Johnson v. Dodson

12 S.W.2d 310, 227 Ky. 132, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 487
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedDecember 21, 1928
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 12 S.W.2d 310 (Johnson v. Dodson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Dodson, 12 S.W.2d 310, 227 Ky. 132, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 487 (Ky. 1928).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge Logan

-Reversing.

In the brief filed on behalf of appellee, counsel thus states the facts:

“On the 4th day of October, 1919, R. H. Mitchell and wife executed an oil and gas lease on a tract of land in Allen County, Ky., to some of the appellants. It appears that later the lease was transferred by them to the Jackson Oil Company, which company became indebted to a man by the name of J. T. Lynch who brought a suit against the company and had this leasehold sold and the appellants who are all stockholders in the Jackson Oil Company purchased said leasehold and claimed to take over same as their individual property. This was prior to Sept. 21, 1923, and on that date the master ■commissioner executed to the appellants a deed of assignment for said property and for some little time thereafter they made some attempt to operate the lease, and the appellee operated the lease for a time under some sort of contract, but about October 17, 1925, he ceased to operate this lease and notified appellants that he could not afford to operate it any longer and demanded that they take charge and properly operate and develop the same. .
“Nothing, however, was done about it, but in the spring of the year after this time the appellee notified the appellants that something must be done; that operations must be resumed within a specified time.
“This letter was written to Johnson April 5, 1926. The appellee reminded him that he, appellee, had agreed to pay some on a new well if appellants would drill it. No answer was ever received to that letter and no attempt was ever made to operate the lease, and on August 10,1926, this suit was filed seeking the cancellation of the lease contract alleging abandonment.
“Some time after this lease was executed the original lessor conveyed this land to the appellee. The *134 original lease contract was for a term of three years and as long thereafter as oil or gas or either of them should be produced. ’ ’

The statement of the facts made by counsel for appellee is substantially correct, but, going back further into the history of the case, we find that there had been considerable development, and that more than $19,000' had been spent in the development and equipment of the lease; 'that it had produced a considerable quantity of oil, although there is nothing in the record to show even approximately the total income which had been received from the sale of oil from the lease; that appellee himself as the employee of appellants was the pumper on the lease from January, 1924, until October, 1926; that, after the last date, he performed some services for appellants in having some of the machinery repaired as late as February, 1926, and that he looked after the payment of their taxes in 1926. We find that on October 8, 1925, appellee wrote Mr. Johnson, one of the appellants, in which he stated that he was going to quit pumping because he had been pumping for five months, and had received no money for it. He also said that he had decided to sell his place, and thought he would give Johnson the first chance to get it, if he wanted to buy it. On the same date there is a letter in the record showing that Mr. Johnson wrote a letter to appellee stating that he had just received check and invoice for the oil runs, and inclosing a check to appellee for one-third of the amount. He expressed regrets at the delay, and explained that it grew out of the making of some new contract. We do not find the letter written by appellee about October 17th referred to in the statement of counsel, but there is a letter in the record written by Johnson to appellee of October 30, 1925, apparently in response to the letter written by appellee on October 8th. In this letter appellee advised that his letter in regard to his quitting had been received. Appellee appears to have suggested that he would no longer pump for one-third of the oil, but he would pump for $25' a month. He was advised that such a contract would not suit appellants. With this letter was inclosed a check for $15.11, appellee’s part of the oil runs of October 14,1925. It appears that appellee later wrote appellants, in which he advised them that his time was about up under his notice, and that he expected to quit. No other communica *135 tion passed between them until in February there was some correspondence about the taxes and a broken piece of machinery. We do not find anything in the record prior to the letter written by appellee in April, 1926, which would indicate that appellee was malting any particular insistence that the wells be pumped. In fact, he appears to have said nothing about the pumping of the wells during the winter of 1926. The letter of April 8, 1926, advises appellants that the lease had been shut down for almost five months, and it suggested that they were saying nothing about pumping or drilling. He then advised that he had too much tied up in the lease to allow it to become worthless, and reminded them that he had offered to pay a part of a new well, but had no opportunity of doing so. He then concluded:

“If you people are not going to do anything more all I ask of you in a kind business way is to give up the lease so I can have something done with it, to make it pay something. Only a business matter with me and you can’t blame me so I would like to see something doing inside of sixty days. Please advise me what you aim to do so I will no how to arrange my business.”

He had no reply to this letter, but there is nothing in it to warn appellants that he is expecting to ask for a forfeiture of the lease for a failure to develop, although there may be an intimation to that effect.

Mr. Johnson, one of the appellants, testified that he received a letter from appellee on November 17th. That letter is in the record, and shows that appellee stated that the 30 days would be out on the 20th of November, and that he was going to quit pumping, although he would like to pump, but could not afford to do so and pay expenses. Johnson stated that, after receiving the letter, he supposed that appellee was engaged in pumping the property, as he had threatened to quit several times and had not done so. He had no reason to assume that appellee would continue after this positive notice that he had quit. Appellants claim that the price of oil was very low, and offer that as a reason why they had not given closer attention to the development of the property. They offer as another reason why they thought Johnson was still pumping the property that they had a letter from him on February 15,1926, in which he reported that it was neces *136 sary to have a crank shaft fixed, and that they advised him to do so, and they paid for the fixing of it. It was not nnnsnal, so they state, for the oil to be retained in the tanks at the wells for some time before it was turned into the pipe lines. There is nothing in the record of a convincing nature tending to show that appellee was making any complaint about the pumping of the wells through the winter of 1926. The appellants still insist that it is their purpose to further develop the lease, and that they never had any intention of abandoning it.

The appellee insists that under the authority of Monarch Oil & Gas Co. v. Hunt, 193 Ky. 315, 235 S. W. 772; Enfield v. Woods, 198 Ky.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 S.W.2d 310, 227 Ky. 132, 1928 Ky. LEXIS 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-dodson-kyctapphigh-1928.