Lovett v. West Virginia Central Gas Co.

79 S.E. 1007, 73 W. Va. 40, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 147
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 21, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 79 S.E. 1007 (Lovett v. West Virginia Central Gas 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. West Virginia Central Gas Co., 79 S.E. 1007, 73 W. Va. 40, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 147 (W. Va. 1913).

Opinion

Robdísoe, Judge:

Defendant, claiming under an oil and'gas lease, entered on plaintiff’s land. By this action in ejectment plaintiff sought to oust defendant from possession. At the trial, when the evidence was all in, the court directed a verdict for defendant, and judgment in its behalf followed. Assigning that the court erred in the admission and refusal of evidence and in directing a verdict, plaintiff seeks reversal of the judgment.

The lease under which defendant entered was executed by plaintiff and his wife to the Eastern Oil Company. It is the same lease that plaintiff and his wife sought to have cancelled by a suit in chancery which was ended adversely to them by a decision of this court reported in 68 W. Va. 667. In that suit the lease was attacked as one forfeited and void. But it was adjudged that the lease was a valid, subsisting one. That suit raised no question as to what parcels of land were embraced in the lease. After the determination of the chancery cause, plaintiff, who had failed therein to relieve all of the land from the force of the lease, for the first time claimed that a parcel of about eleven acres, adjoining the two other parcels which are unquestionably within the description of the lease, was not covered by that description. Defendant, as assignee of the lease, had theretofore entered on the premises and drilled a producing gas well on one of the parcels. When defendant came to begin operations on the eleven acre parcel, the gates thereto were [42]*42barred. Nevertheless defendant’s servants entered and drilled another gas well. Thereafter plaintliff began this ejectment suit.

The description of the land in the lease is the general one ordinarily found in oil and gas leases. It calls for a tract of land containing ninety-three acres, bounded as follows:

“On the north by lands of Wilmer Norris,
On the east by lands of P'olk and Ceph Butcher,
On the south by lands of Geo. N. Butcher and Bailey Bros.,
On the west by lands of Geo. W. Dean.”

Plaintiff and his wife, who executed the lease, owned three parcels of land, all adjoining. Together these three parcels make up the same acreage called for in the lease. Title to the parcel of eleven acres involved in this, ejectment suit, and to one of the other parcels, much larger than the eleven acres, is in plaintiff; title to the remaining parcel is in his wife. The larger parcel belonging to plaintiff and the parcel belonging to his wife make a long but fairly regular boundary of land. But the parcel of eleven acres adjoins plaintiff’s other parcel by only a narrow ne8k and juts out therefrom so that it alone is nearly surrounded by lands of others. The location of the eleven acres is to the east of the body of the other two parcels. Plaintiff says that the call for ad joiners on the east line of the land as given in the lease will not allow the eleven acres to be included. In other words, he says that the lands of Polk and Ceph Butcher as called for in the description are not on the east of the eleven acres. True, by reason of the peculiar jutting out of the eleven acre parcel from the body of the other two parcels, the Butcher lands are to the west and north of the eleven acres. But at the same time they are directly to the east of a portion of the remaining body of the land, and the call does to an extent answer for a boundary of the whole. It is not totally inconsistent with an inclusion of the eleven acre parcel. However we may look at the land, whether as a tract containing the two parcels or the three, the description for the northern and eastern boundary is incomplete. In either ease, there are other, ad joiners that might have been named. Still, the calls for the north and east as given in the lease are not contrary to the taking in of the eleven acres. Then when we look at the call for the south, we find it particularly in harmony [43]*43with an inclusion of the eleven acres; for, the land of Geo. 1ST. Butcher is squarely and regularly south of the eleven acres. It is also true that the Geo. hi. Butcher land might be considered a proper call for the southern boundary even if we exclude the eleven acres, but that plainly indicates that the eleven acres is to be included. The call for the east is incomplete and leaves it uncertain whether the eleven acres is to be included. The call for the south speaks an intention to take in the small parcel, but it is not conclusive in that regard. Thus we observe that the boundary lines given in the lease are insufficient for the purpose of locating the land definitely and certainly. They are indeed consistent with either the inclusion or the exclusion of the parcel of eleven acres. Whither then may we look for further indicia of the intention of the parties?

This case is plainly one where a consideration of the quantity is proper in determining whether the parties intended that the lease should cover all of the three parcels. While a call for quantity will never have effect as controlling other definite description of land, yet when there is plainly such ambiguity in description as we have here, quantity may be considered for the purpose of finding the intention of the parties. When the general boundaries given may mean the inclusion of a parcel or the exclusion of it, as in this case, certainly the number of acres which the parties have fixed in describing the land may be looked to. Particularly so is this in relation to an ordinary oil and gas lease. In such a lease the acreage is usually stated with certainty because of the relation that it ordinarily has to the fixing of the commutation money to be paid. The land owner is particular to see that the acreage of the land he intends to lease is all that it really is, while the lessee is interested in having it stated no larger than the actual acreage of the land. How, in the case before us the parties say by the lease that the land intended to be leased is a tract containing ninety-three acres. If the parcel of eleven acres is included, the acreage is what the parties said it should be; otherwise it is not. The stating of the quantity of ninet}r-three acres is further indicia that the parties intended to cover the small parcel hy the lease. Where all other elements of description lose their superior value through am[44]*44biguities and uncertainties resort may be had to quantity. “Where the description of land by monuments, distances or otherwise is vague and indefinite, by reason of conflicting lines or omission of a line, or from any other cause, the statement of the acreage is an essential part of the description.” Smith v. Owens, 63 W. Va. 60.

But, perhaps, the clearest insight into what the parties mean by indefinite and ambiguous terms in a contract may be had from the practical construction put on it by themselves. “If a contract is ambiguous in meaning, the practical construction put upon it by the parties thereto is of great weight, even though the contract is in writing, and, ordinarily, is controlling.” 2 Page on Contracts, sec. 1126. Fo\f, plaintiff, by a letter which he wrote to an agent of defendant while the "chancery cause to which we have referred was. pending, in specific terms recognized this very lease as embracing all of the three parcels. Here is what he says: “The tract of land embraced in the -lease in controversy in the chancery cause referred to, is made up of three parcels, one containing 33% acres, one containing about 11 or 12 acres, and one containing about 48 acres. The first named tract is owned in fee simple by my wife, B. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 S.E. 1007, 73 W. Va. 40, 1913 W. Va. LEXIS 147, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lovett-v-west-virginia-central-gas-co-wva-1913.