount consisting of $249.60 for damages and injury to the cattle through shrinkage, $140 as compensation to appellee for the time spent by him in riding the ditch and preventing his cattle from injury by falling into it, and $20 as compensation for his time and expense in repairing the fences.

The case is presented in this court upon seven assignments of error, which may be reduced to four contentions made by appellant and which it urges as reasons why the judgment of the trial court should be reversed. It contends, first, that the cause of action involves the title to the land and, appellee’s rights depending upon an oral agreement or contract, the county court did not have jurisdiction to adjudicate the title and his lease contract was void under the statute of frauds; secondly, that the work of excavating the ditch and laying the pipe line was performed by an independent contractor, under a written contract, and, therefore, appellant was not liable for any negligence of the contractor, owed no duty to. observe due care toward appellee in respect thereto and that the interpretation of the written contract was a question of law which should not have been submitted to the jury. Thirdly, that appellee could have reduced his damages to an insignificant proportion by filling the ditch himself and, fourthly, error of the court in overruling its motion for a continuance.

The first contention of appellant, viz., that the cause of action involved the title to land, cannot be sustained. The grazing lease was entered into in 1928 and the record shows it was renewed from year to year thereafter. It was to be used, and was used, by appellee as grazing land and not for agricultural purposes. It is true that, in some jurisdictions, it is held by the courts that a sale of growing gráss and other vegetable growths that are natural products of the soil and do not require annual expense and attention is regarded as a sale of a portion of the real estate or land itself. We think, however, thé better rule is that when the contract contemplates a sale of mere chattels, though they may be the natural product of the soil and attached thereto between the date of the sale and the time when possession of them is to be taken, and does not contemplate an actual transfer of an interest or estate in the land itself, it is regarded as a sale of chattels and does not, therefore, come within the statute of frauds. This rule has been adopted by the courts of this state and is not open to further question. Kreisle v. Wilson, Tex.Civ.App., 148 S.W. 1132. See, also, Purner v. Piercy, 40 Md. 212, 17 Am.Rep. 591.

The Kreisle Case, supra, involved an oral contract for the sale of the grass on land in Victoria County, which was purchased outright. At the time the contract was made, the grass was growing on the land and not ready to be harvested or mowed. It was alleged that the purchaser was prevented from mowing the grass and the action was brought to recover the profits he alleged he would have realized in mowing it and selling it as hay. The contention was made that the subject matter of the oral contract was realty and the contract *673 was within the statute of frauds. Chief Justice James, in delivering the opinion of the court, quoted from Greenleaf on Evidence as follows [page 1133]:

“Where timber or other produce of the land, or any other thing annexed to the freehold, is specifically sold, whether it is to be severed by the vendor, or to be taken by the vendee under a special license to enter for that purpose, it is still in the contemplation of the parties' evidently and substantially a sale of goods only and so is not within the statute.”

In reference to the rule so expressed by Mr. Greenleaf, and in approval thereof, the court said:

“These expressions of the rule are so well supported by decisions, although there is considerable conflict, and are so well founded upon reason, that we conclude they were properly recognized as announcing the correct doctrine. There is no reason why annual products of the soil, capable of being, and which are destined to be, marketed annually, should be treated as real estate for all purposes just because for the time being, and awaiting maturity and removal, they are attached to the soil.”

We agree with the holding of the court in the cited case. It is true that it was not in contemplation of appellee and his brother in making the oral lease involved in this case that the grass would be mowed and converted into hay, but we can see no difference in principle between the sale of grass to be' mowed and converted into hay and a case such as this where the lease contemplates that livestock will be grazed on the land and the grass removed and consumed by them as food. The title to the land was not involved. No portion of the real estate nor any interest therein was vested in appellee by the lease contract. The suit, on the other hand, was one for damages to ap-pellee’s cattle and did not involve the title to the land in any sense whatever.

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121 S.W.2d 670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/j-m-huber-petroleum-co-v-yake-texapp-1938.