Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Stroud

3 S.W.2d 462
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 17, 1927
DocketNo. 575.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 3 S.W.2d 462 (Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Stroud) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Stroud, 3 S.W.2d 462 (Tex. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

STANFORD, J.

This suit was filed by appellant against appellee to recover $1,848.12, being the alleged contract price of 15,401 M •cubic feet of natural gas sold and delivered by appellant to appellee continuously over a period, of 14 months from November, 1925, to; January 1, 1927. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment ren-' dered for appellee. The trial court filed no findings of fact or conclusions, but there is a statement of facts in the record. Appellant, duly perfected its appeal, and presents the ■record here for review.

Under its first proposition, appellant contends, in effect, that the court erred in refusing to render judgment for appellant for $1,-848.12, the amount sued for, because the un-eontradieted evidence required such judgment to be rendered. The record discloses that on May 23, 1921, appellee leased to appellant certain land, by the terms of which appellee conveyed to appellant “all the oil, gas and other minerals, in or under the tract of land hereinafter described,” etc., describing about' 1,257 acres, and containing the usual covenants for beginning wells, payment of rentals, etc. The royalties reserved by the grantor and required to be paid by the grantee were:

“(⅜) On oil, a quantity equal to one-eighth of. all the oil produced and saved from said premises, after deducting that used for light, heat and operations on the premises, the same to be delivered at the wells'or to the credit of grantor in the pipe lines with which the wells may be connected; (b) on natural gas at the rate of one-eighth of the proceeds of the sale for each well producing gas exclusively, and from which gas is then being used off the land, or sold by grantee; the grantor to have the privilege at grantor’s risk and expense of making and maintaining connection and using gas from such well free of charge for one dwelling on the land.”

This lease, which contained many other provisions not necessary to mention,- wa,s put in evidence. Appellant drilled two wells on said land, which produced gas only, and paid appellee one-eighth of the proceeds of the sale of gas from said two wells as gas. royalty, up until about November, 1925. On August 15, 1925, appellee wrote appellant the following letter:

“Magnolia Petroleum Co., Dallas, Texas— Gentlemen: In reference to phone conversation with Mr. Falkner about your gas well on our Hudgins lease will say that as we have made no progress towards a deal with your Mr. Wilson for the well, will suggest that I connect the well to my line and take one-eighth of gas due me as rental on well, or take all the gas I can use from well on basis you suggested 6 cents per thousand 2 lb. pressure pending any deal we may make — if agreeable to your company.
“Shall we connect line or do you want to send your men to do same?
“Tours truly, J. R. Stroud.”

Thereafter, on October 30, 1925, appellant received the following letter from appellee:

“Magnolia Petroleum Co., Dallas, Texas— Gentlemen: I am in receipt of yours of Oct. 26th, in which you inclose me check for $25.91 for the two months of August and September, *464 gas royalty. Referring to same will say that this is not satisfactory to me. I do not think your company has protected my interest in the production of gas; as I think offset wells have produced much more than your well has produced. I asked your company for one-eighth of this production. You declined to let me have it. I now ask you for it again and will pay you 12 cents per ‘M’ for what I use above one-eighth of the capacity of the well. Please let me know if you are willing to do this or if your company will give me this for one-eighth the capacity of the well; or if your company has any proposition to offer please submit it by return mail.
“Yours truly, X R. Stroud.”

On November 2, 1925, appellant wrote the following letter to appellee:

“Mr. X R. Stroud, Stroud Gas Company, Groesbeck, Texas — Dear Sir: In reply to your letter of recent date in which you request to he permitted to take one-eighth of the gas from our well .on your premises:
“I wish to advise you that until you are further advised this will be satisfactory, but you will be obliged to lay your line to the well, also to make the connection. We are not in a position to let you take more than your one-eighth of the gas from this well as we need it for other purposes, but as it will be a very difficult matter to prorate t-his gas so that you will get exactly your óne-eighth, whatever amount over and above that that you happen to take, we will furnish, subject to change on 60 days’ written notice, at 12 cents per thousand cubic feet, computed on a basis of 2 pounds above atmospheric pressure.
“When you get ready to make your connection to this well, please advise Mr. Wilson and he. will have a representative present.”

After receiving the above letter from appellant, dated November 2, 1925, appellee connected his gas 'line with appellant’s two gas wells and began and continued to take gas therefrom until January 1, 1927, measuring the same through standard meters installed by himself. There is no contention on this appeal but that appellee took 15,401 M cubic feet of gas in excess of 'and above thfe one-eighth of the gas taken from said two wells during said period from November, 1925, to January 1,1927. Appellee offered no evidence. On this appeal appellee contends the evidence was insufficient to show a contract of sale of gas from appellant to appel-lee, as alleged, but if such contract is shown, same was, in effect, that appellee would pay 12 cents per thousand cubic feet for the excess over one-eighth of the open capacity production of said two wells, and not the excess over the actual production, and that the amount he received, was not equal to one-eighth of the capacity of said wells. It will be observed that in the lease contract appel-lee conveyed to appellant “all the oil, gas and other minerals in or under said land,” etc. The royalties reserved were: “(a) On oil one-eighth, etc.; (b) on natural' gas at the rate of one-eig'hth of the proceeds of the sale for each well producing gas exclusively, and from which gas is then being used off the land or sold by grantee.”

In other words, by the terms of the lease the title to all the gas was conveyed to appellant by appellee, and appellant was obligated to pay appellee one-eighth not of the gas produced, but of the proceeds of the sale of the gas produced. Again, it will be observed that under the lease appellant was obligated to pay appellee one-eighth of the proceeds of the sale of the gas produced, not orie-eighth of the proceeds of the capacity of the well. It is clear that under the lease the title to all the gas vested in appellant, and appellant was obligated to pay appellee one-eighth of the proceeds of the sale of the gas produced. This is the construction of the lease contract adopted and acted upon by both appellant and appellee for some time, appellant paying and appellee receiving payment without complaint of one-eighth of the proceeds of the .sale of the gas produced. But appellee, being in a position to use the gas in his business of furnishing gas to the citizens of Groes-beck, on August 15, 1925, wrote appellant.

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Bluebook (online)
3 S.W.2d 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnolia-petroleum-co-v-stroud-texapp-1927.