Paraffine Oil Co. v. Cruce

1916 OK 1055, 162 P. 716, 63 Okla. 95, 14 A.L.R. 952, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1384
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 26, 1916
Docket7706
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 1916 OK 1055 (Paraffine Oil Co. v. Cruce) 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
Paraffine Oil Co. v. Cruce, 1916 OK 1055, 162 P. 716, 63 Okla. 95, 14 A.L.R. 952, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1384 (Okla. 1916).

Opinions

TURNER, J.

On February 18, 1915, W. I. Cruce and three other lessors, defendants in error, in the district court of Carter county sued the Paraffine Oil Company, lessee, and four other oil companies, plaintiffs in error, claiming an interest therein under the Paraffine Company as assignees, to cancel an oil and gas lease. The petition as amended substantially states: That on November 6. 1913, plaintiffs made, executed, and delivered to the Paraffine Oil Company a certain oil and gas mining lease on a certain -40-acre tract of land, described in the. petition. in which said company thereafter assigned an interest to its four codefendant companies. That the material parts of the lease read:

*96 “See. 3. It is agreed that tliis lease shall remain in force for a term of one yeqr from this date, and as long thereafter as oil or gas, or either of them, is produced from the said land by the party of 'the second part, its successors or assigns, in accordance with the stipulations of sections 6 and 7 of this contract. * * *
“Sec. 5. Party of the second part agrees to begin operations for the drilling for an oil or gas well within thirty days from the delivery of this contract, and to diligently prosecute said operations until said well is completed.
“Sec. 6. It is understood and agreed by both parties hereto that if said territory proves to be productive, then the party of the second part to complete this contract shall drill as many as eight wells on said premises and said wells shall be drilled with due diligence and dispatch, having in view the interest of both parties hereto, and so to produce all the oil and gas that may be reasonably produced from said premised: Provided that if oil be found in paying quantities in the first well drilled, and there is at the completion of said well, no profitable market for the products of same, the second party shall not be required to begin the drilling of the second well until a market for the products of the first well is available. * * *
“■Sec. 7. The party of the second part shall drill as many offset wells as may be necessary to offset each paying well on the adjacent property when such well on adjacent property is within three hundred feet of the ■boundaries of the premises herein leased.”
“See. 11. A failure on the part of the second party to comply with any of the' stipulations of this contract shall of itself work a forfeiture of this contract and all rights thereunder.”

The petition further states that about 30 days thereafter the Paraffine Company, as lessee, drilled a well on the land which was productive to the extent of 150 barrels of oil a day, at which time there was a profitable market of $1.05 per barrel for all the oil that could then be produced upon the demised premises; that on February 25, 1914, said company drilled another well on the premises, which was productive to the extent of 480 barrels of oil per day; that thereafter, for some time, said lessee developed the lease no further and not until plaintiff complained of its failure so to do pursuant to the terms of the lease, whereupon, pursuant to its promise so to do, said lessee drilled a third well upon the premises which had an initial average production of 300 barrels of oil per day: and that since that time the lessee has neither drilled nor attempted to drill other wells upon the premises and has made no preparation in the way of building tanks or otherwise to take care of the oil from the aforesaid three producing wells. The petition further states that oil-bearing sand is about 1,000 feet beneath the surface of the land, that a well could be drilled thereto in 30 days, and that by the exercise of ordinary diligence the lessee could, within the term of one year fixed by the lease, have drilled eight wells as required by the terms thereof, but had failed so to do.

The petition further states that, although the three producing wells had an initial capacity of 800 barrels a day, defendants have so negligently operated the same that their total production is less than 200 barrels per day, that less than 10 per cent, of their capacity has been taken therefrom, and that the. royalties of the plaintiff lessors have been correspondingly reduced. They further allege “that if the defendants had completed the eight wells upon said land, which said contract required, the total capacity for production would have been much greater than the capacity of the three wells now on said premises,” and that on or about November 19, 1914, “plaintiffs notified the defendants and each of them that because of their failure to comply with the terms of said contract, that each forfeited all rights under the same. Said notice was in writing and was delivered to and received by the president and secretary of each of the defendant companies, and said original notice is now in the possession of each one of the defendant companies,” by reason of all of which they pray that the lease be declared forfeit and canceled, and for general relief.

Por answer, each of the defendants, after denying “all and singular the allegations contained in plaintiffs’ petition, except as hereinafter specifically admitted,” admitted the execution of the lease and the assignments thereof to the codefendants of the Paraffine Company as alleged, and'pleaded that they had complied with the terms and conditions of the lease, and that upon its execution and delivery they “took possession of the premises covered by said lease, and have drilled three wells for oil and gas purposes, and have erected a derrick on said premises for a fourth well, and that these defendants have expended on said premises, in the way of drilling wells and in better-ments and improvements,” large sums of money; “that among other things paragraph 0 of said contract provides that the lessee shall not be required to begin the drilling of the second well until a market for the products of the first well is available, and these defendants would show that there is not now and has never been a market for the products of said well or any other well on said premises”; and “that they went into possession of said premises according to the *97 terms of said lease and have developed said property in accordance with, the terms of the same in the utmost good faith and with due diligence under all the circumstances and conditions surrounding the lease and on good, sound business judgment.”

The reply was, in effect, a general denial, Thus it will be seen that plaintiffs tendered an issue that the lease was forfeit on the ground that the lease required the lessee to drill eight wells upon the demised premises within the fixed term of one year, and that such had not been done. And that defendants joined issue on the allegation that the lease required them so to do, and pleaded in confession and avoidance that, if the lease so required, they were excused from so doing on the ground, not that oil was not found in paying quantities in the first well drilled, but that there was no market for the product of the first or test well. And, further, that they had developed the property “in the utmost good faith and with due diligence under all the circumstances and conditions surrounding the lease on good sound business judgment,” which, they say; was all the lease required them to do, which plaintiffs denied.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1916 OK 1055, 162 P. 716, 63 Okla. 95, 14 A.L.R. 952, 1916 Okla. LEXIS 1384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paraffine-oil-co-v-cruce-okla-1916.