Southeastern Gas Co. v. Ferguson

106 S.W.2d 144, 269 Ky. 162, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 779
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedNovember 20, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 106 S.W.2d 144 (Southeastern Gas Co. v. Ferguson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southeastern Gas Co. v. Ferguson, 106 S.W.2d 144, 269 Ky. 162, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 779 (Ky. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Drury, Commissioner—

Reversing in part and affirming in part.

The Southeastern Gas Company has appealed from a judgment which awarded to appellee a $200 recovery against it and denied to it any relief upon a counterclaim for $650 it had asserted against appellee. Thus as to it the amount in controversy is $850, the sum of these'two (Walter A. Wood Mowing & Reaping Machine Co. v. Taylor, 104 Ky. 217, 46 S. W. 720), and it is entitled to an appeal as a matter of right. Section 950-1, Ky. St.

The items for which appellee Ferguson sought recovery are:

*163 (a) $100.00 rental on well 595 from May 1, ’32 to that date in ’33

(b) $100.00 “ ...... ”33 “ ’34

(c) $100.00 “ “ “ “.34 “ ’35

(d) $100.00 “ " “ “ “35 “ ’36

(e) $200.00 “ « “ 596 Aug. 1, ’32 “ ’33

(f) $200.00 “ “ “ “ ’33 “ ’34

(g) $200.00 “ «• “ “ « ’34 “ ’35

(h) $200.00 ........ « « ’35 “ ’36

(i)$1,500.00 alleged damages to well 596.

The Southeastern Gas Company denied liability for any of the foregoing and asserted a counterclaim for the following:

(j) $50 overpayment on well 595 from May, ’29 to May, ’30

(k) $50 overpayment on well 595 from May, ’30 to May, • ’31

(l) $200 paid by mistake on well 596 from Aug. ’29 to Aug., ’30

(m)$200 paid by mistake on well 596 from Aug., ’30 to Aug., ’31

(n) $150 paid by mistake on well 596 from Aug., ’31 to Aug., ’32

No attack has been made on the lease itself, seeking either its forfeiture or its reformation.

Well 595.

The lease under which wells 595 and 596 were developed on the property of Mr. Ferguson contained this:

“Should any well not produce oil, but produce gas and the gas therefrom be sold off the said premises, the consideration to said first party for the gas from each well from which gas is marketed shall be as follows: At the rate of $200 per year while the well shows a pressure of 200 or more pounds upon being shut in five minutes in two inch pipe or thirty minutes in larger pipe; at the rate of $100 per year while the well shows a pressure of 100 or more pounds and less than 200 pounds upon being shut in five minutes in two inch pipe, or thirty minutes in larger pipe; at the rate of $50 per year while the well shows a pressure of less than' 100 pounds upon being shut in five minutes in two inch pipe or thirty minutes in larger pipe; to be paid quarterly while marketed.”

Counterclaims (j) and (k)

The Southeastern Gas Company had paid on well 595 a yearly rental of $100, from May 1929, to May 1931. The pressure in this well, when determined in the manner provided in this lease during the time cov *164 ered by these payments, was less than 100 pounds, being only 15]4 pounds, and under .the lease provision appellee was only entitled to $50 per year rental. This was shown even by the witnesses introduced by Ferguson. Thus Mr. Ferguson was overpaid on this well No. 595 for these two years, the extent of such overpayment being $50 for each year. The Southeastern Gas Company received no consideration for the $100 so overpaid.

In reversing a judgment that had denied a recovery under somewhat, similar circumstances in Ky.-W. Va. Gas Co. v. Preece, 260 Ky. 601, 86 S. W. (2d) 163, 165, we cited this with approval:

“It is the settled rule in this state, adopted_at an early date and followed by a long line of decisions, that whenever, by a clear or palpable mistake of law or fact essentially bearing upon and affecting the contract, money has been paid without consideration, which in law, honor, or conscience was not due and payable, and which in honor or good conscience ought not to be retained, it may and ought to be recovered.”

It is admitted the pressure on well No. 595 was too low to entitle Ferguson to any more than $50 per year for its rental during these two years and that he was paid by the Southeastern Gas Company $100- per year. Ferguson knew this well was low in pressure, for he wrote the company this letter:

“Redbush, Ky., August 4, 1931.
“Southeastern Gas Company,
“Charleston, W. Ya.
“Dear Sir:
“You may reduce well rental on well No. 595 located on Lease No. 2183 from One Hundred Dollars annual rental to $50.00 annual rental for one year only, beginning with the payment due November 22, 1931.
“Yery truly yours,
“[Signed] Ora Ferguson.”

He does not plead or rely on that letter as a settlement or compromise of the matter, neither does the company. Ferguson in his claim (a) is still asking for rental at the old rate. So the most we can make of this *165 letter is that it is an unaccepted offer of compromise. "We can find nowhere any reduction of rental that was made because of it.

Ferguson is contending that the ^Southeastern Gas Company cannot recover on its counterclaims (j) and (k) because at the time these payments were made the Southeastern Gas Company had in its office, so he contends, a report that showed this well to have had only a seven pound pressure.

"Why this report itself was not put in evidence we do not know. The attorney for the Southeastern Gas Company had this report in his hand when he was interrogating these witnesses, and Mr. Eockhold says in his evidence: “According to the report I found in a file prepared by Mr. Thomas, the pressure of this one well was only seven pounds upon being shut in five minutes in a two-inch pipe.”

The date of this seven-pound test is given in this record as June 22, 1931, so we cannot see how it can be seriously contended that the Southeastern Gas Company knew of this low pressure when it, in 1929 and 1930, made the overpayments upon which it bases its counterclaims (j) and (k).

A later test showed a pressure on this well No. 595 of 24 pounds and the 15^2 pounds’ pressure we mentioned in the earlier part of this opinion was obtained by adding 7 and 24, and dividing the result by two.

To be entitled to a rental of $100 per year on this well, Ferguson would have to have some evidence somewhere that this well at the time these rentals were paid had a pressure of 100 pounds or more, and he has none. All the evidence is the other way. By mistake the Southeastern Gas Company paid him $50 per year too much, and we can see no reason it should not have its counterclaims (j) and (k) for such overpayments subject to a reduction of $36.07 which the Southeastern Gas Company admits it owes for the rental of well No. 595.

These two items of $50 each should have been allowed the Southeastern Gas Company, subject to a credit of $36.07.

Counterclaims (1), (m), and (n) on Well 596.

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Bluebook (online)
106 S.W.2d 144, 269 Ky. 162, 1936 Ky. LEXIS 779, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southeastern-gas-co-v-ferguson-kyctapphigh-1936.