Owens v. Wilson

1929 OK 7, 273 P. 895, 135 Okla. 38, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 51
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 8, 1929
Docket18860
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1929 OK 7 (Owens v. Wilson) 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
Owens v. Wilson, 1929 OK 7, 273 P. 895, 135 Okla. 38, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 51 (Okla. 1929).

Opinion

BRANSON, O. J.

This cause originated in the district court of Cleveland county. J. A. Owens was the plaintiff, and is the plaintiff in error here. J. W. Wilson, John Hall, J. L. Mayes, S. V. Wingamer, Otto Capler,' E. O. Harris, and Mrs. S. A. Turnbull were the defendants, and they are the defendants in error here. Plaintiff submitted his cause of action on an amended petition, to which the defendants filed a demurrer. The demurrer was sustained, and plaintiff seeks a reversal.

The amended pietition .pleads a contract, headed “Contract for Test Well and Leases,” and that same was signed by J. W. Wilson and John Hall, February 3, 19'2i6, and that later, on dates unknown to plaintiff, the other of said named defendants signed; that thereby the defendants bound themselves “relative to the blocking of certain acreage for the purpose of drilling a test well for oil and gas on some .part thereof, and for the drilling of such test well, and that by the terms of said contract the defendants and each of them agreed in writing for a good and valuable consideration to make, execute, and deliver to the plaintiff an oil and gas lease on the tracts and parcels of land set opposite the several names of said defendants * * * and that the plaintiff agreed to begin, within time provided in said contract, a test well for oil and gas * * * on or before six months after the date all new leases and all releases of old or existing leas’es were placed in the Security National Bank of Norman, Okla., in escrow.”

Plaintiff further pleads that on the 18th day of May, 1920, the plaintiff informed the defendants that sufficient acreage had been blocked up to warrant the drilling of a well, and agreed that on delivery of the leases a well would be drilled within six months from said date; and that lie, the plaintiff, has at all times since the execution of said contract been ready, able, and willing to drill the well and carry out his contract, but that the defendants have refused to execute the leases or to place the same in escrow in the Security National Bank of Norman.- Omitting the other allegations not deemed pertinent, plaintiff prays—

“Judgment against the defendants! and each of them, and that they be required to perform the -conditions as set out in the said contract, and that they b.e required to ’execute leases as provided in said contract, on the premises as owned by the defendants, and as s'et out therein.”

The contract which is made tlie basis of the action for specific performance is very lengthy, and we do not deem it necessary to quote it in full.

The plaintiff elected to stand on the said amended petition, and judgment was entered that plaintiff take nothing by his action. The only assignment made by plaintiff in error is that, the court erred in sustaining the demurrer, and to support the same he cites these cases: Clark v. Sloan, 117 Okla. 303, 246 Pac. 425; Humphrey v. Taylor, 106 Okla. 38, 233 Pac. 180; Okmulgee Producing & Refining Co. v. Ball, 111 Okla. 203, 239 Pac. 900.

It appears that the demurrer to the petition was sustained by the trial court for that the contract was insufficient in many particulars to justify the relief. We will not undertake to discuss all of its alleged defects, but only wherein the contract was devoid of mutuality, and indefinite and uncertain to such an extent as to make specific performance not warranted in equity.

It is the position of the defendants that the writing pleaded bound the plaintiff to perform no act, and therefore the defendants -could not be compelled to perform. The indefiniteness and lack of mutuality in the *39 contract is disclosed by referring to certain .paragraphs thereof — •

“That said test well should b'e commenced on or before six months after the date all new leases and all releases of old or existing leases were placed in th'e Security National Bank of Norman, Okla., in escrow.”

Again, it is provided:

“That in the event a sufficient amount of acreage could not be blocked up under said agreement for leases to warrant the plaintiff to make the test well, that the contract should not be binding on any signer thereto.”

Again, there is a provision as to the landowner to the effect that—

“Agrees to make, execute, and deliver a lease for oil and gas, same to cover and describe the land owned and set out following said owner’s name, the said lease to be made on the usual form known as Producer’s Bbrm No. 88, and to have substantially the following provisions to wit: ‘Lease for oil and gas, to be executed by the owner, providing for a royalty of one-eighth of the oil, and for $200 for a gas well or for one-eighth of product of the said gas well, and to provide for one-eighth of th'e product of any and all casinghead gasoline, that may he sold from said lease, lease to provide for well to be commenced within one year and 4 months from the date of said lease, and im the event that no well is begun, to pay the landowner $1 per acre rental’,” etc.

Again, we find! therein:

“That the test well shall b'e commenced on or before six months after the date all new leases and all releases of old or exist-' ing leases are in the ’escrow bank, and all abstracts brought down to date, unless such time be extended by written consent of the landowner.”

Again, it provides:

“It is stipulated by the second'party, and understood that in event a sufficient amount of acreage cannot be blocked up under this agreement for leases to warrant the second party to make the test well, then in that event this contract shall not b'e binding on any signer thereto. * * *”

Defendants say in their brief that the clauses above set forth made the contract unenforceable, by reason of th'e plaintiff! having the right at any time to decide whether or not he would drill, or whether or not a sufficient amount of acreage had b'een acquired: It is left entirely to his option and to his own statement whether a sufficient amount of acreage had been bloaked to justify him in proceeding.

Many cases are cited, and the rule seems to b'e universal, that where contracts of purported agreements include clauses of this nature, they are entirely unenforceable. One individual may not retain to himself the option of exercising his opinion in a matter, and at the same time claim an enforceable agreement with the other side. The right to perform must be mutual, and the right to 'enforce, must likewise be mutual If these conditions do not exist in the contract, then it cannot be enforced..

The defendants cite the case of Davis v. Biddle (Colo. App.) 136 Pac. 55. In the case of Melton et al. v. Cherokee Oil & Gas Co., 67 Okla. 247, 170 Pac. 691, this court said:

> “A court of equity will -not award relief iii the nature of specific performance of a contract which is not certain, fair, and just, or where performance by the complaining party is entirely optional.”

And in the sam'e case, further said:

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1956 OK 267 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1956)
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Bluebook (online)
1929 OK 7, 273 P. 895, 135 Okla. 38, 1929 Okla. LEXIS 51, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owens-v-wilson-okla-1929.