Philadelphia Co. v. Shackelford

98 S.E. 568, 83 W. Va. 280, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 166
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 28, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 98 S.E. 568 (Philadelphia Co. v. Shackelford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Philadelphia Co. v. Shackelford, 98 S.E. 568, 83 W. Va. 280, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 166 (W. Va. 1919).

Opinion

Milder, President :

Plaintiff as assignee of a lease of 288 acres, more or less, for oil and gas, sought by this suit to recover from defendant, the lessor, the several quarterly installments of rent or delay money of $72.00 each paid by it to him. aggregating, according to the bill of particulars filed, $864.00.

The declaration, besides the common counts in assumpsit, also contained a special count: According to the averments of the special count right of action was predicated on the theory of a rescission of the contract and total failure of consideration.

By the lease pleaded and proven the defendant and his wife on November 1, 1909, did "grant, demise, lease and let to said Swisher his successors and assigns, for the sole and only purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas, and of laying pipe lines, and of building tanks, stations and structures thereon to take care of said products,” the tract aforesaid, described by reference to the lands of adjoiners, as containing 288 acres more or less. By its further provision the lease was to remain in force for the term of ten years from date and as long thereafter ■ as oil and gas or either of them should be produced from said land by said lessee or his successors or assigns.

And in consideration of said grant the said lessee cove[282]*282nanted and agreed to deliver to the credit of the lessor in the pipe line free of cost one-eighth of all the oil saved and produced from the leased premises, and seventy-five dollars in advance each three months for the gas from each and every gas well drilled the gas from which should be marketed off the premises. And the further covenant of the lease was to complete a well on the premises within three months from the date of the lease or pay at the rate of seventy-two dollars quarterly, in advance, for each additional three months such completion should be delayed.

On appearance by defendant he craved oyer of the writing sued on, which being read to him and made a part of the record, he interposed his demurrer to the declaration, which was overruled. The only specific ground assigned and relied on was failure of the declaration to allege payment by plaintiff to defendant of the sum of one dollar and surrender of the lease for cancellation, which by the provisions thereof constituted conditions precedent to the right of the lessee to terminate and render said lease null and void, and to absolve him from the payments and liabilities thereafter to accrue thereunder.

On the same day defendant was permitted to file his counter affidavit under the statute, accompanied by a bill of sets-off aggregating $655.49, alleging in his affidavit that there was not as he verify believed due plaintiff from him on account of the demands stated in the declaration a greater sum than $20S.51, the difference between the amount of the plaintiff’s bill of particulars, $864.00, and the amount of said sets-off, $655.49.

At this stage of the proceedings the parties went to the jury on the issue joined on the defendant’s general plea of non assumpsit, and at the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence, the court on motion of defendant struck out all of plaintiff’s evidence and directed the jury to find a verdict for defendant, which was done. The plaintiff' then moved the court to set aside the verdict and grant it a new trial, on the ground that the court had misdirected the jury, which motion the court took time to consider.

On a subsequent day, but before the court had acted on the [283]*283motion to set aside the verdict, plaintiff brought into court its written surrender of said lease together with an affidavit showing payment to defendant by plaintiff of the sum of one dollar as the consideration for the surrender of said lease, and thereupon renewed its motion to set aside the verdict and for a new trial, the following grounds being assigned: First, that the evidence was sufficient to show plaintiff’s right to recover in the action y Second, that the lease at the institution of this suit was without value, and that plaintiff received nothing in the form of money or property from defendant prior to the institution of his suit, wherefore a surrender thereof was not a condition precedent to his right of action; Third, that the institution of the suit, per se, operated as a rescission of the lease, no formal notice of which was necessary in order to maintain the suit; Fourth, that the surrender of the lease and payment of one dollar by the plaintiff to the defendant as a. consideration for the surrender, after verdict, in a case of this'kind satisfies all the requirements of the law; Fifth, because the court erred in not permitting the witness Gates to show that he had examined the title and found that the lessors had no title to the premises described in the lease, wherefapon plaintiff ceased and refused to pay further rental; Sixth, because of the exclusion of certain oral evidence as shown by the record of the official stenographer who took the testimony in the case; Seventh, on the further ground that it would be unjust and inequitable not to set aside the verdict and award plaintiff a new trial, after its surrender of said lease, which would operate as a great hardship, in that the plaintiff might be precluded and barred from maintaining another action to recover back the rentals sued for in this action, should the court decline to award a. new trial.

This motion was overruled, and the judgment now under review was that the plaintiff take nothing by its declaration and that defendant go hence without day, and that plaintiff do pay him his costs about his defense in this behalf expended. And plaintiff took exceptions thereto, and on its request the court certified the evidence and its rulings on the trial as a part of the record.

[284]*284On this hearing an additional ground is assigned for setting aside the verdict and as showing error on the judgment, namely, that as defendant in the counter affidavit admitted liability to plaintiff on the demands stated in the declaration, of $208.51, the court- should at the least have directed a verdict or entered up judgment for plaintiff for that sum. We observe, however, that plaintiff did not elect on the filing of said affidavit, or before or after verdict, to take judgment for the amount so admitted or move the court for judgment therefor, and we must assume it had some reason therefor not clearly apparent from the record.

The special count of the declaration alleges want of any right or title in the lessors at the time of the lease, or prior or subsequent thereto,, in the tract of 288 acres or any part thereof, or to the oil or gas thereunder, or under any part thereof, and avers the non existence of any such tract so far as any right or title thereto of the defendants is concerned, and also avers the inability of the lessors or either of them at any time to deliver possession of said tract to plaintiff for the purposes of said lease, wherefore they rendered no consideration for the rentals paid to and received by them from plaintiff.

These averments show clearly that the basis of recovery laid and relied on in the pleadings was want of any title in the lessors and total failure of consideration for the rentals paid and sought to be recovered. It is conceded that to warrant recovery in such cases, for money had and received, there must have been total failure of consideration, or after eviction by a third person, for mesne profits for the period for which rents have been paid. Gaffney v. Stovers, 73 W. Va.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 S.E. 568, 83 W. Va. 280, 1919 W. Va. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/philadelphia-co-v-shackelford-wva-1919.