Morgan v. Echols

10 So. 2d 776, 201 La. 975, 1942 La. LEXIS 1315
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedNovember 4, 1942
DocketNo. 36483.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 So. 2d 776 (Morgan v. Echols) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Morgan v. Echols, 10 So. 2d 776, 201 La. 975, 1942 La. LEXIS 1315 (La. 1942).

Opinion

McCALEB, Justice.

This is a suit for damages arising out of the alleged violation by the lessee of the provisions of an oil, gas and mineral lease.

The plaintiff, George F. Morgan, is the owner of a 4-acre suburban tract of land located on Highland Road south of the city of Baton Rouge. The property has a frontage of 493 feet 9 inches on Highland Road and extends in depth 345 feet betwe.en parallel lines. Situated in the rear, and approximately in the middle of the property, is a one-story frame dwelling which has not been used by Morgan as his regular residence for a considerable length of time. Morgan’s home is located in Colfax, Louisiana. However, he occupies the house in Baton Rouge intermittently on occasions when he visits that city for the purpose of disposing of produce from his farm:

On August 4, 1934, Morgan, together with several other landowners in the vicinity of his property, entered into a community oil, gas and mineral lease with one Karl E. Young which provided that the lessee would have the right to select any one of the properties covered by the contract for the purpose of exploring for oil. This lease was subsequently assigned by Young, the lessee, to George H. Echols, the defendant in this case. Shortly before the month of May, 1939, Echols decided to drill for oil and selected Morgan’s property as the site for the drilling operations. Accordingly, during May, 1939, after obtaining Moi-gan’s consent as to the location of the proposed operations, Echols moved upon the property and began to drill a well which is now known as the “George F. Morgan et al. Well No. 1.” The explorations were successful and a producing oil well resulted.

On July 7, 1939, shortly after the completion of the oil well, Morgan wrote a letter to Echols in which he requested reimbursement for the value of certain shrubbery, trees, etc., which had been destroyed by Echols during the execution of the drilling operations. The amount claimed totalled the sum of $1,434 and Echols refused to accede to the demand.

Subsequently, ón March '5, 1940, the plaintiff filed the present suit against Echols in the Nineteenth Judicial District Court for the Parish of East Baton Rouge, in which he claimed the sum of $3,334, representing the alleged damage he sustained by reason of the drilling operations conducted upon his property. This total sum was divided by plaintiff into three separate items; one item of $1,434 for the destruction of trees, plants, shrubbery, etc.; another for the sum of $1,500, representing the value of his house which plaintiff contended had been rendered unfit for use or habitation by defendant’s act in placing the well and other equipment 75 feet from the premises without plaintiff’s consent and in violation *979 of the lease; and the sum of $400, representing rental claimed against the defendant because of the location of two large oil storage tanks and an oil separator, ■ which were erected on the north side of the driveway leading from Highland Road to plaintiff’s house, allegedly in violation of defendant’s promise to him that all operations would be conducted on the south side of said driveway.

To this petition, the defendant interposed certain exceptions which were sustained by the trial judge. On the judge’s order, plaintiff’s claim for $400 rental due by the defendant was rejected and the plaintiff has acquiesced in this ruling as to that item of damage. The judge also required the plaintiff to amend and supplement the allegations of his petition. After supplemental pleadings had been filed in compliance with the court’s order, the defendant joined issue by answer, in which he denied any and all liability to plaintiff in the premises and prayed for the dismissal of the suit.

Thereafter the case proceeded to trial on the issues thus joined and the District Judge, after hearing the evidence, rendered judgment in the sum of $1,009 in plaintiff’s favor for the damage to the trees, shrubbery, etc., which had been destroyed as a result of the drilling operations, and rejected plaintiff’s demand for the value of his house, which plaintiff claimed had been rendered uninhabitable and worthless by reason of the close proximity of the oil well to it.

From this judgment the plaintiff prosecuted an appeal to the Court of Appeal, First Circuit. The defendant answered the appeal, seeking a reversal of the judgment of the trial court in so far as the allowance to plaintiff of $1,009 for the destruction of his trees, shrubbery, etc., was concerned, and prayed that it be affirmed in all other respects. The Court of Appeal subsequently dismissed the appeal on the ground that the amount in controversy exceeded its appellate jurisdiction and, acting under the authority of Act No. 19 of 1912, it ordered the case transferred to this court. The matter has now been submitted to us for decision.

The plaintiff bases his cause of action in this case on two provisions of the’ community oil lease contract which he claims have been violated by the defendant. His demand for recovery of the value of his house, which he asserts has been rendered unsuitable for habitation by reason of the close proximity of the oil well and equipment to it, is founded upon an alleged violation of the following provision of the lease: “ * * * no well shall be drilled within two hundred feet of any residence or barn now on said land without lessor’s consent.”

The evidence in the case shows that the oil well is located approximately 75 feet from plaintiff’s house. However, defendant did not breach the above-quoted stipulation because he had previously obtained plaintiff’s consent to conduct the operations at that point. This fact is not seriously disputed by the plaintiff — for he alleges in his petition that, prior to the time drilling operations were commenced, he' agreed to permit the defendant to drill the well at a distance less than 200 feet from *981 the house. Moreover, the uncontradicted evidence shows that, before any operations were begun, Mr. S. P. Gilley, a representative of the defendant, Echols, called upon the plaintiff and his wife and informed them that it had been decided to drill a well on plaintiff’s property and that the location of this well would be less than 200 feet from the house situated on plaintiff’s land. Plaintiff not only admits that he agreed to this, but he signed, together with the other lessors, a letter addressed to the Department of Conservation stating that the proposed well was to be located at a point on his property, 175 feet south of Highland Road. This point is approximately 75 feet from plaintiff’s house.

Plaintiff concedes these facts in argument and in his brief before this court, but he maintains that he is, nevertheless, entitled to recover the value of the house (claimed to be rendered worthless as a result of the drilling operations) because his consent was obtained in consideration of a promise made by Mr. Gilley. He says that, at the time Mr. Gilley' requested his consent, he agreed to give it on condition that Mr. Gilley promise him that all drilling operations, location of equipment, etc., would be confined to the south side of the driveway leading from Highland Road into his property; that Mr. Gilley agreed to this condition and that, notwithstanding this, the defendant, after the well was brought in, located the oil separator, two large tanks and other equipment on the north side of the driveway in violation of the promise.

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Bluebook (online)
10 So. 2d 776, 201 La. 975, 1942 La. LEXIS 1315, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morgan-v-echols-la-1942.