Phillips v. Henderson Gasoline Co.

1924 OK 452, 225 P. 668, 101 Okla. 277, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 88
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 15, 1924
Docket14871
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1924 OK 452 (Phillips v. Henderson Gasoline Co.) 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
Phillips v. Henderson Gasoline Co., 1924 OK 452, 225 P. 668, 101 Okla. 277, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 88 (Okla. 1924).

Opinion

McNEILL, J.

On October 1, 1915, Charles Harter and A. J. Thompson, the owners of oil and gas leases on four separate tracts of land in Nowata county, entered into a contract with the Henderson Gasoline Company, a corporation, to sell said company all the casinghead gas produced from said lease. The contract is very lengthy, blit a few of the provisions necessary for consideration are as follows:

“The parties of the first part for and in consideration of the sum of one dollar *** do hereby bargain, grant and sell unto the party of the second part all of the casing-head gas produced from oil wells located on the hereinafter described real estate. * * *
“2nd. The party of the second part shall have the use of ■said gas for a period of five years from date hereof, and as long as gas can be profitably produced from said leases. * * * * The gas shall be delivered into the lines of the party of the second part at the gas pump or pumps which have been or will be installed by the said parties of the first part.
“3rd. The said .second party agrees to use the said gas supply according to the terms and conditions of this contract and to pay therefor four cents per thousand cubic feet at a pressure of four ounces per square inch.***
“4th. It is mutually agreed by and between the parties hereto that the amount of gas delivered by said first parties to the said second party shall be determined by connecting a meter of standard make equipped with standard vacuum and recording gauge, and all in perfect condition and working order, to intake line of the said second party running to gas pumps of the said first party.”

The contract further provides if any controversy arises over the construction of the contract, the same shall be submitted, to arbitration for settlement. The contract then contains the following provision:

“To the faithful performance of each and *278 every term and condition of this contract, we bind ourselves, our legal representatives, successors and assigns, firmly by these presents.”

On the 14th of January, 1916, a supplemental contract was entered into, but neither party relies upon the same as changing the rights of the parties under the original contract. On the 1st of November, 1917, Hart-er and Thompson assigned their oil and gas leases to W. G. Phillips and J. B. Milam.

During the year 1920, Phillips and Milam made certain changes in their equipment on the leases and installed new vacuum pumps, scrubbers, and drips. -The pumps, scrubbers, and drips were installed on the portion of the gas line belonging to Phillips and Milam and between the wells and the intake gas line belonging to defendant. The meter where the gas was measured was installed on the intake line of defendants about a distance of some several hundred feet from the scrubber.

The scrubbers and drips were installed for the purpose of permitting water, waste, and other impurities from the gas to collect in the same, which are then drained out of the line. During the winter months a great deal of “condensate” or “drip gasoline” accumulated in the scrubbers or drips, along with the water or other waste, and this condensate or drip gasoline accumulated in sufficient quantities to be valuable and is drained out of the scrubbers or drips with water and other waste products. Phillips and Milam on the two tracts of land referred to as the Grimmett lease collected the drip gasoline that accumulated in the scrubbers and drip on; this lease, and disposed of the drip gasoline. On the other two tracts of land, referred to as the Howerton lease, this drip gasoline was collected by the Henderson people and sold by them. Phillips and Milam contend that the drip gasoline belongs to them, contending the same was not covered by the contract, and was not within the contemplation of the parties at the time of entering into the contract. The defendant company, however, contends that under the contract it purchased all the casinghead gas, and this being a portion of the casing-head gas, the same belongs to them, although they concede the same never goes through the meter, nor can it be measured by a meter, nor have they paid for the same.

Phillips and Milam commenced this action in 1921, asking that the entire contract be declared null and void; (2) if the-contract was not declared null and void, that the “condensate,” or “drip gasoline,” be decreed to belong to them and the defendant company be enjoined from interfering with the plaintiffs in collecting and disposing of the same; and pray judgment against the defendant company for the value of the “drip gasoline” already taken by said company and not paid for. The defendant answered, contending under the contract that it is entitled to all the casinghead gas, and the drip gasoline being a part of the casinghead gas, the same belongs to it, and asks that the plaintiffs be enjoined from collecting any of the “drip gasoline,” and further alleges that the drip on the Grimmett lease was unnecessary, and was installed for the sole purpose of extracting the rich by-products from the casinghead gas, and asks judgment against the plaintiffs for the drip gasoline collected by the plaintiffs.

The court in the second paragraph of the findings stated:

“The court finds that the only proper construction to be put on the contract to make it equitable and a workable agreement, is to hold that the plaintiffs intended to sell and deliver, and the defendant company intended to buy, all of the casinghead gas that should be produced on the premises described in the contract, whether such gas should be put in the pipe lines or mains in vaporous form or in liquid, form.”

In the fourth paragraph, the court stated:

“That the substance known as ‘condensate’, or ‘drip,’ is nothing more nor less than casinghead gas or vaporous gas liquefied by heating through friction, and then cooling, and should in this case go to and become the property of the defendant under the contract, to be paid for according to the terms of the contract, which can and must be determined by calculation, allowing the required number of cubic feet to each liquid gallon of the commodity produced.”

The court further found that the plaintiffs should be permanently enjoined from taking possesison of any drip or from interfering with the company’s proper handling of the same under the contract. The journal entry contains other recitals as follow's:

“The coqrt finds the casinghead gas produced from the wells of the plaintiffs can be accurately metered and measured by meter of standard make at the point of delivery of said gas coming into defendant’s lines, and that the defendant herein is entitled to locate its meters at any place along its lines that it may choose to locate them, and the plaintiffs herein have no right to dictate or direct a location 'of said meters.”

The journal entry further recites:

“That on the Howerton farm plaintiffs have installed their scrubber tank as related to and in connection with their vacuum pump, at the distance from their vacuum *279

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1924 OK 452, 225 P. 668, 101 Okla. 277, 1924 Okla. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-henderson-gasoline-co-okla-1924.