Remaley v. Peoples Natural Gas Co.

161 A. 320, 307 Pa. 237, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 522
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 14, 1932
DocketAppeal, 64
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 161 A. 320 (Remaley v. Peoples Natural Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Remaley v. Peoples Natural Gas Co., 161 A. 320, 307 Pa. 237, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 522 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Linn,

Plaintiffs’ bill, in the nature of a bill quia timet, was filed to obtain cancellation of an oil lease dated June 25, 1891, and a later contract of April 1, 1897, by the same parties relating to the same subject, and to enjoin defendant from operating pursuant to them. A decree was made in accordance with the prayers of the bill after *241 hearing on bill, answer, replication and proofs; defendant has appealed.

By the oil lease of 1891, the lessor, whose rights have passed to his children* now the plaintiffs, granted to defendant the exclusive right to drill on his farm of 213 acres, inter alia, for gas, and to market the same, for “ten years......and as long thereafter as gas is found in paying quantities.” If gas was “found in paying quantities in any well” and marketed* defendant agreed to pay “$200 per annum for each and every one of said wells as long as sold and marketed......semiannually in advance,” the lessor to have the right to take “gas for his dwelling,” free at the well. Defendant agreed to “commence operations” within one month, or to pay $1 per acre per annum quarterly in advance until work was commenced; this rental was to cease when defendant began work, “provided a second well is commenced..... within three months from the time of commencing the first,” but if the second was not commenced within three months defendant should “pay the said rental on one-half of said premises until said well is commenced...... and the failure to pay said rental or. commence said well within or at the time specified, shall render this lease null and void and not binding on either party except as to the one-half of said premises,......and a failure by the [defendant] to drill one well, or thereafter to make such payments at such time and place as above mentioned, shall in itself be a complete surrender, abandonment and cancellation of this lease and revest in the lessor the title of the lessee hereunder without any formal surrender or notice by lessor, and all rights or liabilities accrued or accruing shall cease and determine as fully and absolutely as if this lease had never been written......”•

Shortly after the lease was made, defendant drilled two wells, known as numbers 1 and 2, No. 1 being located near lessor’s dwelling house. Both wells produced gas in paying quantities until some time prior to April *242 1, 1897, the date of the second agreement. Prior to that date, as the chancellor found, “the gas decreased in volume so as no longer to flow in paying quantities.” If the volume of gas had not ceased to flow in paying quantities, until after the end of the ten-year term, defendant might then have surrendered the lease pursuant to provision so permitting, and have been discharged from further liability on the lease, but as the failure occurred before, defendant was not in position to require the lessor to accept a surrender.

Instead of continuing to pay the rent due, and, in order to avoid suffering default under the lease, defendant and the lessor made the agreement of April 1, 1897. This agreement recited that defendant represented to the lessor (who accepted the representation as a fact) that the “pressure and volume of gas in said wells have been so decreased, as, in the opinion of the said company, no longer to justify said company to continue paying for the same.” Accordingly, by this agreement, the lessor released defendant “from all rent, royalty, claim or charge for said well No. 2, and for the gas from the same, in consideration whereof the said gas company does give and grant to the said Anthony Remaley, his heirs and assigns, all the right, title and interest of the said gas well No. 1 and the gas therefrom together with the casing in said well No. 1.”

Between 1891, when the two wells were put down, and January, 1929, defendant drilled no additional well and made no further exploration, and after making the agreement of April 1, 1897, paid no rent or royalty. During that interval there were periods when the pressure and volume of gas in well No. 1, were so low that the lessor, and, later, the plaintiffs claiming under him, were unable to get enough for their household use. During the same interval, though defendant at times extracted gas from well No. 2, there were long periods when none was obtained. For a while, the casing of this well wanted repair and quantities of water collected in it. With the *243 well in this useless condition, defendant ijj the fall of 1928, withdrew the defective casing and put in a new one, pumped out the water, and in January, 1929, drilled the well from the Murrysville sand which had contained the gas (depth 1,440 feet), to another sand, designated in the evidence as the Hundred Foot sand, 60 feet deeper, with the result that the rock pressure, theretofore varying from three to four pounds, was increased to over six hundred pounds, and with an enormous increase in gas production. Before this well was deepened, plaintiffs protested to defendant and denied its right to do as proposed.

Plaintiffs contend that the second agreement rescinded the original lease, and left each party with an existing well, and limited defendant’s right to take such gas only as could be extracted from well No. 2 at the depth at which it had been operated when the agreement was made, or, in the words of the agreement, “said gas well No. 2 and for the gas from the same”; that both parties for over thirty years thereafter acted on that interpretation, until, in 1929, defendant, by boring to a deeper sand, asserted rights under the original lease; that the assertion of this alleged right which it no longer possessed under the lease, constituted a cloud on plaintiffs’ title and interfered with the sale and use of their property requiring the intervention of equity on familiar principles. See Heller v. Fishman, 278 Pa. 328, and cases cited in that opinion. Plaintiffs also contend that defendant had abandoned the rights conferred by the second agreement and has become a trespasser, committing irreparable injury, also justifying the decree made.

Defendant contends that the original leas.e is still in force, except as modified by the second agreement, and that it has the right to extract all the gas in the farm, and that, by the second agreement, it may extract all that will flow from well No. 2 without payment; that its surrender to the lessor in 1897 of gas well No. 1 was *244 final, payment for all the gas that can ever be extracted through well No. 2.

In support of plaintiffs’ position that the contract of 1897 was intended to rescind the lease, one of them testified (and there was no contradiction of this evidence) that when defendant’s agent presented the document to lessor for his signature, “he [the lessor] said he didn’t like to sign it until he [defendant’s agent who conducted the negotiation] sent the old lease [1891] back. He [defendant’s agent] said ‘Go ahead and sign it and I will mail your old lease back.’ Father trusted to his honesty, but he never did.” Appellant complains that this evidence was received against its objection that it was “in violation of the parol evidence rule.” The evidence was properly received.

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Bluebook (online)
161 A. 320, 307 Pa. 237, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 522, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/remaley-v-peoples-natural-gas-co-pa-1932.