Johnson v. Engle

67 S.W.2d 938, 252 Ky. 634, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 1026
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedOctober 31, 1933
StatusPublished

This text of 67 S.W.2d 938 (Johnson v. Engle) 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. Engle, 67 S.W.2d 938, 252 Ky. 634, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 1026 (Ky. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Judge RichaRdson

Affirming.

D. N. Witt and Callie Witt, husband and wife, were the owners of a tract of land containing 88 acres situated in Estill county, Ky. On the 25th day of May, 1915, they executed, acknowledged, and delivered to C. Marcum and Charles T. Maple, a lease, granting to them *635 * ‘all the oil and gas on and under it.” It vested in the lessees the authority to enter on and remove therefrom the oil and gas for a term of ten years “and as much longer thereafter as oil and gas was found thereon”; also the right to remove at any time “ all property, pipes and improvements placed or erected on or upon the land by the lessees.” The lease contained a provision that if oil was found in paying quantities, the lessees were to deliver to the lessor, into tanks, or pipe lines, one-eighth part or share of all. oils produced on or piped from the premises. It also stipulated that “it shall become null and void and the payments, which shall have been made (by the lessees) to be held by. the lessor as the full stipulated damages for the non-fulfillment of the lease,” and that the terms and conditions of the lease “should extend, and apply to the heirs, executors, administrators and assigns of the parties” to it. Other provisions of the lease not here involved are set forth in apt language.

In 1920 Witt and wife conveyed by deed, with covenant of general warranty, the tract of land described in the lease, to John Marcum and Clarence Marcum. At the date of this conveyance, the lease of Witt and wife to Marcum and Maple was of record in the office of the clerk of the county court of Estill county. Thereafter, John Marcum and wife, and Clarence Marcum, a single man, conveyed by deed, with covenant of general warranty, the land embraced in the lease to Fred Johnson, the appellant. In neither of these deeds was the oil lease mentioned.

In his petition Johnson sets forth these facts, and alleged that he was the owner of the land covered by the lease, “together with the appurtenances and improvements, and all oils and minerals not heretofore sold by the plaintiffs mesne grantors, Witt and wife, namely, one-eighth of the oil and gas, in, on and underlying the said property.” He further charged that-Engle, the present owner of the Witt lease, and - his predecessors in title have abandoned the leased land and that same is idle, “and had been idle . nearly three years ’ ’; that there were eleven producing oil wells on it, now producing oil in paying quantities, “provided the lease is properly, and in a workmanlike manner operated,” but that the wells were dormant, without proper or any care; that they have been allowed “to *636 sand up, the pipes and equipment to rust, and salt water and other dangerous agencies have been allowed to smother the wells and stop their productivity” and that they “have materially and substantially damaged the property so that same is now in a very deteriorated condition”; that the adjoining lands have been operated and wells drilled thereon within less than 200 feet of the property lines, and other wells have been drilled on a roadway within 5 or 6 feet of the property lines; that these wells are draining the oil from under his land; that “these acts of Engle and his predecessors in title constitute negligence, and an abandonment of the lease.” He alleged that the lease was a cloud upon his title, and asserted he was entitled to its cancellation, “so that he may be able to lease it under favorable terms, to others who will operate the property.”

A demurrer was filed to the petition and sustained. Johnson was permitted to amend. In paragraph one of the amendment he reaffirms the allegations of the original petition, and further alleged that J. E. Riddle owned one thirty-second of the royalty, and that O’Kyle and Mrs. O’Kyle were the owners of a one sixty-fourth working interest, carried as a royalty, and that Engle was the owner of the- other fifty-five sixty-fourths working interest, in the lease. He names in the caption of the amendment, himself, Henry Becker, Ray Bigley, Fred Johnson, and E. E. Rice as plaintiffs. In the body of it he avers that these three individuals owned jointly one-sixteenth or one-twelfth of one-eighth of the royalty reserved in the Witt lease. He asked that they be permitted to intervene as necessary parties. He also named in the caption W. H. Cunningham as plaintiff, and stated that he was the owner of a one thirty-second interest of the royalty.

The amended petition contains this language:

“Plaintiff states that since the filing of the original petition herein, namely, on the 8th day of September 1930, the master commissioner of this court, D. N. Witt made, executed and delivered to defendant, I. J. Engle a deed to 55/64 interest in and to the oil and gas lease executed by D. N. Witt and wife mentioned in said original petition covering the lands now owned by plaintiff, Johnson, and described in the said petition; that said defendant, Engle and co-defendants, 0- Kyle and Mrs. 0. Kyle *637 as planitiffs are informed and believe, the full owners of said oil and gas lease in its entirety.”

Engle filed a general demurrer and without "waiving it, filed an answer. The second paragraph of the amended petition is denominated a reply to Engle’s answer, and it is in fact a traverse thereof.

Engle filed a general demurrer to the petition as amended, and also a rejoinder to, the reply. . The answer to the amended petition was controverted of record.

On the issues thus made and the evidence adduced, a judgment was entered dismissing the petition with costs. The evidence in behalf of Johnson shows that the land covered by his deed was damaged by the flowing of salt water onto it from tanks and pipes erected under the lease, and that the presence "of the pipes and other equipment of the oil wells, in a way interferred with the cultivation of the land.

In neither his original nor amended petition does he attempt to sue for damages to the land. It appears from his amended petition that neither of the parties named with him as plaintiffs has any interest in the claim for damages which he attempted to prove. The proof of such damages without allegations in his original or amended petition setting up damages, does not entitle him to judgment therefor. The statement that evidence establishing a cause of action, does not authorize the rendition of judgment on the evidence without pleading, needs no authority to sustain it. For this reason alone the judgment dismissing the petition as to the claimed damages was proper.

The allegation in the amended petition that Riddle, Becker, Bigley, Rice, and Cunniqgham own certain interests in the royalty which the lessees by the terms of the lease agreed to pay lessor, are inconsistent with the allegation therein that “Engle and his co-defendants, O. Kyle and Mrs. O. Kyle are the full owners of all of said oil and gas lease in its entirety.” We are unable to reconcile these conflicting allegations as to ownership of the royalty. Doubtless the circuit court labored under the same difficulty. Accepting the allegation as it appears in the amended petition, that “Engle and co-defendants, 0. Kyle and Mrs. 0.

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Bluebook (online)
67 S.W.2d 938, 252 Ky. 634, 1933 Ky. LEXIS 1026, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-engle-kyctapphigh-1933.