Nystel v. Thomas

42 S.W.2d 168, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1443
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 22, 1931
DocketNo. 7497.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 42 S.W.2d 168 (Nystel v. Thomas) 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
Nystel v. Thomas, 42 S.W.2d 168, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1443 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

McClendon, c. j.

Thomas (lessor) sued Nystel (lessee) to have declared terminated an oil and gas lease upon an SO-acre tract of land in Brown county, on account of failure of the lessee to begin drilling well No. 3 upon the premises within one year after abandonment of well No. 2 thereon, as required in the lease; and for an injunction to prevent lessee from “further trespassing or intruding” upon the leased premises. Temporary injunction was granted and Nystel filed a cross-action for damages for suing out the injunction writ. A trial to a jury upon special issues resulted in a judgment in favor of Thomas both upon his suit and upon Nystel’s erossraction. Erom this judgment Nystel has appealed.

The lease was executed November 1, 1924. The grant was for the sole purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas, laying pipe lines, etc., and provided that it should “remain in force and effect, subject, however, to performance of the terms and conditions hereinafter mentioned, for a term of five years from this date, and as long thereafter as oil and gas, or either of them is produced from said land by lessees or his assigns, in commercial quantities.”

With reference to gas the lease provided: ,

“Lessee is to pay lessors one hundred dollars ($100.00) per annum for each well drilled on said premises in which gas is found in commercial quantities, payment therefor to begin thirty (30) days after the completion of said well, and to be made quarterly thereafter i-n advance; and such payment is to continue as to each well as long as it produces gas in commercial quantities.
“Lessors are to have gas free of cost from any such well or wells for all stoves and all inside lights in the principal dwelling house and in one tenant house on said tract of land during the time of this lease by making their own connections with said well or wells at their own risk and expense.”

With reference to drilling it provided that actual drilling of a well should begin on the west half of the premises before February 1, 1925, unless, on or before that date the lessee paid or tendered to the lessor $100, which payment or tender should operate as rental and cover the privilege of deferring the beginning of such well for three months from said date. If such well proved to be without oil or gas in commercial quantities, actual drilling of a second well should begin before November 1, 1925, unless like payment or tender should be made on or before that date, which would in like manner defer the beginning of such well for three months. The following is the clause involved in this litigation: “If both the first and second wells drilled on said 80 acre tract of land prove to be wells without either oil or gas in commercial quantities, then lessee shall within one year from the time of the completion of said second well begin the actual drilling of a third well on said land; and in the event he does not begin the drilling of said third well within said time, this lease shall thereupon terminate as to both parties hereto and shall cease to be of any further force and effect as to the whole of said 80 acre traer.”

The $100 was paid so as to- extend the time for drilling well No. 1, which well was begun during the extension period and was brought in in June or July, 1925, with a very strong gas pressure, so great in fact that all efforts to control it proved unavailing, and the railroad. commission required that the well be filled up so as to prevent the further escape of gas. This was done by filling the well with a mud-laden fluid some time in July. 1925, and some thirty days after gas was discovered; and the well was thereupon abandoned. There was no payment or tender of rental on the theory that well No. 1 was a producer in commercial quantities until aft *170 er this suit was filed. Well No. 2 was begun shortly thereafter and was completed or abandoned about December 1, 1025, as a dry hole. Nothing further was done on the leased premises until November, 1920, when Nystel erected his drilling rig over well No. 1 and proceeded to recondition it so as to produce gas as fuel for operating his machinery in drilling well No. 3 which he commenced about February 1, 1927, more than twelve months after abandonment of well No. 2.

Nystel’s defense is based (1) upon compliance with the terms of the lease, and (2) upon waiver or estoppel as regards failure to begin drilling well No. 3 within twelve months after abandonment of well No. 2. His pleading in this regard is important, and we quote it in full:

“For further answer herein, defendant says that this defendant, in compliance with the terms, covenants and conditions in oil and gas lease mentioned in plaintiff’s petition, commenced the drilling of the first well, as provided in said lease, within the time and in the manner therein provided-; that said well not only produced gas in commercial and paying quantities, but gas produced therefrom was of such volume and pressure that the pipe with which said well was cased did not withstand the gas pressure, causing water to break in, as a result of which defendant shaled up the hole so as to preserve said well so that the same could be properly cased.
“That thereafter, defendant drilled the second well within the time and in the manner provided for in said lease, said second well being a dry hole.
“That defendant thereafter began the drilling of a third well on said land within the time and in the manner provided for in said lease, but before so doing, and by and with the consent and approval of plaintiff', defendant went back to his No. One Well, cleaned out and re-cased the same, so that he might have gas to use in drilling said third well; that upon so cleaning out and re-conditioning said No. One well, the same produced gas in paying quantities; that upon re-conditioning said well, defendant moved to the location of his third well, and was drilling the same when he was served with copy of writ of injunction in this cause, necessitating the suspension of further operations on said lease.
“That defendant -drilled a well on said land producing gas in paying quantities, and tendered to plaintiff the rental on said well, as provided for in said lease, and in all things complied with the terms of said instrument so as to make the same a valid and subsisting oil and gas lease by reason of said facts.
“That not only was said lease a valid and subsisting oil and gas lease by reason, of said matters, as above stated, but by reason of plaintiff’s acquiescence and agreement allowing defendant to clean out and recondition well No. One before beginning well No. 3 on said lease, plaintiff should be, and is now estopped to claim that said third well was not commenced or drilled so as to cause a forfeiture of said lease had the same not been commenced within the time provided in said lease, and further conditioned that the first two wells drilled thereon should not have resulted in the production of oil and gas In paying quantities.”

In so far as this pleading may be construed as alleging that-well No. 1 was originally brought in as a producer, it is wholly without support in the evidence, which conclusively establishes the abandonment of the well in July, 1925.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 S.W.2d 168, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1443, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nystel-v-thomas-texapp-1931.