Stitz v. National Producing & Refining Co.

247 S.W. 657
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 13, 1922
DocketNo. 6841.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 247 S.W. 657 (Stitz v. National Producing & Refining Co.) 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
Stitz v. National Producing & Refining Co., 247 S.W. 657 (Tex. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

SMITH, J.

On March 20, 1919, .Judge Y. H. Blocker obtained from appellant, Stitz, an oil and gas lease upon 884.8 acres of land in McMullen county belonging to Stitz. No question is raised as to the sufficiency of the down consideration paid for the lease, nor is any fraud shown in its procurement from appellant by Blocker. In fact the latter was, and for a long time had been, and still appears to be, appellant’s attorney and adviser, and apparently the lease was made over to him in order to facilitate the placing of it in the hands of some one who would undertake to develop the land for oil and gas purposes. Among others, these provisions were embraced in the contract:

“Lessee to have and to hold the said above-described land for five years from date, and during the continuance of actual work or drilling by said lessee, or his assignee, and for as long thereafter as oil or gas or coal or other minerals are found thereon in paying quantities.
“Lessee shall have the right to remove any machinery, or any other thing which he shall have put thereon, from the premises at any time without being liable to the lessors for damages.
“Lessee agrees to begin operating for drilling a well for oil or gas on the above-described land and to prosecute the same with reasonable diligence, unavoidable circumstances excepted, within ninety days from date, or this contract, upon notice in writing to the lessee, may be declared null and void. ,
“If a dry hole is made in the first drilling, it is agreed and understood that lessee can and shall have the right to begin and prosecute the drilling of other wells wherever selected by said lessee on said above-described land without let or hindrance by lessor under this contract.”

On March 26th, six days later, Blocker assigned the lease to the Texas State Oil & Leasing Company, which began the drilling of a well on the land during the following December, under an agreement extending the time for that purpose, and drilled it to a depth of 700 feet by April 1, 1920, when the work was discontinued. On June 21, 1920, the last-named company assigned the lease to the National Producing & Refining Company, which resumed drilling in the same well about the 1st of the following October. When the well had been drilled to a depth of 900 feet, about January 1, 1921, salt water was struck, work was discontinued, the crew was discharged, and the company later sold the rig,' although the derrick and other facilities used in the drilling were not disturbed. No other drilling operations were actually begun on the land.

On January 18, 1921, Stitz wrote the lessee, the National Producing & Refining Company, at Port Worth, as follows:

“You will please appreciate my anxiety to know what steps your company intend to take, as to further developing or prospecting- my land, since you have declared the present well is a water well, and have dismantled the rigging and machinery at the well, preparatory to a move elsewhere, I presume. Hence I am writing you to know whether you intend abandoning further work here or not, and if not, will you be kind enough to say about when work will begin again. I trust, you will see it to yours, as- well as my interest, not to delay indefinitely nor too long, before developments are begun again.”

To which the company, two days later, replied:

“Referring to your letter of the 18th, will say that our Mr. Harrison has already been instructed by tbe operating department to skid the derrick over preparatory to drilling another well to the shallow sand which was encountered in drilling the well which we recently completed in salt water. If we can find a shallow sand there, we shall certainly develop the field to the greatest extent possible. You may rest assured that our interests are mutual and I think we can develop the property as soon as any one else could do it, even if you had it back to lease to some one else now.”

The correspondence thus initiated continued more or less regularly until shortly before this suit was filed, Stitz urging development, and the company still insisting upon its purpose and intention to resume operations .at the earliest possible moment, but *659 postponing the beginning upon the stated, grounds that the financial stringency was interfering, and that, besides, the low price of oil, and lack of pipe line facilities between the land and the railroads or market made it undesirable to all parties to bring the oil or gas to the surface, until those conditions improved. On June ÍOth the company suggested in a letter to Stitz, who had threatened to cancel the lease, that, in order to avoid “difficulty or legal proceedings,” it might be willing to pay a reasonable rental for deferring development until not later than the following March 1st, or that “we might be able to get in there in the next 30 or 60 days, or it might suit us better to make a small payment and defer it a little further on account of financial difficulties.” On June 16th Stitz had prepared a 90-day extension contract, which he forwarded to the company through the bank, with $1,000 draft attached, but this was returned to him. Throughout this correspondence the company insisted that Stitz had no right to cancel the lease, and that it' intended to proceed with development at the earliest possible moment, but on August 1st Stitz wrote it as follows:

“I am writing you in regards to the lease on my land. I have given you all the show and chance to do something and so far you have not done anything and will not even write what you intend to do. And now I declare the lease null and void as the contract has not been -complied with. I expect you to send me. a release on same at once.”

To which the president of the company replied two days later:

“In answer to yours of August 1st, will say that financial conditions have been such that we did not deem it advisable to undertake further development on your lease at the present time, with the additional reasons as set out in my letter of some weeks ago. Now, Mr. Stitz, I do not know at the moment what our legal rights are in this matter, but I feel sure that the lease is a valid lease in our name, and if we have any rights you may rest assured that we will assert them to the fullest possible extent. If we have no rights, then we will be glad to execute a release to you. I will investigate the situation and let you know.”

On September 22d Stitz wrote the company as follows:

“Have been waiting some time to hear from you in regards .to the lease on my place. I have waited now for nearly ten months for you to do something, and nothing has been done yet, and now I must have a release at once. I will wait till'1st of October, 1921, for a release. If I do not receive by then I will bring suit for same. Hoping to receive this release without any further trouble, beg to remain.”

And a week later the company replied:

“In answer to yours of the 22d, I am under the impression that active operations will be started on your property in the very near future. I am sure you would much rather have development than to bring suit for cancellation of the lease.”

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Bluebook (online)
247 S.W. 657, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stitz-v-national-producing-refining-co-texapp-1922.