Laney Et Ux. v. Columbia Nat. Gas Co.

158 A. 266, 305 Pa. 527, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 622
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 6, 1931
DocketAppeal, 168
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 158 A. 266 (Laney Et Ux. v. Columbia Nat. Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laney Et Ux. v. Columbia Nat. Gas Co., 158 A. 266, 305 Pa. 527, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 622 (Pa. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Drew,

This is an action in assumpsit to recover royalties under a certain oil and gas lease. After verdict and judgment for plaintiffs, defendant appealed.

The principal question in the case, and the one out of which the other questions grow, is whether or not the written lease is so ambiguous as to require and permit the introduction of parol evidence to explain its meaning. The learned court below decided this question in *530 error. the affirmative, and its action in so doing is assigned as

land in Indiana County Company, which lease w The plaintiff's, on February 7, 1924, leased a tract of to the American Natural Gas ¡as assigned to the defendant, Columbia Natural Gas Company, on or about July 7, 1926. Under this lease the defendant’s predecessor in title entered and drilled ;wo wells, and a pressure reading was taken immediately or very soon after the completion of each well. It was admitted that the lessee had marketed ga,s off the premises from each well until the time of filing suit.

The lease contained thi following gas royalty clause: “Should any well not produce oil, but produce gas, and the gas therefrom be sole, off the said premises, the consideration to the parties of the first part for the gas from each well from which gas is marketed shall be at the rate of $20 per lb. per annum first minute pressure based on six-inch casing, to be paid quarterly while marketéd. The minimium royalty ijor each gas well drilled to be $150 per annum.” The !.ease was prepared by the repay, who negotiated for it. He >rm, inserting in his handwritthe words: “$20 per lb. per annum first minute pressure based on six-inch casing.” He also struck out of the lease the following printed words: “except while any well shows a pressure of less than 200 pounds per square inch upon being confined for five minutes, in which case the consideration for the gas shall be at the rate of......dollars per annum, to be paid quarterly while marketed” and inserted in handwriting the following: “The minimum royalty for each gas well drilled to be $150 per annum.” resentative of the compa made use of a printed ft ing in the printed clause

The entire dispute between the parties revolved around the interpretation of the provision — “$20 per lb. per annum first minute ing.” pressure based on six-inch cas-

*531 The plaintiffs contend that the true intent and meaning of the phrase is and was that the first minute pressure reading of each well should be taken as soon after the completion of each well as practicable, and that payment should be made to the plaintiffs at the rate of $20 per pound per annum, based on six-inch casing and the first minute pressure taken as soon after the drilling of the well as practicable so long as gas was produced from that well and sold off the premises. The defendant, to the contrary, contends that the true intent and meaning is and was that payments should be made to plaintiffs quarterly at the rate of $20 per pound per annum based upon tests of the first minute pressure in six-inch casing, such tests to be made quarterly for the purpose of determining the royalty due for each quarter.

The learned trial court ruled that the lease was ambiguous in this respect and admitted testimony to show what was in the minds of the parties at the time they made the lease. This testimony was admitted not to vary the written instrument but solely for the purpose of making clear how the royalty was to be determined, whether by one test or by quarterly tests.

The plaintiffs, in support of their contention, testified concerning the negotiations for the lease and certain circumstances surrounding its execution, together with the interpretation which was placed on it by the parties at the time. Their testimony was to the following effect: that shortly before the making of the lease large producing wells had been drilled on neighboring property and that representatives of the American Natural Gas Company called on them several times for the purpose of negotiating a lease; that these representatives proposed a flat rate which plaintiffs refused demanding a pound pressure basis; that the representatives advised them that a flat rate would be more to their advantage, as the company might reduce the pressure by pumping the wells if they leased on a pressure basis, which would diminish their payments under the lease, and that then *532 they conceived the idea of leasing at a flat rate, this rate to be determined, however, once and for all, by the result of the first pressure test. Plaintiffs claim the representatives of the company then agreed to this basis, and the lease was accordingly made. The defendant denied that the lease was made on such basis, and one of its representatives stated that he told plaintiffs that the well would be tested quarterly.

The plaintiffs testified further that during these negotiations they refused to sign a standard form of lease which provided for the taking of minute pressure tests quarterly with payments based on such quarterly readings, and that then the lease agreed upon was executed on a printed form, the representative of the company writing in the words “$20 per lb. per annum first minute pressure based on six-inch casing,” and striking out the printed portion of the lease providing for a reduction of the payments in event that the pressure fell below a certain point, and inserting in its stead the clause which provided that the minimum royalty for each well drilled was to be $150 per annum.

The plaintiffs also showed that after the completion of the first well it was gauged within seven days but that no subsequent gauges of it were taken for a period of two and one-half years and that payments to them were based on that first pressure reading; that the minute pressure on the second well was taken the day after its completion, and payments based on that reading, and that no other pressure reading was taken for a period of one and one-half years.

The plaintiffs produced in evidence a letter written by the assistant general manager of the defendant to Mr. Laney, one of the plaintiffs, dated November 17, 1926, to show that the interpretation placed on the contract by the defendant at that time was the same as the interpretation of the plaintiffs. The first paragraph of this letter reads as follows: “About a week ago Mr. Borger and Mr. Nicklas paid you a visit regarding royalty on *533 your two gas wells. Your refusal to change the royalty provision has caused us to reconsider the matter. We will now pay the royalty as provided for in the lease even though the gas has not been used off the premises to any extent since the completion of the wells. This is as you desired it.”

In support of its position defendant contends strenuously that the words “first minute pressure” have a technical meaning and that the word “first” modifies only the word “minute” and not the word “pressure,” and that there is a custom in the gas industry when wells are leased on a pressure basis to take pressure readings quarterly and to base payments on quarterly readings.

Mr. Heck testified that, representing the American Natural Gas Company, he procured the lease from the plaintiffs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
158 A. 266, 305 Pa. 527, 1931 Pa. LEXIS 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laney-et-ux-v-columbia-nat-gas-co-pa-1931.