McIntosh v. Ropp

82 A. 949, 233 Pa. 497, 1912 Pa. LEXIS 858
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 2, 1912
DocketAppeals, Nos. 217, 218, 219 and 220
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 82 A. 949 (McIntosh v. Ropp) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McIntosh v. Ropp, 82 A. 949, 233 Pa. 497, 1912 Pa. LEXIS 858 (Pa. 1912).

Opinion

Opinion bt

Me. Justice Moschziskee,'

These four appeals are in cases arising out of the same state of facts. The causes were tried together in the court below and argued as one in this court, on the understanding that they should be here disposed of in like manner.

Addie McIntosh, the plaintiff and appellant, is the owner of an undivided one-half interest in a farm of 128 acres in Butler county, the other undivided half belonging to her brother, Edward E. McIntosh. This farm was originally owned by their mother, Rose McIntosh, who died intestate May 15, 1888, leaving to survive her a husband, Kenneth McIntosh, the above-named two children, and a daughter Lizzie. At the time of the mother’s death and during the period of the other facts here involved, the father lived on the farm with Edward and Addie, but the daughter Lizzie resided in New York state. Prior to the acquisition of this property by Rose McIntosh the land had been developed for oil and.gas, but the operation had been abandoned at the time of her death.

On July 22, 1895, Kenneth McIntosh executed a lease to B. B. Seibert for twenty acres of said farm at a one-eighth royalty; it was in the usual form, and was to run for fifteen years and as long thereafter as oil and gas should be produced in paying quantities. ' None of the children joined in the execution of this lease, but they were all of full age at that time. The lessee went upon the land and drilled two unproductive wells, and in November, 1896, when about to abandon the property, he assigned all his interests to Daniel Dierkin and Valentine Whitener for a consideration of $1,200. They,‘ ‘ as the result of the expenditure of a considerable sum of money” managed to make the wells “fair producers.” On March 19, 1898, Whitener sold his interest to Dierkin for $3,000, and the latter retained possession until July, 1907, at which time he assigned the lease to W. H. Ropp for $4,000. Ropp con[508]*508tinued to operate the two wells until April 5, 1909, when he sold to C. E. Blaney for $4,000; and the latter still holds possession.

April 7, 1900, Lizzie McIntosh sold and conveyed her undivided one-third interest in the farm to her brother and sister. January 8, 1910, Kenneth McIntosh died. January 13, 1910, Edward E. McIntosh conveyed to his sister Addie all his interest in the oil rights, “in and to the twenty acres of land comprising said leasehold,” together with all oil produced in the past from the two wells, retaining the right to one-half of the royalty fixed by the lease. On the same day they executed a division order to the company through whose lines the oil was run, and thereafter the royalty was paid to them in equal proportions. Before that date the royalty had been paid to Kenneth McIntosh, with the knowledge of his two children, many of the payments having been made directly to Edward.

In 1907 Edward and Addie brought a joint action in trespass against Dierkin, and another against Ropp, to recover damages for the taking of oil under the lease; but on appeal it was held that Edward was estopped by his knowledge and conduct (as detailed in the report) from again enforcing “payment for the oil thus run,” this court stating, “as to the sister Addie .... we are of opinion that the facts established at the trial are not sufficient to constitute an estoppel as to her. However, the present action cannot prevail, because it being joint, and there being sufficient facts established to estop Edward, the right to a joint recovery being thus defeated, this action must fall.” Addie then instituted the following actions: April 20, 1909, proceeding in equity against Ropp praying for an accounting for her share of the oil, exclusive of the royalty, from July, 1907, to April, 1909; June 10, 1909, action of trespass against Dierkin to recover damages because of his operations from March 18, 1898, to July 1, 1907; January 13, 1910, action of ejectment against Blaney to recover the land and mesne profits; February 14,1910, action of trespass against Blaney to recover [509]*509damages because of his operations from April 5,1909, to January 8, 1910; and these are the cases before us on appeal.

The plaintiff averred that the various defendants went upon the land and carried on their operations “without authority from or consent of the plaintiff,” and that they had wrongfully retained from her the oil and gas produced therefrom; that “at the time of the unauthorized, unlawful and wrongful entry of the defendant .... the plaintiff was the owner .... subject to the life-estate of her father, .... and had a property in the one-half of the oil, gas and other by-products .... taken out,‘removed, or appropriated, .... by the defendant, which, exclusive of royalty, belonged absolutely and immediately to her as personal property, and for one-half of which the defendant is answerable to the plaintiff in damages.” She claimed that the measure of her damages was the market value of the oil after it had been severed from the land less the expense of production and the royalty paid by the defendant, while the defendant contended that the only proper measure was the value of the oil in place as represented by the royalty already paid.

At the trial the parties, inter alia, agreed: “That the lease was made by Kenneth McIntosh, who was a tenant for life with remainder in Addie McIntosh, the plaintiff, and her brother, Edward McIntosh;” that “Edward McIntosh, the owner of the one-half of the title in remainder, ratified the lease made by the life-tenant and the lessee' was in possession under him as well as under the life tenant;” that “If the plaintiff is not entitled under the circumstances and the law of the case to recover the one-half of the seven-eighths of the market value of the production during the life of the life-tenant after .it has been produced and severed from the land, less the proper cost and expense of its production, then judgment to be entered for the defendant;” that “If the court should be of opinion that the damages are not to be measured by the value of the oil and other products, after being severed, less cost [510]

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Bluebook (online)
82 A. 949, 233 Pa. 497, 1912 Pa. LEXIS 858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcintosh-v-ropp-pa-1912.