Orndoff v. Consumers Fuel Co.

162 A. 431, 308 Pa. 165, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 595
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 18, 1932
DocketAppeals, 95 and 107
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 162 A. 431 (Orndoff v. Consumers Fuel Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orndoff v. Consumers Fuel Co., 162 A. 431, 308 Pa. 165, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 595 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Schaffer,

This is a declaratory judgment proceeding brought to determine the amount of oil royalty payable by Consumers Fuel Company to the respective lessors under oil and gas leases held by it, and the proportions and man *170 ner in which the lessors shall share in the royalties. There are two appeals, one by the Consumers Fuel Company, the lessee, and the other by G. T. Anderson, one of the lessors. They will both be disposed of in this opinion.

It is contended by the Consumers Company that a declaratory judgment proceeding is not the appropriate remedy; that ejectment, trespass or equity should have been invoked. We are not impressed with this view. It would be difficult to settle in ejectment all the rights and claims of the three interests involved; — impossible, it would seem, to have adjusted them in trespass, and, while they might have been worked out in equity, that is not a more appropriate remedy than the one invoked, in which the judge sat without a jury under the Act of April 22, 1874, P. L. 109. To the argument that, as there are minors’ interests to be affected, there is no jurisdiction by declaratory judgment, because we said in Kari-her’s Petition (No. 1), 284 Pa. 455, 471, jurisdiction will never be assumed unless all the parties are sui juris, it is sufficient to observe that in so stating we did not mean to close the door to declaratory judgment proceedings on minors who are represented by guardians as those in this case are.

A recital of the facts disclosed by the record will make clear the questions with which we have to deal. Elizabeth J. Anderson died May 4, 1907, seized of a tract of land in Greene County containing about 70 acres. She left surviving her husband, G. T. Anderson, who is still living, four sons, and a daughter Rosetta Abercrombie, who died March 27, 1925, leaving six children, three of whom are minors, having as their guardian the State Bank & Trust Company of Elm Grove, West Virginia. On December 22, 1915, the five children of Elizabeth J. Anderson, owning the entire estate, subject to the life estate of their father, G. T. Anderson, as tenant by the curtesy, made an oil and gas lease to John B. Orndoff, in which it was provided that the lessee should pay to *171 the lessors a quarterly rental of $25 until a well was completed, and, if oil be found, that the lessee should deliver into pipe lines, free of charge, one-eighth of the oil to the credit of the lessors. When this lease was made, G. T. Anderson was in possession of all of the land as tenant by the curtesy and is so still. He did not join in the lease. The lessors advised the lessee that when he desired to drill, he would have to deal separately with the life tenant, and that no part of the one-eighth of the oil reserved could be used for that purpose. The court found as a fact that such information had been given by the lessors. Orndoff, the lessee, and his brother, who had an interest in the lease, assigned it on October 5, 1916, to City & Suburban Gas Company of Wheeling, West Virginia, advising that company of the existence of the life estate and that the lease gave no right of entry. In this lease the Orndoffs reserved to themselves an additional one-eighth of the oil. The assignee paid the annual rental to the lessors or their assigns and paid nothing to the life tenant.

In the year 1917, after the assignments of the lease, John B. Orndoff purchased four-fifths of the estate in remainder from the four sons of Elizabeth J. Anderson, subject to the lease they had made with him. It is in this capacity as lessor and as plaintiff that Orndoff appears in this proceeding and not as lessee, the other lessors and plaintiffs being the children of Rosetta Abercrombie, who own the other one-fifth in remainder. On June 2,1922, the tenant by the curtesy, G. T. Anderson, and his daughter, Rosetta Abercrombie, executed an oil and gas lease of the land in question to the Natural Gas Company of West Virginia. The lease of December 22, 1915, from the remaindermen was still in force when this later one was signed. It is. not disputed that this lease was void as to Rosetta Abercrombie, who had executed the earlier one. The lessors named in the later lease were G. T. Anderson, Rosetta Abercrombie and John B. Orndoff. The latter refused to execute it. By the terms of *172 this document, the lessee was to deliver into the pipe lines to the credit of the lessors one-eighth of the oil produced, to be paid to the lessors in the following proportions : one-sixth to G. T. Anderson, one-sixth to Eosetta Abercrombie and four-sixths to John B. Orndoff. It was set forth in the lease that the interest of G. T. Anderson was to be in effect only during his lifetime. As Orndoff did not sign this lease and as Mrs. Abercrombie had parted with her rights under the prior one, the only person whose compensation was determined by it is G. T. Anderson at one-sixth of one-eighth or one-forty-eighth. We cannot subscribe to the position of the Consumers Company that Anderson had no estate in the land nor the right to place an oil and gas lease thereon. He could not grant the oil and gas rights without the joinder of the remaindermen (Marshall v. Mellon, 179 Pa. 371), but in virtue of his life tenancy when they had granted their interest he could deal on his own account for possession of the property which the lessee could not acquire against him.

The City & Suburban Gas Company became insolvent in 1924 without having obtained from G. T. Anderson any right to-enter on the land. All of its assets were sold at judicial sale to defendant, Consumers Fuel Company. On June 8, 1925, after the Consumers Fuel Company had acquired the lease of December 22, 1915, by judicial sale of the assets of the City & Suburban Gas Company, the Natural Gas Company of West Virginia, lessee under the lease of June 2,1922, from G. T. Anderson, assigned it to the Consumers Fuel Company. Eight days later, the Consumers Company, then being the owner of both leases, entered on the land and began to drill a well, which, upon completion, produced oil in large quantities. While the. latter lease was an incomplete contract, because not signed by all the parties named in it as lessors, the Consumers Fuel Company acted under it in entering upon the land and drilling the well. Even if an agreement be incomplete, a party who *173 acts upon it and accepts benefits under it cannot be allowed to deny its validity as to the party who signed and performed it and thus escape payment for the benefits received: Grove v. Hodges, 55 Pa. 504; Carnegie Nat. Gas Co. v. Phila. Co., 158 Pa. 317. At the time the well was being drilled, Orndoff, owner of the four-fifths remainder interest, filed a bill in equity, alleging that the lease had expired by failure to pay rental and seeking to enjoin further operations. This litigation was settled out of court by written agreement to which the Consumers Fuel Company and Orndoff were parties, in consideration of $5,500 paid by the Consumers Company to Orndoff in which the lease of December 22, 1915, was expressly “ratified, affirmed, approved and consented to.”

The claim of the Consumers Fuel Company on its appeal is that it is required to give up in all only one-eighth of the oil produced as royalty. The claim of G. T.

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Bluebook (online)
162 A. 431, 308 Pa. 165, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 595, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orndoff-v-consumers-fuel-co-pa-1932.