Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Kimmel

68 F.2d 520, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4897
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1934
Docket891
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 68 F.2d 520 (Stanolind Oil & Gas Co. v. Kimmel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit 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. Kimmel, 68 F.2d 520, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4897 (10th Cir. 1934).

Opinion

SYMES, District Judge.

The appellees, J. D. Kimmel, J. W. Cree, R. M. Gawthrop, and W. D. Goodwin, brought an action at law against the appellant, defendant below, in the district court of Tulsa county, Okl., to recover damages for an alleged breach of an oil and gas lease development contract. The case was removed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Oklahoma, tried to a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of plaintiffs for $28,000. Defendant appeals.

On April 3, 1923, the plaintiffs were the owners by assignment to Kimmel, for the joint and equal use and benefit of the plaintiffs, of two certain departmental oil and gas leases, one. known as the David Wind lease of 120 acres, and the other as the Malinda Knight lease of 80 acres, both in the Garrison Pool in the Creek Nation, Okl.

On that date said Kimmel, acting for himself and the other plaintiffs, entered into a written contract with the McMan Oil & Gas Company, whereby the plaintiffs in consideration of $50,000, and other consideration, assigned to the said McMan Oil & Gas Company an undivided one-half interest in said leases, together with the exclusive control and management thereof, and the McMan Company agreed that it should properly develop said leases for oil or gas, by the drilling and equipping of the necessary wells to produce the oil or gas under said leases, and to advance all moneys necessary for the proper development thereof, up to $2,00,000, and should be reimbursed therefor by plaintiffs’ proportion of the oil and gas produced, until the cost of development was paid.

Later the McMan Oil & Gas Company was absorbed by the defendant, Stanolind Oil & Gas Company, a Delaware corporation, which took over the leases in question, and assumed all the obligations and liabilities thereof. The action is for damages for failure to properly develop said leases in accordance with the said contract.

The execution and assignment of the contract, and its assumption of the liabilities of the McMan Company is admitted by defendant. It then alleges that it drilled two oil wells and one gas well at a cost of $123,417.40, exclusive of the cash payment of $50,000; that the total receipts from them amounted to $73,618.14, thus resulting in a loss of $49',-799.26; that the development by other lessees of contiguous lands had been unprofitable, and that competent geologists and men of experience in this field had conducted detailed study of relevant factors in respect to further developments of the leases. That predicated thereon, the McMan Company had concluded that no prudent, skillful, or experienced operator would further develop said leases; that further development would not bo advantageous to the plaintiffs, and would only result in greater financial loss to the defendant.

Defendant first demurred to the plaintiff’s evidence, a,nd then moved for an instructed verdict at the close of all the evidence. Both were overruled and exceptions saved.

The assignments of error chiefly relied upon are based upon these rulings of the court, and present for our consideration the law defining the defendant’s duty to the plaintiffs under the terms of the contract and the transcript of the evidence to determine whether it supports the verdict rendered.

The law governing oil and gas leases of this nature is well settled. The provision that the lessee “shall advance any and all moneys necessary for the proper development of the above described properties,” to the extent of $200,000, is a usual one, and held to be an implied covenant to diligently develop the property for oil or gas. This has been the law since Brewster v. Lanyon Zinc Co. (C. C. A. 8th, 1905) 140 F. 801, page 814, wherein Judge Van Devanter said:

“No breach can occur save where the absence of such diligence is both certain and substantial in view of the actual circumstances at the time, as distinguished from mere expectations on the part of the lessor and conjecture on the part of mining enthusiasts. The large expense incident to the work of exploration and development, and the fact that the lessee must bear the loss if the operations a,re not successful, require that he proceed with due regard to his own interests, as well as those of the lessor. No obligation rests on him to carry the operations beyond the point where they will bo profitable to him, even if some benefit to the lessor will result from them. It is only to the end that the oil and gas shall he extracted with benefit or profit to both that reasonable diligence is required. Whether or not in any particular instance such diligence is exercised depends upon a variety of circumstances, such as the quantity of oil and gas capable of being produced from *522 the premises, as indicated by prior exploration and development, the local market or demand therefor or the means of transporting them to market, the extent and results of the operations, if any, on adjacent lands, the character of the natural reservoir — whether such as to permit the drainage of a large area by each well — and the usages of the business. Whatever, in the circumstances, would be reasonably expected of operators of ordinary prudence, having regard to the interests of ■both lessor and lessee, is what is required.”

The late Judge Kenyon in Watehorn v. Roxana Petroleum Corporation (C. C. A.) 5 F.(2d) 636, collected and reviewed all the pertinent authorities and approved the statement from Brewster v. Lanyon Zinc Co., supra. It has been adopted as the law in the Tenth Circuit in Orr v. Comar Oil Company, 46 F.(2d) 59, and in Denker v. Mid-Continent Petroleum Corp., 50 F.(2d) 725. In the latter ease Judge Phillips, discussing these implied covenants, said, page 727 of 56 F.(2d):

“A lessee must do that which, under the circumstances, an operator of ordinary prudence, having regard to the interests of both lessor and lessee, would do.”

We deem it unnecessary to review the evidence in detail. In our opinion there was sufficient produced pro and con to make the case one for the jury.. The plaintiffs made a prima facie ease that three of the tracts, at least, were in proven gas fields, and that at the times in question the gas produced therefrom could have been sold at a profit equal, at least, to the amount of the verdict of the jury.

Appellant’s argument and discussion of the evidence is really directed to the point that its evidence outweighed that of the plaintiffs; that some of plaintiffs’ witnesses were theorists, when contrasted with the experienced operators it called to the stand, etc. Arguments of this nature are for the jury and not an appellate court. Nor can we agree with counsel that Judge Van Devanter in referring to “mining enthusiasts” (supra), intended to include capable geologists as a class, to the exclusion of so-called practical or actual operators. It is the province of the jury, and not the court, to weigh the evidence, and, where there is a conflict, decide that which it would believe, and give such credence to the so-called theorists or experts, as in its judgment it deems fair and just. This applies with peculiar force to a situation such as we have here.

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Bluebook (online)
68 F.2d 520, 1934 U.S. App. LEXIS 4897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanolind-oil-gas-co-v-kimmel-ca10-1934.