Nolan v. Young

220 S.W. 154, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 263
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 18, 1920
DocketNo. 1608.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 220 S.W. 154 (Nolan v. Young) 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
Nolan v. Young, 220 S.W. 154, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 263 (Tex. Ct. App. 1920).

Opinion

HUPl?, O. J.

Nolan and wife sued John Young, Will Crow, Geo. B. Owens, and Newton P. Willis, who, it is alleged, composed a copartnership, under the name of the Canadian Star Oil & Gas Company, which is also made a party defendant. The suit is to cancel an oil lease on the alleged ground of fraud, inducing the plaintiffs to make a lease contract by false representations, which are alleged substantially as follows: That defendant Young, in order to induce plaintiff to execute the lease, represented that he had already secured almost enough land for the *156 purpose of sinking a test well or wells, and lie wanted plaintiff’s land to make enougli acreage, and that the sinking of a test well on the land was assured; that he had received the bills of lading for the material and machinery to put down the well; that, if plaintiff did not lease to defendant said land, the well would be located further away from plaintiff’s real estate; that defendant had, at that time, a geologist on the field, ready to make, and was making, a location of said test well; that if, for any reason, Work should not be begun on the sinking of the well as represented, defendant would return to plaintiff the lease contract, and the same should not be filed for record. Defendant further rep-, resented that a drilling contract between C. H. Shaller and Allen & Paylor for the sinking of a test well on land adjoining plaintiff’s land had been canceled, and that Allen and Paylor had left the country; that such representations were false, and made for the purpose of inducing plaintiff to execute the lease, and that he believed the same, and, relying upon them, executed the contract; that the lease 'had not been used for the purpose of sinking a test well on the lands represented, but had been assigned to the Canadian Star Oil & Gas Company, a copartnership composed of the above-named, defendants, and for other purposes.

The case was submitted to a jury by the trial court on a general charge; the jury finding a general verdict in favor of all the defendants. The trial court, however, instructed the jury to find for Geo. Owens and Newton P. Willis for a one-fourteenth interest each in the lease contract. The terms of the lease sought to be canceled are substantially that, for the sum of $5 cash paid, as a consideration, together with other covenants and agreements of the lessee, John Young, to 'be paid, kept and performed, the lessor, Nolan, granted, demised^ leased, and let unto the said lessee 960 acres of land, described, for the sole and only purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas, etc., for a period of five years, and as long thereafter as either oil or gas was produced in paying quantities. In consideration of the lease the lessee agrees to deliver one-eighth part of all oil produced or saved from the leased premises to the lessor, and a certain sum per well if gas only is produced, and a certain sum for gas produced from oil used off the premises. If no well be commenced on or before the 1st day of May, 1920, this lease terminates as to both parties, unless the lessee on or before that date pay or tender to the lessor $960, which shall operate as a rental and cover the privilege of deferring the commencement for 12 months from said date, etc.

The first assignment is based on the ruling of the court in sustaining appellee’s exception to the fifth paragraph of appellant’s petition. That paragraph is substantially that there was no consideration paid or promised by John Young for the lease; that only a nominal consideration of $10 was paid, which was no consideration, and was not considered at the time as any consideration, for the lease. The motive which induced plaintiff to sign said lease was the securing of a drilling contract bn or near his land, and the consequent testing of his land for oil,' gas, and minerals, and the prospective royalties which he would receive under the- terms of said lease contract; that the contract was therefore void ab initio, the $10 not being considered by the parties as consideration for the execution of the lease, and there being no promise to do or perform any other act or thing. The exception sustained is:

“Because the same shows upon its face that there was a good and valuable consideration, to wit, $10, paid, and the promise to secure a drilling contract or pay the annual rental therein specified of $960 per year.”

The plaintiff tendered the $10 into court as a condition to the right of cancellation. It is also alleged the market value of the one-year option and of each year’s rental was $1 per acre. The appellant asserts by proposition that an oil lease, not supported, by a consideration, is void. This proposition may be conceded, but appellant does not allege a nudum pactum, but alleges there was $10 paid. True, it is alleged that this was no consideration — a mere nominal sum, and the parties did not consider it' a consideration. Ten dollars in this country, has a value, and is of value. Where the consideration paid to support a contract is of value the contract is not a nudum pactum. It is not necessary that the consideration be adequate in point of actual value. The slightest consideration, in the absence of fraud, is sufficient to mgke the most important agreement binding. Allen v. Stephanes, 18 Tex. 672; Moore v. Lowery, 27 Tex. 541; Riddle v. Bush, 27 Tex. 675; Pearson v. Hudson, 52 Tex. 361; Odle v. Frost, 59 Tex. 686. Misrepresentation is alleged as inducing the contract, but not as affecting its terms or its character, or that appellant would not have accepted the price paid, but for the misrepresentation. The rule of common law and as generally recognized in this country is stated in Ruling Case Law, vol. 6, “Contracts,” § 85:

“That the adequacy of the consideration is immaterial has been undoubted law ever since the notion of consideration began to be developed. The reason is that the parties are deemed to be the best judges of the bargain entered into. As Hobbes says, the value of things contracted for is measured by the appetite of the contractors. Accordingly the courts do not ordinarily go into the question of equality or inequality of consideration, but act upon the presumption that parties capable to contract are capable of regulating the terms of their contract, granting relief only when the inequality is shown to have arisen from mistake, misrepresentation, or fraud. A different rule would, in every case, impose *157 upon the court the necessity of inquiring into and of determining the value of the property received by the party giving the promise. Such a course is deemed to be impracticable. In all cases, therefore, where the assumption or undertaking is founded upon the sale or exchange of merchandise or property, or upon other than a money consideration, and the ^promise has been deliberately made, the law looks no further than to see that the obligation rests upon a consideration ; that is, one recognized as legal and of some value. It is sufficient if it is of only slight value, or such as can be of value to the promisor.”

It is manifest that appellant assumed in his petition that the contract is an optional contract, but he does not set out its terms; yet the court and the parties each, as shown by the exception, took the contract into consideration in considering the sufficiency of the pleadings. We shall therefore consider the contract on this point.

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Bluebook (online)
220 S.W. 154, 1920 Tex. App. LEXIS 263, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nolan-v-young-texapp-1920.