North Healdton Oil & Gas Co. v. Skelley

1916 OK 659, 158 P. 1180, 59 Okla. 128, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1141
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 13, 1916
Docket7382
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 1916 OK 659 (North Healdton Oil & Gas Co. v. Skelley) 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
North Healdton Oil & Gas Co. v. Skelley, 1916 OK 659, 158 P. 1180, 59 Okla. 128, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1141 (Okla. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

BURFORD, C.

The petition in this cause alleges that the plaintiff is a corporation engaged, among other things, in the oil and gas mining business, and that it is the owner of an oil and gas lease covering a tract of land in Jefferson county; that said tract of land is located in the North Healdton oil and gas field, which was and is a tried and developed oil and gas field, containing many successfully operated and productive oil and gas wells in close proximity to and surrounding the property of the plaintiff; that in order to develop the said tract of land the plaintiff entered into a contract with the defendants whereby they were to drill a well to a depth of 1,750 feet: that said well was completed at said depth, but was nonproductive: that the well was properly drilled and cased, and was in good shape and condition at that time, and that plaintiff had expended in the drilling thereon the sum of $8.509.24; that, not finding oil and gas at said depth, the plaintiff desired to drill deeper and consequently entered into a second contract with the defendants whereby the defendants, upon certain conditions and payments, agreed to drill the well to a further depth of 250 feet; that defendants entered upon the performance of their contract and drilled about 35 feet, and then the defendants “did negligently, maliciously, wantonly, and carelessly drop, break off. leave or deposit at the bottom of said hole what defendants name or describe as three underreamer slips; said clips being solid steel blocks, about 4 inches square and about 2 inches thick.” The petition further alleges that said reamer blocks were allowed to remain in the well, and that said defendants stated to the plaintiff and others that they could not be removed therefrom, and that the defendants abandoned the work without any further drilling. The petition then further alleges:

“At this time said hole or well is in such a condition that further relief is impossible, owing to the malicious, willful, negligent, and careless acts of the defendant as herein set forth. * * * That on account of the condition of said hole or well brought wholly about by the acts of this defendant, the same has become worthless for any purpose, and especially as a prospect hole, and the money expended in the drilling and expenditures thereon by the plaintiff as here-inbefore set forth is, wholly lost to this plaintiff, and plaintiff is damaged thereby in the sum of $8,509.24.”

Plaintiff then alleges that it has performed at all times its part of the contract, and that the existing conditions were brought on wholly by the defendants.

This petition was an amended petition; there having been a demurrer sustained to the original petition. A motion to strike was filed, which the court, apparently by consent of all parties, treated as a general demurrer, and after argument sustained the same. Plaintiff, electing to stand upon its petition, brings the cause here for review.

It is the theory of the defendants in error, and presumably that of the trial court, that no damages could be recovered under this petition, for the reason that no value of, or prospective profits from, the well could be established, since no one could tell whether, if drilled to completion, oil and gas would be found, and, if none were found, the hole was of no value. The answer to this contention is that the plaintiff is not suing for prospective xirofits, nor is "he suing for the value of an oil or gas well, but is attempting to recover the value of the prospect hole, which he alleges became worthless by reason of the negligent and malicious acts of the defendants. The petition in reality states two causes of action, one for the abandonment of the contract, and the other for a tort in the malicious injury to the. hole. The causes of action should have been separately stated and numbered, or one of them eliminated, but this objection is not available upon general demurrer, either to the trial court or here. Considering the petition in either phase, we think it states a cause of action, and entitles the plaintiff to recover some damages, if only nominal. The mere statement of the amount of damages claimed could not render the petition subject to a general demurrer, if under it the plaintiff were entitled to recover anything.

The pertinent provisions of our statute are:

Section 2872, Laws 1010: “For the breach of an obligation not arising from contract, the measure of damages, except where otherwise expressly provided by this chapter, is the amount which will compensate for all detriment pnbximately caused thereby, *130 whether it could have been anticipated or not.”

Section 2886: “Where certain property has a peculiar value to a person recovering damages for deprivation thereof, or injury thereto, that may be deemed to he its value against one who had notice thereof before incurring a liability to damages in respect thereof, or against a willful wrongdoer.”

Section 2SSS: “The damages prescribed by this article are exclusive of exemplary damages and interest, except where those are expressly mentioned.”

Section 2851: “In any action for the breach of an obligation not arising from contract. where the defendant has been guilty of oppression, fraud or malice, actual or presumed, the jury, in addition to the actual damages may give damages for the sake of example, and by way of punishing the defendant.”

It cannot bo said that because this prospect well may have turned out unfortunately, if completed, or because it is of no value as an oil well by reason of the fact that its completion has been prevented by the wrongful and malicious acts of the defendant, such willful . or malicious acts may thereby be excused. If this were true, one's enemy might go upon his land, which ho is attempting to develop for oil and gas, and, by repeatedly throwing iron or steel into his prospect holes, not 'only cause the owner an immense loss of money, hut entirely prevent him from developing his land for oil and gas, and yet the wrongdoer would have a complete defense to an action for damages because the landowner could not prove that his prospect hole would have developed into an oil or gas well. We think the value of a prospect hole which has not been completed is not dependent upon the fact that it may be dry or may be a well, and that its value in case of its destruction by lack of ordinary care upon the part of a person charged with some duty to the owner in relation thereto is ordinarily measured by the amount necessary to bring it to the point where such destruction occurred. It would he. obviously unfair to charge one guilty of negligence, or even of wrongdoing, resulting in the destruction of a prospect hole, with- the entire cost of completing such hole if the same had already been abandoned as worthless, but, where the prospective value has not been and cannot he determined, the situation is entirely different. The owner has a right to expend his' money in drilling such prospect hole to the depth which he desires, without the negligent or willful interference of third parties. That the venture may ultimately become a loss to him is no defense to an action against a wrongdoer. As is said in Sutherland on ■Damages, vol. 2. p. '180. adopting the language of Chamberlain v. Parker, 45 N. Y. 369, and Taylor v. N. P. C. R. Co., 56 Cal. 319:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 659, 158 P. 1180, 59 Okla. 128, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-healdton-oil-gas-co-v-skelley-okla-1916.