Meers v. Frick-Reid Supply Corp.

127 S.W.2d 493, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 594
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 6, 1939
DocketNo. 4997.
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 127 S.W.2d 493 (Meers v. Frick-Reid Supply Corp.) 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
Meers v. Frick-Reid Supply Corp., 127 S.W.2d 493, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 594 (Tex. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

On the 3rd day of April, 1929 appellants, J. F. Meers and wife, executed and delivered to Albert McCollum an oil and gas lease on 80 acres of land owned by them in Gráy County. The lease provided that it should remain in force and effect fór a primary term of five years. and as long thereafter as either oil or gas should be produced from the land. It contained royalty provisions of two-eighths of any oil or gas that may be produced and saved from any well or wells that may be drilled thereon and provided that drilling operations should commence within ninety days from the date of the lease.

About the middle of July, 1929, McCol-lum began the drilling of a well on the land and completed the same to a depth of 3,000 feet or more about January 1, 1930. Gas in considerable quantities was discoveréd before the well was completed but, in an effort to discover and produce oil, McCollum cased off the gas and drilled some distance below the gas horizon.

About July 15, 1929, McCollum purchased from appellee, the Frick-Reid Supply Corporation, certain oil well machinery, casing, tools and supplies to be used by him from time to time in the drilling of the well, agreeing to pay therefor within sixty days. Within the time provided by law the Frick-Reid Supply Corporation filed in the office of the County Clerk of Gray County an affidavit and verified claim in which it fixed, secured and claimed a material-man’s lien upon the leasehold estate and the material furnished by it, under article 5473, Revised Civil Statutes 1925, as amended in 1929 Acts Forty-first Legislature, Chapter 223, Vernon’s Ann. Civ.St. art. 5473, to secure its account amounting to $7,107.67.

On or about August 1, 1929 the lessee, McCollum, purchased from the other ap-pellees, Atlas Supply Company and Hinder-liter Tool Company, certain material and supplies which he used in the drilling of the well and to secure the payment of which the Hiñderliter Tool Company filed its mechanic’s lien claiming an indebtedness of $3,082.12 and Atlas Supply Company filed a similar lien claiming an indebtedness of $2,660.13.

On July 9, 1930, appellee, the Frick-Reid Supply Corporation, filed this suit against Albert McCollum and a large number of other parties to whom McCollum had assigned certain portions of the leasehold estate in which it sought judgment for its debt and foreclosure of its material-man’s lien on the leasehold estate and material and supplies furnished by it. Appellants, Meers and wife, were not made parties to the suit at that time.

*495 At some time after the completion of the well on or about January 1, 1930, and before the suit was filed July 9, 1930, Mc-Collum abandoned the well and leasehold estate and appellants, Meers and wife, on October 27, 1930, filed another suit, No. 2620, against McCollum and others, including the appellees, Frick-Reid Supply Corporation and all other parties to this suit, in which they sought to recover the leasehold estate by virtue of t'heir allegations that the same had been abandoned and forfeited. During the trial of Cause No. 2620 appellants; who were plaintiffs therein, and appellees, who were defendants therein, entered into a written stipulation to the effect that in the event appellants, Meers and wife, prevailed in that suit, the decree of the court would be res adjudicata as against appellees herein in so far as they claimed a lien against the oil and gas leasehold estate but that such judgment should not be res adjudicata on the question of whether, with the lease terminated, appellees .still had and could claim and foreclose their liens against the casing in the well. The stipulation further provided that appellees would not, in that suit, seek to recover judgment for, nor to foreclose their alleged liens upon, the oil and gas leasehold estate.

Cause No. 2620 was tried in the district court before a jury and on the 31st day of August, 1931, upon a verdict favorable to appellants, Meers and wife, the court rendered judgment in their favor against all the defendants, including the appellees here, to the effect that, prior to August 11, 1930, the oil and gas lease had been abandoned by McCollum and the other defendants interested with him and that the lease had expired and terminated and that it was null and void. The title to the leasehold estate was divested out of McCollum and his associates and vested in appellants. Appellees appealed from the judgment so entered and on the 29th of June, 1932, it was affirmed by this court. 52 S.W.2d 115, 119.

On August 11, 1930, before the filing of Cause No. 2620, upon application of Frick-Reid Supply Corporation, J. R. Phillips was appointed in the instant case as receiver of the oil and gas leasehold estate and all property and equipment thereon situated, including the oil well that had been drilled thereon by McCollum. Phillips duly qualified and took possession of the property and premises and filed an inventory thereof.

It seems that during the process of drilling the well and after the gas had been encountered and cased off, McCollum “shot” the well in an effort to accelerate to paying quantities the small amount of oil that had been discovered and in doing so he damaged the casing, after which the abandonment took place. When the receiver took charge of the property, therefore, the well was in bad condition and was not producing any oil or gas. Instead of drawing the casing from the well and disposing of the material and supplies that remained on the premises, the receiver made application and obtained an order from the court authorizing him to recondition the well in an effort to bring it in as a producer of gas. In doing this the receiver drew out the inner casing that had been’inserted to shut off the gas and explore for oil at a greater depth, plugged the well back to the gas ho.rizon and developed gas production of more than five million cubic feet per day. There being no available market, however, the well was capped and all of the material and supplies located at the well, except the casing in the well, was sold by the receiver - and the proceeds, amounting to $1,139.10, deposited in the bank.

Appellees, Hinderliter Tool Company, Atlas Supply Company, and Parkerburg Rig and Reel Company, were permitted to intervene and filed interventions in this case on the 10th of August, 1930, but appellants, Meers and wife, were not parties to this suit until they were made so by an amended petition filed by appellee, Frick-Reid Supply Corporation, on May 17, 1934. The case was tried upon the second amended original petition of Frick-Reid Supply Corporation, filed on the 10th of June, 1937, in which it seeks judgment for its debt and foreclosure of its material-man’s lien upon the casing in the well, consisting of 2,799 feet, which was a portion of the material sold to the lessee and used by him in drilling the well.

Appellants answered by general demurrer, general denial, pleas setting up the two and four years’ statutes of limitation and a special plea to the effect that by reason of the abandonment of the leasehold estate and adjudication of such abandonment in the prior suit No. 2620, and by reason of the fact that the casing is located in the *496

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127 S.W.2d 493, 1939 Tex. App. LEXIS 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meers-v-frick-reid-supply-corp-texapp-1939.