Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Barnhill

107 S.W.2d 746, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 735
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 21, 1937
DocketNo. 4777.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 107 S.W.2d 746 (Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Barnhill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Barnhill, 107 S.W.2d 746, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 735 (Tex. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

STOKES, Justice.

This appeal is from a judgment of the district court of Potter county in favor of the appellees, who were defendants in that court. The suit was filed by appellants, Stanolind Oil & Gas Company’ and J. A. Batson, each claiming to own a half interest in an oil and gas lease on 160 acres of land in Hutchinson county, the Stanolind Oil & Gas Company claiming to own the entire lease on the remaining portion of the tract involved of 960 acres. The petition was in the form of trespass to try title to the seven-eighths of the oil and gas conveyed by the lease, and setting up additional facts concerning operations, development, and production of gas in such manner and quantities as to comply with the terms of the lease and continue the same in force for an indefinite term under its production clause. There is no controversy over the pleadings.

The lease was executed by appellees, J. R.' Barnhill and wife and O. B. Carver, to J. A. Batson, and the interest claimed by Stanolind Oil & Gas Company duly assigned to it by the latter. It was dated February 4, 1930, and, by its terms, was to continue for a term of five years and as much longer as oil or gas or either of them should be produced from the land by the lessee. The sum of $10,000 was paid as cash consideration for the lease; and it contained further provisions for the payment of rentals in the sum of $1 per acre if no well were commenced on the land before February 4, 1931, and like payments annually in the absence of drilling operations.

Appellants commenced the drilling of a well on the land December 23, 1930, discovered gas and completed the drilling March 31, 1931, at a depth of 3,370 feet after plugging back from the total depth drilled of 3,498 feet. Tests showed a potential production of more than 7,000,000 feet of sour gas per day,.and a pressure of 410 pounds. The well was gauged’ at intervals of about a month continuously from the date it was completed up to December S, 1935, when the last test was made and the supply and pressure continued equally as good or better, with a slight increase toward the last portion of the period. No delay rentals were paid, and on May 11, 1932, appellees executed and filed in the office of the county clerk of Hutchinson county an affidavit setting forth this fact, and on May 26, 1932, appellants caused to be filed in the same office an affidavit in substance .that the lease was in good standing. Appellants expended about $25,000 in drilling the well, in addition to the $10,000 paid to appellees for the lease. .

There was no demand for sour gas, and no market for it, especially from small, isolated wells, such as the one involved here, until late in the year 1935, when House Bill No. 266, enacted by the Forty-Fourth Legislature, became effective, prohibiting the use of sweet dry gas in the manufacture of carbon black, and, though appellants made every reasonable effort to market the product of the well, they were unable to do so until about October, 1935. On the 9th of that month, appellant Stano-lind Oil & Gas Company made a contract with Phillips Petroleum Company to begin the delivery of gas from the well on December 31, 1935, but, before the latter date, appellees notified the Phillips Petroleum Company and appellants that the lease had terminatéd and the Phillips Petroleum Company then declined to take the product of the well until the status of the lease was definitely determined. It was to determine that issue that this suit was filed.

*748 The case was tried by the court, without a jury, and the trial judge filed findings of fact substantially in accordance with the foregoing statement. His conclusion of law was, in substance, that, regardless of what may have been the rights of appellees prior to February 4, 1935, as to forfeiture, there being no production of either oil or gas in paying quantities, as provided by the lease, it expired on that date, which was five years after its date, ancl judgment was entered denying appellants any relief, canceling the oil and gas lease and removing the cloud cast upon appellees’ title to the land and vesting the title in them.

Appellants present the case in this court upon four propositions, the pertinent questions raised in all of which we think may be reduced to the contention that, under the oil and gas lease, appellants hold a determinable fee in the oil and gas conveyed by the same, which is not terminated by failure to sell the product on account of a non existing market, there being no abandonment of the lease and, if the lessors have a remedy, it is one for damages and not for a cancellation of the lease.

It is not an open question in Texas as to the nature of the title or interest of the lessee in an oil and gas lease, such as the one involved here. It invests the lessee and his assigns with the title to oil and gas in place, which is a determinable fee and which is lost on cessation of the use of the land for the purposes of exploration, development, and production of the oil and gas that may be in the land. Where such a lease provides for royalties and fails to define the lessee’s duty in respect to development after oil or gas in paying quantities has been discovered, the law implies the obligation of the lessee to continue the development and production of the product with reasonable diligence, and a breach of his duties in that respect will not authorize the forfeiture of the lease as would be the result of a breach of a condition subsequent, such obligation being a covenant. Grubb v. McAfee, 109 Tex. 527, 530, 212 S.W. 464; Texas Company v. Davis, 113 Tex. 321, 335, 254 S.W. 304, 255 S.W. 601; Waggoner Estate v. Sigler Oil Go., 118 Tex. 509, 19 S.W.(2d) 2; Mon-Tex Corporation v. Poteet, 118 Tex. '546, 19 S.W. (2d) 32. Such is the law in cases wherein there is no question as to the actual production of the product in paying quantities. When a well has been drilled upon the property and oil or gas in paying quantities once produced therefrom, the failure of the lessee further to develop the property is, under the hold-, ings of the courts, a breach of an implied covenant, the usual remedy for which is an action for damages. It is only in extraordinary circumstances, where there can be no other adequate relief, that a court of equity will entertain an action to cancel the lease on «uch ground.

As we view the case, it is not so much a question of whether or not the appellants continued to develop the land after they discovered the gas in the first well, and by such continued development complied with the implied covenant so to do, as it is a question of whether or not they have produced oil or gas in paying quantities as contemplated in the lease within the time provided by the lease itself. As has been stated, the estate held under the lease by appellants is what the law denominates a “determinable fee.” It is a fee-simple title because it may continue, forever, and it is determinable because it may come to an end upon contingencies. The lease provides that it shall remain in force for a term of five years from its date, which was February 4, 1930, and as long thereafter as oil or gas, or either of them, is produced in paying quantities from the land by the lessee. If, within five years from the 4th of February, 1930, appellants have .developed and produced oil or gas from said land in paying quantities, their interest in the estate continues. On the other hand, according to the terms of the lease, if oil or gas is not produced from the land within the period of five years, the lease comes to an end.

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Bluebook (online)
107 S.W.2d 746, 1937 Tex. App. LEXIS 735, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanolind-oil-gas-co-v-barnhill-texapp-1937.