McIntosh v. Augusta Oil Co.

35 S.E. 860, 47 W. Va. 832, 1900 W. Va. LEXIS 160
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 35 S.E. 860 (McIntosh v. Augusta 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
McIntosh v. Augusta Oil Co., 35 S.E. 860, 47 W. Va. 832, 1900 W. Va. LEXIS 160 (W. Va. 1900).

Opinion

English, Judge:

W. R. McIntosh and James L. Peebles were in February, 1890, seised and possessed of several tracts of land located in West Virginia, on the waters of Standing Stone creek, in Wirt County, containing in the aggregate nine hundred acres, and on September 5,1889, the said McIntosh, having control and management of said property, joined with Pee-bles in leasing said land to one William Skinner, of Pitts-burg, Pa., for the purpose of drilling and operating for oil and gas, upon the usual conditions. The lease provided that one well should be completed within six months from the date of the lease, unavoidable accidents excepted, and, on failure to complete operations on a well within such time, said Skinner agreed to pay fifty dollars per annum after the time for the completion of such well. Skinner, having assigned his rights under said lease to the Augusta Oil Company as to thirteen-sixteenths of the same, the said oil company entered into an agreement with said McIntosh to begin and bore a test well on said land, beginning opera[834]*834tions within thirty days from the date.of said agreement, and continue boring as rapidly as possible until the stratum known as the “Berea grit” was reached, etc. In the event the said Skinner and Augusta Oil Company should fail or refuse to bore and operate said test well, subject to the conditions aforesaid, within one year from the date of said agreement, then the Augusta Oil Company agreed to pay to said McIntosh and Peebles one thousand dollars as liquidated damages for the breach of covenant, and operate said test well. , In pursuance of this agreement the said oil company undertook to drill an oil well on said land, but, being so unfortunate as to get their drilling tools fast in the well, the undertaking was abandoned without further effort to complete the contract. On July 27, 1891, said McIntosh instituted a suit in equitv against the Augusta Oil Company, James L. Peebles, William Skinner, and H. W. Hartman, trustee, filing his bill at the August rules following, in which he stated the facts above detailed, and prayed for a decree against said oil company for the sum of one thousand dollars for said liquidated and agreed damages. McIntosh also filed an affidavit in said suit for an order of attachment, stating as the sole ground for such attachment that the defendant oil company was a corporation, created and existing under the laws of West Virginia, but that no person could be found upon whom service of pcocess could be made otherwise than by publication; and that the said oil company owns property and estate in said county of Wirt. In pursuance of this affidavit an order of attachment was issued and levied upon certain real estate in Wirt County as the property of said oil company. There was no motion to quash the affidavit or order of attachment, and no demurrer to the plaintiff’s bill. The defendant oil company filed its answer, claiming that McIntosh, at the time said contract was entered into, on the 7th of February, 1890, represented to it that he had a good title to said land, and a right to lease the same, when in fact he had not paid the purchase money, and suits were pending for the sale of said land; and that he concealed these facts from it for the purpose of inducing it to enter upon the work of developing said territory, and investing its money in said land; ‘that at the time said lease and [835]*835agreement were made, the Pennsylvania and West Virginia Lumber Company -bad instituted suit against the eight hundred acre tract, and a sale of the same had been direeted, and that McIntosh had induced respondent to pay off the claim then due the plaintiff in said suit, promising to refund to it the money so advanced, which he failed to do, and it was compelled to have said land sold under tbe said decree in favor of said lumber company, to whose rights it had been substituted; that by consent and agreement between the defendant company and McIntosh work was discontinued on the well then being drilled on thé McIntosh land, and the machinery moved to another lease near his land, and a well put down to a depth sufficient to test the territory; that said McIntosh never refunded the money paid for him, and in the meantime the land was advertised under a trust deed which McIntosh had executed on the same, and defendant was compelled to buy to protect itself, — all of which transpired before the territory could have been developed under said agreement. Depositions were taken, and on May 20, 189S, a decree was rendered in the cause holding that the plaintiff was entitled to the relief prayed for; that the order of attachment be sustained, and that the oil company do pay the plaintiff one-thousand one hundred and ninety-seven dollars and five cents, with legal interest thereon from May 20, 1898, until paid, and, in the event the oil company should not, within thirty days, pay the sum of money so decreed, directed a sale of the eight hundred acres attached in the cause upon-the terms and in the manner therein prescribed. From this decree the Augusta Oil Company obtained this appeal.

Now, the assignments of error in this case are, to a large-extent, based on facts and circumstances which the contending parties sought to establish by the testimony in the case, which seems to be conflicting; and that this Court will not disturb the finding of the circuit court where the evidence is conflicting, unless plainly erroneous, has frequently been held. See Smith v. Yoke, 27 W. Va. 639; Bartlett v. Cleavenger, 35 W. Va. 720, (14 S. E. 273); Richardson v. Ralphsnyder, 40 W. Va. 15, (20 S. E. 854); Yoke v. Shay, (W. Va.) 34 S. E. 748; and Spurgin v. Spurgin, (W. Va.) 34 S. E. 750. It is claimed in the assignments of [836]*836error that the oil company, by reason of the failure of the title of said McIntosh and the breach of the covenant for quiet enjoyment, could not safely operate said land, but the testimony is undisputed that said oil company left the plaintiff’s land, and moved its machinery to the Rathbone land, because that lease was about to expire, and that said company was not prevented from putting1 down the well on plaintiff’s land to the “Berea grit” on account of the liens existing against said land or the enforcement of such liens. It is also claimed as error that the plaintiff should have been compelled to amend his bill because he made an arrangement to compromise his claim for one thousand dollars sued for in the case, because the plaintiff, in his testimony, admits that said oil company Js entitled to a credit of two hundred dollars by reason of his portion of the purchase money arising from the sale of part of said land. These facts, however, were known to the oil company, and it neither demurred to the bill nor brought the matter to the attention of the court; and, if it had been brought to the court’s attention, it would have been only a credit on plaintiff’s claim to that extent, and no causé for amending the bill.

It is next claimed as error that the plaintiff, by his affidavit or bill, does not show any grounds for attachment, and this suit should have been dismissed for want of equity. This assignment is met by the fact that no motion was made to quash the affidavit or attachment in the circuit court, and the plaintiff, in his bill, alleges that upon his. affidavit as prescribed by law he has obtained from the clerk of said court an order of attachment against the defendant oil company, which allegation is not controverted in the answer. The question raised as to the validity of the attachment comes too late. In Kesler v. Lapham, 33 S. E.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
35 S.E. 860, 47 W. Va. 832, 1900 W. Va. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintosh-v-augusta-oil-co-wva-1900.