Ohio Oil Co. v. McCrory

14 Ohio C.C. 304
CourtOhio Circuit Courts
DecidedOctober 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 14 Ohio C.C. 304 (Ohio Oil Co. v. McCrory) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Circuit Courts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ohio Oil Co. v. McCrory, 14 Ohio C.C. 304 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1896).

Opinion

King, J.

The defendant in error, Nancy E. McCrory, in 1877, made a lease, known as an oil and gas lease, to one C, Underwood, by which she leased to the lessee, his heirs and assigns, her lands, comprising about five acres, and the right to drill and operate for petroleum oil and gas.

One of the conditions of the lease was, that if oil was produced by these operations, the lessee agreed to give to ■the lessor the one eighth part of the oil, and deliver the same in tanks free of expense; and should gas be found in sufficient quantities to justify marketing the same, the consideration in full, to the party of the first part, .should be .three hundred dollars per annum for the gas from each well as long as it should be sold therefrom.

[306]*306This lease was afterwards assigned by Underwood to The Ohio Oil Company, and this action was brought in the court of common pleas by Nancy McOrory to recover from The Ohio Oil Company the amount which she claims is due for the use oi the gas from a certain well on her premises. The amount she claims is six hundred dollars, which would be three hundred dollars per year for two years.

The defense was that thewelbwas an oil well essentially; that there was a little gas in it, but only about the amount .that is usually found in oil wells of .that character, and that it had been used, so far as it had been used at .all, by the defendant to operate the well. That the defendant had other wells on other properties near and adjoining, and that it had piped the gas into a common pipe and used it to operate all of the wells, but there was not more gas from this one well than enough to operate it; in fact, not enough to operate it at all times.'

The case was tried, and a verdict rendered for the plaintiff for the amount of her claim.

It is claimed that the verdict and judgment are wrong, for several reasons: That in the course of the trial, im-

proper evidence was admitted. That the court erred in its charge, and that the verdict is not sustained by the evidence.

I shall notice these several grounds of error-in the order that I have named them.

A great many exceptions were taken throughout the record. The first one which I desire to notice is exception No. 7 on page 8,' in which Mrs. McOrory, the plaintiff, being a witness, was inquired of whether she had any conversation with a certain Mr. Floyd, or Mr. Noggles, during the time they had charge of the pumping of the wells, relative to the strength of'the well on her premises for gas from November 16th, 1892, to November 16th, 1894, which' is the period named in the petition for which she seeks to recover. That was objected to, objection overruled and ex[307]*307ception taken, and the witness answered that they said to her that it was a good well. The evidence showed that Floyd and Noggles were pumpers, pumping the wells belonging to the defendant. Now, it is enough for me to say that nothing is shown here to justify the admission of this testimony. That the statement of mere employes, who are charged with specific duties, cannot be offered in evidence to bind the defendant company; that these employes had no such control or authority as would make their admissions competent.

On page 27, exception No. 19, this question was asked:

“Now then,if you know the quantities of gas a well should produce to justify marketing the same, you may state to the jury what amount of gas that would be.”

That is objected to, overruled and exception.

The witness answered:

“I would consider gas that would be sufficient to run from five to ten or twelve stoves was the amount of gas that would guarantee a company for to lay a line at the cost of forty of fifty dollars for to run the gas and conduct it onto another farm, to enable them to produce oil on other premises; that is what I would consider a paying well,- — -in paying quantities.’’

We think that objection ought to have been sustained, and the answer of the witness ruled out, as it seems to be a long rambling argument rather than the statement of a fact.

The question as to whether a well produces gas in paying quantities, is a question for the jury to decide, and the witness could not be called to decide it for them. The witness might be called to give them evidence of facts which would enable them to arrive at a conclusion as to what a well should produce to justify marketing, but a witness cannot be asked the very question that is involved in the litigation; for, if that were so, it would not be necessary to' have a jury.

[308]*308On page 34, exception 24, substantially the same question is asked, though slightly varied:

“Now what would you say from your experience as to whether a well is producing gas sufficient to justify marketing, when it produces a flame, upon being set afire, eight or ten feet high?”

This was objected to, objection overruled and exception, and the witness answered: “I should say it would”. The same reasoning applies to that question as to the one preceding it.

On page 38 are two exceptions involving the same question:

' “I will ask you to state, from your knowledge and experience, as to whether gas, which, when lighted, produces a flame from eight to ten feet high, constitutes gas in sufficient quantities to justify marketing the same.”

That was objected to, overruled and' exception taken. The witness answered: “Yes, sir.”

A motion was made to strike out the answer, which was overruled, and an exception taken. The same ruling applies to that. We think it was improper.

The next question I will notice is in relation to the charge of the court. Several exceptions are taken to the charge of the court, only one or two of them I need notice, and in doing that I will say that the defendant alleged, among other things, in addition to what I have stated, that there prevailed a custom in existence at the time of making this contract, well known to the parties and people generally, that a person operating under one of these leases, would have the right to use so much of the gas produced from any well as would be necessary to operate that well. There was a denial of that custom in the reply, and upon the subject the court said certain things to the jury very proper to be said, that the burden was upon the defendant to establish it by a fair preponderance of the evidence, and unless he did so establish it,the defense is not maintained.

[309]*309Proceeding further, the court said:

“In order to make a local custom good, it must appear that it was long continued, without interruption, acquiesced in, reasonable, certain, compulsory and known to the parties to be affected thereby.”

The words “compulsory and known to the parties to be affected thereby,” are excepted to, and we are disposed to think that the court must have been misled in giving that definition, as I do not find any definition that substantially complies with that.

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Bluebook (online)
14 Ohio C.C. 304, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohio-oil-co-v-mccrory-ohiocirct-1896.