Rex Oil & Gas Company v. Busk

56 N.W.2d 221, 335 Mich. 368, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 45, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 526
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1953
DocketDocket 39, Calendar 45,419
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 56 N.W.2d 221 (Rex Oil & Gas Company v. Busk) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rex Oil & Gas Company v. Busk, 56 N.W.2d 221, 335 Mich. 368, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 45, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 526 (Mich. 1953).

Opinion

Bushnell, J.

Plaintiff Bex Oil & Gas Company held an oil and gas lease on 37 acres in section 20 of Croton township, Newaygo county, and other leases on lands in the immediate area. Bex produces and buys oil which it sells to refineries. Defendant Augie Busk, also a producer, had leases in the area. Desirous of exploring for oil the parties entered into a contract dated December 9, 1949, which provides that Busk would drill on the .Bex lease in section 20 and furnish full geological' and drilling information. He was required to commence operations within 30 days and continue with due diligence to a certain depth. Upon completion of the well, *370 Bex agreed to assign its lease to Busk, reserving, however, the optional right to purchase any or all of the oil and gas which might be produced. Such an option to buy crude oil, to the exclusion of all other buyers, is in common usage among oil men and is designated as a “call.” If the well proved to be a “dry hole,” Bex was obligated to pay Busk $1,000 as partial reimbursement for his expenditures.

The controversial portion of the contract reads as follows:

“10. Busk does hereby grant to Bex the optional right to purchase any or all of the oil which might be produced under leases on property described as follows: El/2 of NW 1/4 Sec. 29, T12N, B11W, Croton Twp., Newaygo county; SE 1/4 of NW 1/4, Sec. 6, T16N, B17W, Weare Twp., Oceana county, and any other property on which Busk may now own or hereafter acquire oil and gas leases in Croton township in the general area of said above described tract.
“Said purchase of crude oil shall be at the highest posted market price of oil of like grade and gravity in the area where same is produced or at the price fixed by any governmental agency.”

The contract further provides:

“This agreement shall be binding upon the heirs, representatives, successors, or assigns of the parties hereto, but shall not be assigned by Busk without the written consent of Bex, and the terms of this agreement shall constitute a covenant running with the land and leasehold estates covered thereby.”

During the drilling operations in section 20, Bex exercised its “call” on oil produced from the well in Weare township, Oceana county. The assignee of Bex is still taking oil from that well. The well on section 20 cost about $8,750, proved to be a dry hole on about January 3, 1950, and Bex then paid *371 Busk $1,000. ' Busk waived Ms right to au assignment of the Rex lease, and Rex, according to the testimony of its vice-president, let all its leases “drop” in the area of the dry hole.

In March of 1951, Busk acquired a lease on land in section 29, not specifically mentioned in the December, 1949, agreement. Before he began drilling-on this property he assigned 7/16 of his lease to. Carlie Grimes, and 1/8 to a contracting partnership, consisting of himself and one Ormiston. Busk retained for himself a 7/16 interest. He struck oil on June 23, 1951, and several days thereafter one Berger, a vice-president of Rex, asked Busk if he could buy this oil. He made no reference to the claimed option of Rex. Berger is also vice-president of the Naph-Sol Refining Company.

In late August of 1951 Busk began drilling another well in section 29 on lands specifically described in the Rex agreement. He had an undivided 1/2 interest in that lease at the time the Rex contract was-made. Pie later acquired the entire lease, but claims that he- had the same arrangement respecting this-well with Grimes and the contracting partnership that he- had on the other well. PMs last well also, proved to be productive. Busk and Ms associates-expended about $27,500 on the first producing well,, and oil from it, and the last producing well was-sold to Marvel Refining Company, which had advanced $10,000 in cash to Busk and had provided him with $15,800 worth of equipment.

On September 11, 1951, Rex advised Busk that it desired to exercise its “call” option, to which Busk replied the next day, denying the existence of the option, because of the termination of the 1949 agreement. A formal demand then followed for the delivery to Rex of oil produced under leases on property specifically mentioned and all other property under lease to Busk in ■ the general area. Upon Busk’s- *372 refusal to sell the oil, Rex commenced an action for injunctive relief and for specific performance of its “call” agreement. A temporary injunction was dissolved upon the showing that its continuance would force a shut-down. It was stipulated that Busk could store his oil, or oil of like quantity and quality, pending the outcome of the litigation.

The record shows that by December 1, 1951, one of Busk’s wells had produced 5,734 barrels of oil, the other had produced 3,248 barrels, and that these wells were still producing at the rate of about 66 barrels a day. The “posted” market price in the field was $2.80 per barrel, but Busk was receiving from Marvel $3, which included a 20-cent bonus. Busk claims that similar oil is available to anyone who is “able to compete on the open market.” Rex claims that oil of the kind produced from wells involved here is not available on the open market and that the nearest source of similar oil is Oklahoma and Texas, where the market price is $2.61 to $2.65 per barrel. Pipeline space is unavailable from Oklahoma to the Muskegon, Michigan, market, and the rail transportation rate is $2.26 per barrel. The cost of transportation from Croton township to Muskegon is 31 cents per barrel. Busk was unwilling to venture an opinion as to the prospective commercial life of the producing wells, but thought it would be short.

Busk testified that the optional right of Rex to purchase oil from the Weare township well was still in force, because it was exercised during drilling-operations on the dry hole. He said he assumed that other “calls” had terminated, because in other agreements similar options were always considered as being “washed out” in the event of a dry hole. He further said this was the custom in the industry. He stated that he had not forgotten about the provisions of the 1949 agreement when he made his *373 commitments to third parties regarding the subsequent wells.

At the close of the proofs the trial judge denied specific performance on the ground that the issuance of this discretionary writ was not justified in the light of the proofs, and also because of the fact that Rex had an adequate remedy at law if it could prove damages. The order entered on December 24, 1951, was “with prejudice as to the prayer for specific performance, but without prejudice to plaintiff’s right to bring an action at law for damages.”

Busk, in the trial below, did not rely upon abandonment by Rex or termination by mutual consent, but rather upon the claim that “this contract was intended by the parties to terminate in the event of a ‘dry hole’ and the plaintiff’s conduct was evidence of such intention.” Busk’s testimony as to a custom among oil men, that contracts of this nature are terminated if the test well is a dry hole, is not' corroborated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 N.W.2d 221, 335 Mich. 368, 2 Oil & Gas Rep. 45, 1953 Mich. LEXIS 526, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rex-oil-gas-company-v-busk-mich-1953.