Plumber v. Southern Oil Co.

214 S.W. 896, 185 Ky. 243, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 278
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 3, 1919
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 214 S.W. 896 (Plumber v. Southern Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Plumber v. Southern Oil Co., 214 S.W. 896, 185 Ky. 243, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 278 (Ky. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Chief Justice Carroll

Affirming.

On April 21,1916, Plumber, in consideration of $1.00 paid by C. W. Sale and Company, leased to them the oil and gas privileges in a tract of land containing 160 acres “for the term of ten years from date and as much longer .thereafter as oil and gas is found thereon. ’ ’

[244]*244It was further provided iu the lease:

“First: Lessee agrees to drill a well upon said premises within one year from this date or thereafter pay to lessors rentals as hereinafter provided until a well is completed or the property hereby granted is reconveyed to lessors.
“Second: Should oil be found in paying quantities the lessee agrees to deliver to the lessors free of charge into tanks or pipe lines one-eighth part or share of all crude oil produced or saved from said premises.
■ “Third: Should gas foe found in paying quantities the lessee agrees to pay $100.00 each year for the product of each well while the same is being sold off the premises.
“Second party agrees to complete a well on the premises within one year from the date hereof (unavoidable accidents and delaying excepted) unless the lessee thereafter pays a yearly rental of 10 cents per acre, payable quarterly in advance, until a well is completed, which payments for delay in completing well may be made direct to lessee , or deposited to his credit in the Peoples Exchange Bank, Beattyville, Ky., which payments shall fully and completely extend this lease from time to time until a well is completed, and lessors agree to accept said payments of rentals when made and to mail receipts for same to the lessee.
“And it is further agreed that the lessee may at any time remove all his property and reconvey the premises hereby granted, which conveyance said lessors agree to accept and thereupon this instrument shall become null and void and the payments which shall have been made be held by the lessors as the full stipulated damages for non-fulfillment of the foregoing contract.”

It appears-that later Sale and Company assigned this lease to the Southern Oil .Company and thereafter on October 27, 1917, Plumber brought a suit in equity against the oil company seeking to have the lease to Sale and Company which had been assigned to it cancelled upon the ground that the consideration of $1.00 for the lease and the further consideration of 10 cents an acre was not a valuable consideration, and further that the Southern Oil.Company on the 21st day of October, 1917, violated its contract in that it failed to pay the rental due on or before that date to him or the Peoples Exchange Bank.

[245]*245To this petition the Southern Oil Company filed an answer setting up that on April 27, 1917, it deposited in the Peoples Bank to the credit of Plumber the sum of $4.00, the rental due according’ to the terms of the lease, and this sum was received by the bank and placed to the credit of Plumber and accepted by him as rental for the first three months after the expiration of the one year during which it was permitted to hold the lease without rental; that on July 17, 1917, it again deposited in the Peoples Bank to the credit of Plumber the sum of $4.00, which sum was received by the bank and placed to his credit and accepted by him as rental for the second three months after the expiration of the year in which it was permitted to hold the land without rental; that on October 22, 1917, it again deposited in the Peoples Bank to the credit of Plumber the sum of $4.00, which sum was received by the bank and by it placed to the credit of Plumber as rental for the third three months after the expiration of the year in which it was permitted to hold the land without rental; that the reason it did not pay this last rental sum on the 21st day of October, 1917, according to the terms of the lease was because that day was Sunday.

For reply to this Plumber denied that the Peoples Bank was designated in the lease as his agent to collect, receive or hold the rentals named in the lease or that on October 22,1917, the Southern Oil Company deposited in the bank to his credit the sum of $4.00 as rental due under the lease or that said sum was accepted or received by the bank and placed to his credit on that date.

It will be observed that Plumber admits the payment and receipt by him of the stipulated rental paid on April 26, 1917, and July 17,1917, and only denies the payment or receipt by him of the rental due on August 21, 1917. In reference to the rental due on October 21,1917, he testified that on October 22, he called at the bank and asked if the Southern Oil Company had placed anything to his credit and that Beach, the cashier, said there was nothing there and that no tender of money had been made to him nor had he received credit by it in the bank; that four or five days later he again inquired at the bank as to whether the rental installment due on October 21st had been paid and placed to his credit and the cashier told him that no money had been placed to his credit but [246]*246said there was a check in the bank for the amount if he wanted it put to his credit or the money on it.

On his cross-examination he further said that after the lease to Sale and Company he had been offered a much larger sum for the privilege of operating for oil and gas on the land than Sale and Company had agreed in their lease to pay him, although when he leased to Sale and Company the consideration recited in the lease ap: peared to him at that time “to ibe a good, valid and valuable consideration.”

Beach, the cashier of the Peoples Bank, testified that a few days before October 21, 1917, Plumber came into the bank and told him not to place any money to his credit that might be paid as rental on his oil lease; that on October 22, 1917, the oil company left with him in the bank a check for $4.00, the rental due on October 21,1917; that he held the check for four or five days until he could get some legal advice as to whether he should place it to Plumber’s credit after having been forbidden by him to do so; that after receiving advice that he had the right to put the check to Plumber’s credit he did so and the amount of it, $4.00, was yet in the bank to his credit; that the only reason this sum was not placed to his credit on October 22d was because Plumber had instructed him not to place it to his credit.

This was all the evidence introduced on the trial and upon hearing the case the lower court dismissed the petition of Plumber and he appeals.

The only fact in the case about which there is any dispute arises in connection with the payment of the rental due on October 21, 1917, and the weight of the evidence, as we think, shows that this rental that was paid on October 22 to the bank was not placed to the credit of Plumber on that date because he had instructed the cashier not to put it to his credit.

It will also be observed that this suit was brought within a week after the rental due on October 21, 1917, was paid as stipulated in the lease and that Plumber sought to cancel the lease without calling upon the oil company to drill for oil on the leased premises.

Under the facts we think the decision of this case must be controlled by the principles announced in Monarch Oil, Gas and Coal Co. v. Richardson, 124 Ky. 602. In that case a lease substantially like this was entered [247]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Coles v. Johns
377 S.W.2d 587 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1964)
Browning v. Blanton's Administrator
45 S.W.2d 1 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1931)
Kister Oil Development Corp. v. Young
27 F.2d 433 (W.D. Kentucky, 1928)
Union Gas & Oil Co. v. Wiedeman Oil Co.
277 S.W. 323 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976), 1924)
Leeper v. Lemon G. Neely Co.
293 F. 967 (Sixth Circuit, 1923)
Armstrong v. McGough
247 S.W. 790 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1923)
Lyon v. Union Gas & Oil Co.
281 F. 674 (Sixth Circuit, 1922)
Satterfield v. Galloway
234 S.W. 448 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1921)
Keystone Gas Co. v. Salisbury
234 S.W. 290 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1921)
Owens v. Curd & Drummond
232 S.W. 639 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1921)
Denniston v. Kenova Oil Co.
220 S.W. 1078 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
214 S.W. 896, 185 Ky. 243, 1919 Ky. LEXIS 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/plumber-v-southern-oil-co-kyctapp-1919.