Mitchell v. Probst

1915 OK 828, 152 P. 597, 52 Okla. 10, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 230
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 19, 1915
Docket5407
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1915 OK 828 (Mitchell v. Probst) 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
Mitchell v. Probst, 1915 OK 828, 152 P. 597, 52 Okla. 10, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 230 (Okla. 1915).

Opinion

Opinion by

DEVEREUX, C.

(after, stating the facts as above). In Frank Oil Co. v. Belleview Gas & Oil Co., 29 Okla. 719, 119 Pac. 260, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 487, the provision of the gas and oil lease under consideration was:

“If no well is commenced on said premises within one year from this date, then this grant shall become null and void, unless second party shall pay to the first party $80 for each year thereafter such completion is delayed, said rental to be paid quarterly in advance.”

The provision is practically the same as in the case at bar, and in construing it the court say:

“Here we have a contract that is unilateral; the lessee being bound to do nothing, except at his own option. It has expended no money by way of developing the lessor’s property. The well that was sunk on the Gibson tract was in all probability sunk in accordance with a contract made with the owner thereof to prevent a forfeiture of that lease and such was in all probability the case where other wells were sunk on adjoining lands. The lessor had no direct interest, so far as this record discloses, in the development of the Gibson tract. This contract clearly contemplated the exploration for oil as a speculation or promotion an the part of the lessee, which is permissible under the law. The consideration for the first year’s delay in making this development on lessor’s tract was $200 cash in hand paid, and the commencement within 30 days from the date of the lease of the sinking of a well on the Gibson tract. That year elapsed, and no well was sunk or begun on the tract of the léssor. The lessee had the option to be allowed ad *14 •ditional time as delay in the exploring of lessor’s tract by paying to the lessor $80 for each year thereafter such completion was delayed; such delay money to be paid quarterly in advance. This lease being an option, is the anomalous construction to be here adopted of the language ‘then this grant shall become null and void unless second party shall pay to the first party eighty ($80.00) ■dollars for each year thereafter such completion is delayed, said rental to be paid quarterly in advance,’ so as to change this part of the lease from an option to a tenancy, creating the relation .of landlord and tenant for a year when the first quarterly payment in advance is made, thereby obligating the lessee to pay the other three quarterly payments? This would violate the settled rule of construction that an option is to.be construed liberally in-favor of the party granting it and strictly against the holder thereof.”

In Barnsdale v. Owen, 200 Fed. 519, 118 C. C. A. 623, the court say:

“An agreement in the form of a lease for a limited term of years, such as these were, granting the right to ■explore for gas and oil, and to retain that found and extracted, is of a peculiar class. The. interest of the lessee .Is more like a license than an estate in the land itself.”

In Kolachny v. Galbreath, 26 Okla. 722, 110 Pac. 902, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 451, it is held:

“When contracts are optional in respect to one party, 'they are strictly construed in favor of the party that is Ibound and against the party that is not bound.”

And in Deming Investment Co. v. Lanham, 36 Okla. 773, 130 Pac. 260, 44 L. R. A. (N. S.) 50, quoting from Thomton’s Law Relating to Oil and Gas, it is said:

“Forfeitures, however, on the part of the lessee- in a gas or oil lease, which arise by reason of his neglect to develop or operate leased premises are rather favored by *15 the law, because of the peculiar character of the product ■ to be provided.”

And'see Cohn v. Clark, 48 Okla. 500, 150 Pac. 467.

It is true that in Frank Oil Co. v. Belleview Gas & Oil Co., supra, it is said:

“This contract having been entered into prior to the-erection of the state, section 1118, Compiled Laws of Oklahoma 1909 (Rev. Laws 1910, sec. 968), which provides, ‘Time is never considered as of the essence of a. contract, unless by its terms expressly so provided,’ has. no application,” etc.

But this statute does not mean that time is never the essence of a contract, unless these words are used in it. In Cooper v. Ft. Smith & W. R. Co., 23 Okla. 139, 99 Pac. 785, it is held:

“Although it is provided (Wilson’s Rev. & Ann. SN 1903, sec. 809) that ‘Time is never considered as of the-essence of a contract, unless by its terms expressly so provided,’ no particular form of expression is required, but it must appdkr from the express provisions contained in such contract that it was the intention of the parties thereto that time should be the essence thereof.” Federal Trust Co. v. Coyle, 34 Okla. 635, 126 Pac. 800; Green Duck Co. v. Patterson, 36 Okla. 392, 128 Pac. 703.

The language of this contract is set out above, and,, in our opinion, brings it within the reasoning of the above-citations.

Apply the principles settled in these cases to the case-at bar. The plaintiffs in error had only a license to .explore the land for gas and oil for the time mentioned in; the lease, with an option to extend the license upon the-payment of the sums provided in the lease at the time therein set out. The plaintiffs in error never took pos *16 session, did nothing towards exploring the land for gas and oil, and failed to secure a prolongation of their license by making the payment for this privilege at the agreed time. As construed by this court in the cases above cited, the legal effect of the contract was that, if a well was not drilled on the land in one year from the date of the contract, the agreement should be null and void, but with an option to the plaintiffs in error to continue their license under the agreement by paying in ádvance a rental of $2.50 per acre for the first year, and $5 per acre thereafter until a well was drilled or the lease canceled. They now ask this court to change their contract by allowing them to pay the sum for the extension of the option to some other time than that specified in the contract. This we cannot do under the evidence in this case.

The plaintiffs in error contend that the forfeiture cannot be upheld in this case, because the defendant in error failed to give notice of his intention to take advantage of the failure to pay the money when, by the terms of the contract, it was payable. But we can see no merit in this position. The contract did not provide for notice, and the plaintiffs in error knew what the contract provided as well as the defendant in error did. Should we now decide that notice was necessary before the defendant in error could declare the forfeiture, we would be adding something to the contract which the parties did :not see fit to incorporate in it. Plaintiffs in error cite Sayers v. Kent, 201 Pa. 38, 50 Atl. 296, but that case does not apply, because of the payment of the money into the bank prior to expiration of the time limited in the contract. Steiner v. Marks, 172 Pa. 400, 33 Atl.

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Bluebook (online)
1915 OK 828, 152 P. 597, 52 Okla. 10, 1915 Okla. LEXIS 230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-probst-okla-1915.