Lovett v. Eastern Oil Co.

70 S.E. 707, 68 W. Va. 667, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 31
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 14, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 70 S.E. 707 (Lovett v. Eastern Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lovett v. Eastern Oil Co., 70 S.E. 707, 68 W. Va. 667, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 31 (W. Va. 1911).

Opinion

BRAfjnof, Judge:

In October, 1907, James B. Lovett and wife brought a chancery suit in the circuit court of Lewis county against Eastern Oil Company and West Virginia Central Gas Company to cancel a lease made by Lovett and wife to Eastern Oil Company dated 16th May, 1899, for oil and gas, assigned to West Virginia Central Gas Company, of a tract of.land, and the court refused the relief asked and dismissed the bill, and Lovett and .wife appeal to this Court.

The lessee did not take possession or do any work of development of oil or gas prior to the institution of this suit, but did later enter and drill a gas well. On the 19th day of August, 1905, Lovett and wife made a writing, which was recorded in the office of the clerk of the county court, declaring. that they repudiated the lease and declined to accept any further rental or payments under it, and declaring an absolute forfeiture thereof, not only on account of the default in the performance of its conditions, but also because the same was void for want of mutuality. The lease was for a term of ten years and for as much longer thereafter as oil or gas should be found in paying quantities. It contained, provisions for the payment of a royalty of one eighth of the oil produced and one hundred dollars per year for each gas well. , It provided that “rentals on this'lease may be paid direct to first parties or deposited to their credit in the Citizens Bank of Weston.” It contained also the following provisions: “It is further agreed, That- the second party shall drill a well within three months from the date hereof, or thereafter pay the party of the first part Ninety dollars per annum rent in advance for said premises from the [669]*669time fixed for the drilling of the well aforesaid until a well shall be drilled.

The lessee,, his heirs or assigns may surrender this lease at any time upon notice to the first party of his intention so to do, and notice of such intention may be given by a failure on the part of the second party to pay the rent when due.

Upon notice so given this lease shall lie null and void and the parties of the first part hereby waive all right of action for damages by reason thereof and all money which has been paid-shall be in full for all damages.

The parties then shall mutually release each other from their covenants in this lease and from all rights, claims, moneys, or action due or to become due.” The oil company paid into the bank six rentals of $90 each, which Lovett received, and on the 10th day of August, 1905, the oil company paid into said bank $90 in advance for the year running from 16th August, 1905, to 16th August, 1906, and it paid into the bank three further rentals paying down to August 16, 1909, a few days before, each installment was due. As stated Lovett accepted six yearly rentals paid in lieu of development; but lie did not accept that rental paid in bank on the 10th of August, 1905, for the year ending 16th August, 1906, and he has not accepted any subsequent installment and has declined to do so, claiming the right to annul and repudiate the lease. He knew of these payments into bank. Lovett bases his claim to repudiate this lease on the theory that it is but a mere option which he could revoke at any time because' of the failure of the lessee to develop oil and gas. He claims that as the lease gives the oil company right to surrender the lease at any time, he has the correlative right of cancellation. He claims that as the oil company had right to surrender the lease either expressly or by failure to pay the rental and be released from obligation, there is no mutuality of obligation, no consideration binding, and that he had right to- declare the lease at an end. We are cited for this contention to the cases of Eclipse Oil Co. v. South Penn Oil Co., 47 W. Va. 84, and Trees v. Eclipse Oil Co., Id. 107. I dissented in both those cases, as will appear in 34 S. E. 932 and 934, though my dissent was omitted in the official State Report from negligence of some one connected with the publication. But this is not material. Those cases proeee.d upon [670]*670the idea that there were no binding leases; that there was no obligation, no promise on the -part of the lessee to pay money or do anything, and a privilege to surrender the leases without payment of anything, at mere will; that they conferred only an estate at the will of the lessee, and that the etate being one at will it might be terminated by either party; that there was no consideration for the lease. Those cases do.not control this case. AA'Ihy? Reference to Judge Dent's opinion in Lowther Oil Co. v. Guffey, 52 W. Va. at page 91, will show the difference between the leases in those cases and the lease involved here. So will the opinions in Harness v. Eastern Oil Co., 49 W. Va. p. 250, and Pyle v. Henderson, 65 lid. p. 4£. In the lease before us we ünd a valuable consideration paid, as it recites the payment of one dollar down. WiH it be said that that small sum is not a sufficient consideration to support the lease? -We said that it was sufficient, as consideration, to make the lease good in Lowther Oil Co. v. Guffey, supra. “The mere inadequacy of a consideration does not render it insufficient except as a circumstance bearing on the question of fraud or undue influence. A valuable consideration, however small and nominal, if given or stipulated for in good faith is, in the absence of fraud, sufficient to sustain a parol contract. Accordingly, a grantor who has been tendered one dollar as a consideration for his deed, can not have it set aside for want of consideration where it does not appear that he expected any other.” 1 Beach, Modern Law of Contracts, § 5. Look back at hundreds of deeds through hundreds of years and you will find them stating one dollar as a valuable consideration. To say that such a consideration acknowledged under seal is not good would be to overthrow myriads of deeds. The parties have chosen to treat it as a sufficient consideration; they have contracted that it shall be such, and no court in the absence of fraud, can nullify their contract. The fact that it is so small a consideration will not render the lease a mere option. The fact that a valuable consideration was paid-for such a lease differs this case from Eclipse Oil Co. Case above cited, as was stated in Lowther Oil Co. Case, 52 W. Va. p. 91, and in Pyle v. Henderson, 65 Id. p. 41. But that one dollar is not the only consideration; for the lease provides that the lessee shall drill wells, and from them pay royalty, or on failure to do that pay $90 per year. Lovett thus [671]*671had the chance of getting returns in royalties, or in lieu of them, $90 each year. Until the lessee should exercise the right of surrender the rental was payable. The mere fact that this right of surrender existed does not deprive the lease of having a valuable consideration on which to rest. The oil company did not exercise that right, but year after year paid this rental. So that the lessee not exercising the privilege of surrender paid large amounts as yearly rental, accepted by Lovett, and this was valuable consideration, in addition to the one dollar, and would bar Lovett from holding the lease a mere option without consideration, a mere estate at will determinable whenever Lovett chose.

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Bluebook (online)
70 S.E. 707, 68 W. Va. 667, 1911 W. Va. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovett-v-eastern-oil-co-wva-1911.