McLeod v. Cities Service Gas Company
This text of 131 F. Supp. 449 (McLeod v. Cities Service Gas Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Plaintiffs, Alfred M. McLeod and Besse McLeod, Kansas citizens, bring this action against • the defendants, Cities Service Gas Company, a Delaware cor *450 poration (herein referred to as “Cities’) and Charles Miller, a Kansas citizen, to recover money judgments for real and personal property losses allegedly suffered by plaintiffs because of the negligent, and otherwise unlawful, acts of the defendants while the defendants were on plaintiffs’ lands pursuant to certain lease arrangements.
Plaintiffs’ “Third Amended Petition for Damages” contains, in substance, the following :
In Count I, plaintiff, Besse McLeod, asks for $20,000 actual damages and $9,000 punitive damages from Cities for the alleged wilful and reckless spreading of oil, sludge and basic sediment from three refuse ponds located on 252 acres owned by plaintiff permanently damaging about 10 acres of such land ; 1 the dismantling, scattering and littering of pipe and other oil field equipment and debris over the entire premises; the unneeessary destroying of fences; and, the excessive appropriating of land area for vehicle driveways and roads. The elements making up the alleged actual damages include permanent damage to land, growing crop damage, and temporary pasture depreciation.
In Count II, plaintiff Alfred M. McLeod, seeks to recover $5,000 from defendant Cities for damages to crops, pastures> terracing and fertility and pro-Activity of the three tracts making up the 214 acres brought on by wrongful ac^® ^he same character alleged by plaintiff Besse McLeod in Count I. 2
In Count III, plaintiff Alfred M. McLeod, asks to recover a total of $6,000 from both defendants for damage to plaintiff’s 88 acre tract wherein allegedly *451 a water well was destroyed ánd tbie terracing and grass crop on such tract were damaged from the joint and concurring carelessness of defendants’ employees. 3
In Count IV, plaintiff, Alfred M. McLeod, seeks $2,000 actual and $1,000 punitive damages from defendant Cities Service for damages suffered by the 88 acre tract (described in Count III) from the acts of Cities Service employees in ripping out embankments of ponds containing sludge, basic sediment and other refuse and permitting such waste to flow over the land, permanently damaging the land overflowed by such sludge and reducing the value of the remainder of the tract by the tracking of such sludge and refuse by plaintiff’s cattle over the entire tract.
In Count V, plaintiff Alfred M. McLeod, asserts that as a further result of the unlawful acts of defendants’ employees described in Counts I, II and III, plaintiff suffered a $30,000 loss from being forced to ship his cattle to Iowa for feeding rather than leaving them on the described lands; and, in addition claims $5,000 damage to his sheep from coming in contact with the sludge, basic sediment and other refuse described in the previous Counts.
The case was tried to the Court without a jury and taken under advisement at the conclusion of all evidence. The land involved in this controversy was personally viewed by the Court; and, counsel were permitted to submit briefs.
Plaintiffs’ requests for relief may be classified into three basic categories: (1) permanent damages (to land); (2) temporary damages (to terraces, ponds, brome grass and fences on land); and, (3) livestock operational losses. These issues will be dealt with separately and in the order just mentioned.
The Court is of the opinion that neither of plaintiffs is entitled to recover for alleged permanent damages to the lands in question for the reason that such permanent damages resulted from work by Cities employees in filling in slush and refuse pits and disposing of such refuse at the direction of plaintiff, Alfred M. McLeod, owner, or agent for owner, of all lands affected. 4 Inasmuch as Cities was under no legal obligation to clean up the slush pits; 5 the Court can but give credence to Cities testimony that such work was done as an accommodation to plaintiffs to promote good relations between the gas storage lessee and the lessors. Once it *452 Was discovered that the pits could not be filled in as requested by Mr. McLeod, Cities’ .employees proceeded with all diligence to properly complete the cleanup. When it developed that the sludge and refuse could not be covered with dirt, Cities promptly gained permission to haul off the waste material and deposit it in a gully located on the McLeod premises. 6 Although all persons engaged in the cleanup learned the attempt to fill in was a mistake, plaintiffs cannot be heard to complain inasmuch as the cleanup was begun and conducted in accordance with McLeod’s expressed wishes; and, at all times Cities’ employees evidenced good faith, continuing the cleanup until a workmanlike finish was achieved. 7
As to temporary damages, the Court has concluded that only a very limited recovery should be permitted.'
.Although the evidence indicates that Cities employees did do some temporary damage to terraces and brome grass, plaintiffs’ proof fails to establish by the requisite measure that any of such damage resulted from a negligent or unreasonable use of the leased premises. It is, of course, understood that a lessee may make reasonable use of the leased land in carrying out the legitimate object of the lease. 8
Also, the Court finds no merit in plaintiffs’ assertions that Cities was guilty of negligence or other misconduct in the general cleaning up and removal of oil field equipment sold to Cities and left on the premises by the original mineral lessee. Under the gas storage lease, Cities had the right to make reasonable use of the premises, including an alteration or removal of the purchased equipment; and, the preponderance of the evidence discloses that plaintiffs' lands were in much better condition after Cities operations than before Cities went on the properties. However, under the express terms of the gas storage lease, plaintiffs are entitled to recover for all brome grass destroyed by Cities in their work and operations. 9
The Court has further concluded that neither of the defendants is liable for the alleged livestock operational losses of plaintiff, Alfred M. McLeod.
Neither defendant Cities nor defendant Miller was guilty of misconduct which necessitated a shipping of cattle and sheep from the lands in question to other locations. If the sheep wool be *453 came damaged by oil' and basic sediment such damage resulted from a condition which éxisted at the time Cities first went on the leased lands; 10
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
131 F. Supp. 449, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 1732, 1955 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcleod-v-cities-service-gas-company-ksd-1955.