MAZDA OIL CORPORATION v. Gauley

1955 OK 331, 290 P.2d 143, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 229, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 580
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedNovember 15, 1955
Docket36654
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1955 OK 331 (MAZDA OIL CORPORATION v. Gauley) 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
MAZDA OIL CORPORATION v. Gauley, 1955 OK 331, 290 P.2d 143, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 229, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 580 (Okla. 1955).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

H. C.’Gauley, defendant in error, brought action in the district court of Major County to recover damages to his farm occasioned by gas escaping from below the surface. Defendant claimed damage to growing crops and permanent damage to his real estate praying judgment for $32,020. The case was tried to a jury and a verdict .returned awarding recovery in the sum of $14,852. The Mazda Oil Corporation, defendant in the trial court, against which judgment was rendered on the verdict by the jury, appeals.

For convenience the parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

The defendant corporation as lessee under an oil and gas lease drilled a well on plaintiffs’ farm. Drilling was completed on or about 11-3-48 and the well produced oil. Plaintiff predicated his right of recovery from damages suffered to his property by reason of escaping gas from defendant’s well and alleges negligence and want of care by defendant in one or all of several particulars, briefly stated as follows: Defendant was negligent in the manner of setting surface pipe in the well; in not taking proper precautions to prevent the escape of gas from the well to the upper structures and strata; in failing to properly cement the well to protect the upper strata from gas from producing sand; and negligence and want of care in failing to take proper action to prevent and .stop escaping gas from the producing sands to the upper structures after the escaping of gas became ■known to 'the defendant.

Briefly stated the defense was that defendant’s well was not the proximate causé of the alleged damage, the well never produced gas and defendant was not guilty of any actionable negligence.

The record is voluminous. The testimony includes that of both laymen and those specially trained in their particular field of study and experience whose testimony was calculated to shed light upon the complex situation arising in the case. The testimony and exhibits revealed the use of scientific tests relative to the physical aspects of an oil well and the condition of the soil surrounding it.

The Ringwood Oil Field, in Major County, is large in area, covering several sections. The well drilled by the defendant on plaintiff’s farm was one of the first in the field. At the time it was drilled, gas in any considerable amount had not been discovered. Later, gas from what is known as the *145 Cherokee Sand was encountered at a depth of some 6,000 feet. It proved to be extensive in area and when released showed very high pressure.

Defendant denies that gas was produced from its well in any considerable amount at any time and that none came through or from it to plaintiff’s damage. This constitutes a major issue in the suit.

Plaintiff’s evidence in support of his claim reasonably tends to show that he had owned and lived on the farm involved since 1926 and conducted farming operations; that defendant had drilled a water well to a depth of 200 feet on plaintiff’s farm for use in drilling the oil well, which water well was 40 feet north and 100 feet east of the oil well and some 50 or 60 feet from his home; the oil well was some 300 feet from the house; that when the drilling of the oil well reached 190 to 200 feet, a channel or fissure connecting the oil well and the water well was discovered; that such channel was large enough for cotton seed hulls used with the drilling fluid to pass through to the water well; that there were many manifestations of seeping and erupting gas on the farm; that in October or November of 1949 gas escaped from plaintiff’s domestic water well located about 100 feet northeast of the defendant’s water well; that the water from the domestic well came through pipes to plaintiff’s home and at times had sufficient gas pressure to knock a glass from the hand; that this condition continued until spring of 1951; that gas and liquids erupted from a bradenhead valve on defendant’s oil well; that drilling mud came into the domestic water well and it had to be abandoned and another drilled to a depth of 51 feet some 10 or 12 feet northwest; that it developed gas in the fall of 1950 and the following February, 1951, caught fire; that in June of 1950, defendant’s water well was discovered to contain gas in sufficient amount to ignite; that on July 19, 1950, the defendant’s water well started to erupt gas and water, the eruption at first reaching a height of some two feet and later increasing to approximately 200 feet, and continuing for a week; that an oil well identified as the'Wilco started drill-mg on the offset west, one-fourth of a mile from the defendant’s well; that at 240 feet and 340 feet gas blew from this well with great force, which caused a subsidence in the eruptions of the water well; that after the disturbance in the water well and the Wilco well, a large eruption occurred through a seismograph hole, also on plaintiff’s farm, which hole was about 100 feet northwest of the defendant’s oil well and some 40 feet to the northeast of the Wilco well; that on August 15, 1950, another eruption, southwest of the seismograph hole some 100 feet from the Wilco well, blew gas and other substances 15 feet in the air and affected an area 30 feet in diameter; that a similar eruption affecting an area 60 feet in diameter occurred southwest of the Wilco well, the last previous eruption subsiding as this one began; that this last eruption was stopped when heavy rain and water ran into the holes created by the eruptions and disappeared; that gas seepage killed a wind break of trees and other trees near plaintiff’s house; that strips or spots of feed vegetation and later growing wheat began to die due to gas Seepage first observed in the fall of 1951, the first 'such strip being some 45 feet from the oil well; that the area affected by gas seeping into the soil broadened, appearing in spots, eventually extending to 1600 feet; that a soil analysis showed the soil to be in numerous places saturated with gas; that the soil contained carbon-dioxide 300 times that of normal soils and such condition is not found normally elsewhere in Oklahoma or in plaintiff’s community; that there was a definite source of seepage coming from one point; that the seepage only appeared near defendant’s well and from a visual examination of the area it was confined to the quarter section in which defendant’s well is located; that there was a gassy smell very close to the well and the area around the well had such odor, which odor disappeared 20 yards from the well but reappeared from the holes dug for soil analysis; that the vegetation slopped out from the oil well; that a substance identified as oil well cement in the form of small granules was washed from the defendant’s water well and deposited nearby in considerable quantity; that *146

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Bluebook (online)
1955 OK 331, 290 P.2d 143, 5 Oil & Gas Rep. 229, 1955 Okla. LEXIS 580, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mazda-oil-corporation-v-gauley-okla-1955.