Johnson v. Kansas Natural Gas Co.

135 P. 589, 90 Kan. 565, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 267
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 11, 1913
DocketNo. 18,411
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 135 P. 589 (Johnson v. Kansas Natural Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Johnson v. Kansas Natural Gas Co., 135 P. 589, 90 Kan. 565, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 267 (kan 1913).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Porter, J.:

Action in the nature of one for an accounting between tenants in common.

The. court made findings of fact and conclusions of law which are summarized as follows: In December, 1904, John A. Johnson died intestate, seized in fee of the southwest, quarter of section 33, township 27, range 17, Wilson county. There has been no administration of his estate. He left surviving him his widow, Selma Johnson, and six children, including Axel E. Johnson, the plaintiff. On January 5, 1906, the widow and all the heirs except Axel E. Johnson joined in executing to the Kansas Natural Gas Company an oil and gas lease on the premises, by virtue of which the company entered upon the land and drilled six gas wells and began taking gas therefrom. The plaintiff, Axel E. Johnson, left his father’s home in 1889 and was not heard from by any member of the [567]*567family from about 1898 until the summer of 1910, during which time his whereabouts or whether he was living or dead was unknown. In the summer of 1910 he returned, and learning, of the gas being taken from, the land, made a demand of the defendant gas company for one-twelfth of the sum received from the sale of the gas taken. The demand was refused, and on November 28, 1910, this action was commenced. The plaintiff is-the same Axel E. Johnson who left his home in 1889, and is the son and heir of John A. Johnson, deceased. The consideration paid for the oil and gas lease referred to was one dollar; the lease was made without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff, Axel E. Johnson. Prior to April 1, 1912, the Kansas Natural Gas Company had taken from the wells on the .premises referred to 4,570,604,000 cubic feet of gas, at the standard pressure of 4 ounces, and had sold the same, receiving therefor $0.1204 per thousand cubic feet, at the standard pressure of 4 ounces. The company expended $1500 in drilling each of. the six wells located on the premises. Axel E. Johnson’s share of this expense is $750. The profits of the defendant derived from the sale of the gas from the Johnson lease are far in excess of the consideration paid for the lease.

The court found that there is due the plaintiff for his share of the gas taken from the premises the sum of $45,108.47. Upon request of the defendant, Kansas Natural Gas Company, the following additional findings of fact were made:

18.
“Plaintiff did not expressly waive any claim he might have under the theory of'wrongful confusion of goods, but his counsel in substance stated in open court that if the quantity of gas taken could be ascertained, in his judgment, the harsh rule of confusion of goods should not be applied.
[568]*56819.
“After establishing his interest in the land in question, the plaintiff offered evidence tending to show the quantity of gas taken and the proceeds derived from the sale of it.
20.
“The pipe line rental of $8,810,118.07 was for the Kansas City 16" line, and included no other part of the. system of pipe lines and pumping stations.
21.
“Six per cent interest on the money invested in said other northern lines and compressor stations, for the time used while gas was taken from said land, equals $1,140,558.75.
22.
“The depreciation of the said other northern lines and compressor stations for the period used, while gas was taken from said land, equals $950,463.70.
23.
“Mr. LaDow’s computations on the quantity of gas taken up to the time minute pressure readings were begun as shown by the evidence, are based upon initial open flow capacity of wells.
24.
“In his figures, based upon minute pressure readings, Mr. LaDow used the total minute pressure for his basis of computation.”

As conclusions of law, the court held that the plaintiff since his father’s death has been the owner of an undivided one-twelfth interest in the land in question and is entitled to judgment against the gas company for the sum of $45,108.47. Judgment was rendered accordingly, from which the company has appealed.

The first errors complained of may be disposed of summarily. The petition stated a cause of action, and the objection to the admission of evidence under it was rightly overruled. If it were conceded, as the defend ant company claims, that no evidence was offered tend[569]*569ing to show that it had any notice or knowledge of plaintiff’s interest in the lands, and therefore that plaintiff was required to make some showing of the quantity and reasonable value of the gas taken, we think beyond any question that plaintiff produced sufficient evidence to make a prima facie case.

The whole controversy was over the facts, which involve the quantity of gas taken from the Johnson wells, the cost of marketing the same, and the net price that should be charged against the gas company for the plaintiff’s share. The trial was a lengthy one, and the evidence voluminous and conflicting. The record contains exhibits from “A” to “W” which were offered in evidence, and innumerable references to technical books and to reports produced by the defendant gas company showing the volume and some of the details of a business that during the years from 1904 to 1912 reached such magnitude that more than thirteen millions of dollars was received from the sale of gas through the two pipe lines alone to which the Johnson wells were connected. There was a great deal of oral testimony, much of which was by expert witnesses. The findings of the trial court made upon conflicting oral evidence are conclusive upon this court. (Beaubien v. Hindman, 37 Kan. 227, 15 Pac. 184; Giffen v. Johnson, 43 Kan. 678, 23 Pac. 954; Jones v. Bank, 66 Kan. 808, 72 Pac. 391; Leverton v. Rork, 74 Kan. 832, 85 Pac. 800; Stone v. Townsend, 80 Kan. 697, 103 Pac. 114 ; Love v. Love, 72 Kan. 658, 83 Pac. 201; Taylor v. Adams, 79 Kan. 360, 99 Pac. 597.)

It is only fair to counsel for defendant to say that this proposition is not controverted. The defendant, however, attempts in a measure to discredit the findings of fact because the court did not agree with the witnesses on either side in determining the quantity of gas taken from the wells; but that fact can not be urged against the conclusiveness of the findings. It was th e province of the court to consider all the evidence an 1 [570]*570arrive at what it deemed a just verdict. (Missouri River R. R. Co. v. Richards, 8 Kan. 101; Craver v. Hornburg, 26 Kan. 94; Young v. Irwin, 70 Kan. 796, 79 Pac. 678.)

The real contention of the defendant is, that the court adopted erroneous rules for measuring the damages, and that the findings as to some material facts are so contrary to certain well-known physical facts as to require another trial.

The six wells involved are said to be among the largest gas wells ever brought in in the Kansas field. Well No. 1 struck gas December 1, 1906, and was later drilled 28 feet deeper; its capacity was 30,000,000 cubic feet per day, and the rock pressure 290 pounds. Well No.

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Bluebook (online)
135 P. 589, 90 Kan. 565, 1913 Kan. LEXIS 267, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-kansas-natural-gas-co-kan-1913.