Patsy Oil & Gas Co. v. Baker

1927 OK 159, 259 P. 869, 127 Okla. 76, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 277
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJune 7, 1927
Docket17214
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 1927 OK 159 (Patsy Oil & Gas Co. v. Baker) 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
Patsy Oil & Gas Co. v. Baker, 1927 OK 159, 259 P. 869, 127 Okla. 76, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 277 (Okla. 1927).

Opinion

LESTER, J.

The parties in this court appear in the inverse order to that in the district court. Eor convenience they will be referred to as they appeared in the court below.

On the 3rd day of October, 191S, the plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract, which contract provided that for and in consideration of an assignment of a certain oil and gas lease by the plaintiff to the defendant the defendant would drill a certain oil well on said lease.

Said contract provides in part as follows:

“That said Patsy Oil & Gas Company, shall within six months from the date hereof, drill upon said land above described a well to a depth of 2,500 feet unless oil or gas is found in paying quantities at a less depth.
“It is specifically agreed that fea id well shall be drilled at some point upon the line of said land above described in such a position as .to offset the southwest quarter of section 12, township 2 south, range 8 west. * * *
“It is further specifically agreed that the party of the second part shall deposit in the Exchange National Bank of Ardmore a certified check in the sum of $1,000 which sum the parties hereto estimate as the damages suffered by the party of the first part in case of a failure on the part of the party of the second part to complete this contract according to the terms hereof, the parties hereto finding from the nature of the case that it would and will be impracticable and extremely difficult to fix or determine the actual damages suffered by the party of the first part in case said well is not completed.”

The plaintiff alleged in his petition that the defendant had wholly failed to carry out the agreement as contained in said contract; that it had failed to drill a well on the location named in said contract; that it had failed to complete a well to the depth of 2,500 feet; that it had drilled to a depth of about 1,400 feet; that no gas or oil had been found in said well and that the defendant finally abandoned its contract by removing its machinery from said lease.

Plaintiff in his petition asked for cancellation of said contract and judgment for damages in the sum of $1,000.

A jury was impaneled, and thereafter-wards rendered its findings of fact on certain interrogatories submitted to them by the court, but these interrogatories and answers thereto returned by the jury into court were treated by all parties to the action as being only advisory to the court.

The parties to the action finally agreed that the jury be discharged and the court be permitted to render its judgment on all the issues submitted under the pleadings and the evidence introduced at the trial. The court thereafter rendered its decision in favor of the plaintiff on all controverted questions, and rendered its judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $1,000’, and also decreed a cancellation of the contract between the plaintiff and the defendant, from which judgment the defendant appeals.

The defendant urges numerous errors of law occurring at the trial of said case. From a close examination of the .record,, as well as the briefs presented by the parties to this action, we think the principal question here involved is whether or not the defendant abandoned its lease and contract with the plaintiff. On this issue the court found:

“The court further finds that the said defendant, Patsy Oil & Gas Company, after it went on said premises and drilled a well to a depth of approximately 1,400 feet, then abandoned the' premises described in the plaintiff’s petition, and has not drilled on *78 the said premises since said date up to the time this cause was submitted to the court on the date aforesaid. The court further finds that the said defendant, Patsy Oil & Gas Company, did not drill said well within, six months from the 3rd day of October,, 1918, as it had agreed to do in said contract, and that more than six months elapsed before the filing oí the petition, and said well had not been drilled.”

The question here presented is whether the findings of the court are against the clear weight of evidence.

The contract for drilling was signed on October 3, 1918, and provided that said defendant should within six months from date of said contract drill upon said lease a well to the depth of 2’,500 feet unless oil or gas was found in paying quantities at a less depth.

The records show that three principal witnesses testified in the cause: O. P. Baker and D. R. Jones, for the plaintiff, and H. AY. Marcum, president of the Patsy Oil & Gas Oompany, for the defendant.

C. P. Baker in behalf of himself testified in part as follows (C. — M. 44, 45) :

“Q. Do you know when they began drilling that well? A. They began drilling the well three days after six months in which it should have been completed. Q. Let’s see, what time would six months have expired? Did you figure that up? A. It was made on October 3. They commenced I think, April 6. Q. When did they quit? A. They quit some time in May. I think. Q. In what year? A. 1919. Q. When they got to that 11,598, or 1,000, whatever it is, what did they do? A. They moved their machinery out, and a few days after that, the wind blew the derrick down, and it has been dormant since. Q. Now, let’s see. They ceased operations on that lease from May, 1919, until April, 1920. Is that your testimony? A, Yes.”

It appears from the evidence that the defendant was using a rotary drill in developing said well, and that representatives from the Department of the Interior objected to its further use and requested that the defendant cease operations in the use of said rotary drill, and that the defendant acquiesced in this demand, and thereupon stopped further drilling on said well, and thereafter removed its machinery from said lease, and thereafter the derrick was blown down and the material composing it was taken from said leased premises.

H. W. Marcum, as chief witness for the defendant, testified in part as follows (C.M. 79-80):

“Q. Your rotary moved out and ceased drilling on the lease on the 20th day of May ? A. Something in that neighborhood. Q. Approximately? A. I really could not say for sure what date it was. Q. This suit was filed in August. The record shows it was filed in August. Between May and August you did not go back on the lease to drill, did you, last year? A. May or August, no, sir. Q. That is what I say, in that interim, between the time you moved the rotary out and the suit was filed, you did not go back on the lease to finish the well? A. Sure not, they filed suit against me. Q. Why they did it, you don’t know? A. No, I did not know. Q. Then the suit was filed in August, and it remained here on the docket since August until two weeks ago, and you never tried to do anything on the lease) towards drilling the well? A. No, sir. Q. Now you say the Department officials asked you to discontinue drilling with the rotary. A. Yes, sir. Q. And you said all right. Now, you could have gone in there and finished that hole with standard tools? A. Yes. Q. And you do intend to do that now if you go back to drill? A. Yes. Q. And you, could have done that when you moved your rotary out? A. If I had the derrick and had the pipe.”

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1957 OK 174 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1957)
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1943 OK 32 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1943)
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Houston v. McCrory
1929 OK 433 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1929)

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Bluebook (online)
1927 OK 159, 259 P. 869, 127 Okla. 76, 1927 Okla. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patsy-oil-gas-co-v-baker-okla-1927.