King v. Turner

1925 OK 215, 234 P. 564, 109 Okla. 77, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 682
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 17, 1925
Docket15000
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1925 OK 215 (King v. Turner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Turner, 1925 OK 215, 234 P. 564, 109 Okla. 77, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 682 (Okla. 1925).

Opinion

Opinion by

JARMAN, C.

The amended petition of the plaintiff, Thomas E. Turner, on which this action was tried, alleges that the King Petroleum Company, one of the defendants, is a trust estate, and that Thomas M. King, P. J. King, and W. T. Moran, defendants, are the trustees therefor, with the full right, power, and authority in each of them to act for and to bind the King Petroleum Company by contract; that the defendants were the owners of an oil and gas mining leasehold estate upon certain lands and premises in Creek county, and on March 15, 1921, Thomas M. King, acting for the trust and his cotrustees, made and entered into a contract with the plaintiff whereby it was agreed that the plaintiff should drill a well for oil and gas on said lease through the Mounds or Wilcox' sand unless oil or gas should be found in paying quantities at a lesser depth on the location agreed upon by the parties to said contract; plaintiff to furnish the rig, casing’, and all other necessary equipment and to pay all expenses of drilling and completing the well, and to begin said well within 60 days from the date of the contract and the drilling thereof to be prosecuted witihi due diligence to completion, unavoidable delays excepted; and that it was further agreed and understood by and between the parties that, in the evqnt a producing well should be drilled, the defendants would assign and set over to the plaintiff an undivided one-half interest in and to the oil and gas mining lease and leasehold estate except two gas wells then in existence on the premises, and that it was further agreed that in the event said well, when drilled by the plaintiff, should produce oil or gas in paying quantities that each of the parties to said contract should pay one-half of the expenses of equipping said well, for producing oil or gas and of operating the same, and that the said parties should pay equally the expenses of drilling, equipping, and operating such other wells as they Should agree to drill on said lease; that an attempt was made to reduce said contract to writing, but, by mutual mistake and inadvertence of the parties in preparing ancf attempting to reduce to writing said contract, the same was drafted in such a manner as to not fully and correctly express the full agreement and understanding of the parties to said contract as shown by the language used therein as follows:

“In consideration of which, the party of the first part hereby agrees to .assign and set over to the said second party a full and undivided one-half interest in and to *78 the said well, in the event the same is found to be a paying producing oil or gas well. It is further agreed that if said well is a paying producer, as hereinbefore specified, that each of the parties hereto shall own an equal one-half interest in the said well, and that each parity hereto shall receive an equal one-half of the proceeds received from said well.
“It is further agreed that in the event the said well is a paying producer, that each of the parties hereto shall pay an equal one-half of all expanses of drilling, completing and operating all such other wells as the parties hereto may mutually agree to drill on the above described tract!”

The plaintiff alleges, further, that said contract should have been worded so as to give the plaintiff an undivided one-half interest in and to the lease instead of the well; that said contract, as written, is ambiguous, and that the same should be reformed to recite the true agreement entered in|to between the parties. The plaintiff alleges, further, that he had fully performed his part of said agreement and had drilled a producing oil well on the premises and prayed for an order requiring the defendants to execute an assignment to him of an undivided one-half interest in and to the lease and leasehold estate.

To this amended petition, the defendants filed an answer denying that the contract in question is ambiguous and alleging that the agreement of the parties was fully and correctly set out by the terms of the said contract, and that there was no mutual mistake on the part of the parties to said contract in the execution of the same, and tendered to the plaintiff an assignment of an undivided one-half interest in and to the said well.

The plaintiff filed a reply alleging that the term “to drill and complete a well,” as used in the contract, has a technical meaning when applied to the drilling and completing of wells for oil and gas and that said term was used by the parties in said contract in its technical sense, which means that the well shall be drilled to the depth indicated and sufficient casing shall be used to shut out the water, and does not include the shooting of the well, cleaning it out after the shot, attaching the same to the pump, or equipping it for operation.

The court entered judgment reforming said contract to give the plaintiff an undivided one-half interest in and to the lease and leasehold estate and directing the defendants to execute an assignment thereof to the plaintiff.

The defendants, contend: (1) That the contract sought to be reformed is clear, unambiguous and free from any unusual language; (2) that, to reform said contract, the burden of proof was upon the plaintiff to show clearly and to a moral certainty that there was a mutual mistake on the part of both parties to the contract in drafting the same and that the term “one-half interest in the well” was intended by both parties to be “one-half interest in the lease”; (3) that the court erred in admitting the testimony of certain witnesses to the effect that the drilling of the well for a one-half interest in said well was unreasonable and that said testimony was not within the issues.

We cannot agree with counsel for defendants that said contract is clear and explicit. Under the contract, as written, which provides that the plaintiff should receive an undivided one-half interest in and to “said well,” the second paragraph of the contract, as above set out, is meaningless, for the effect thereof would be that in the event the well, which was to he drilled, should turn out to be a producing oil oi-gas well, then if the defendants should decide to let the plaintiff do further drilling on the lease, that the plaintiff should have an undivided one-half interest in such well or wells as the plaintiff and the defendants might mutually agree to drill. In other words, this paragraph of the contract, as far as tbe plaintiff is concerned, means nothing to him, and, to that extent, the contract in question is ambiguous, and, therefore, it was necessary for the trial court to consider extraneous evidence to ascertain the true agreement and understanding of the parties. It is the duty of tbe court to give any contract such an interpretation as will make it not only lawful but reasonable in its terms and capable of being carried into effect, it it can be done without violating the intention of the parties. Section 5046, Comp. Stat. 1921. The burden of proof was on the plaintiff to show clearly that there was a mistake on the part of both the plaintiff and the defendant in the drafting of tbe contract and in their signing the same, and that it was intended that the plaintiff should have an undivided one-half interest in the lease instead of the well. Upon the substitution of the word “lease” for the word “ well” in the contract, the second paragraph, now ambiguous und^r the terms of tbe contract as written, would become clear and explicit.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1925 OK 215, 234 P. 564, 109 Okla. 77, 1925 Okla. LEXIS 682, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-turner-okla-1925.