Sult v. A. Hochstetter Oil Co.

61 S.E. 307, 63 W. Va. 317, 1908 W. Va. LEXIS 97
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 14, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by84 cases

This text of 61 S.E. 307 (Sult v. A. Hochstetter Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sult v. A. Hochstetter Oil Co., 61 S.E. 307, 63 W. Va. 317, 1908 W. Va. LEXIS 97 (W. Va. 1908).

Opinion

POFFENBARGER, PRESIDENT:

The A. Hochstetter Oil Company, a corporation, having entered upon a certain small tract of land in Ritchie county, known as the Linch farm, and commenced the production of oil therefrom, Peter J. Suit, claiming under a prior lease, obtained a decree appointing a special receiver to take charge of the wells, machinery and appliances on the land and operate the same for the production of oil and gas, and enjoining and restraining said company, its servants, agents and employes from interfering in any way with the receiver’s custody and operation of the wells and machinery, and the Eureka Pipe Line Company from delivering to the Hochstetter Company oil produced from the land; from which decree, as well as several other orders previously made in the cause, said company and J. O. Linch, its lessor, have appealed.

Suit’s claim of title is founded partly on a lease for oil and gas purposes, executed by J. O. Linch to T. E. Barnsdall, bearing date March 17, 1897, the gas right under which after-wards passed by sale to the Mountain State Gas Company, Barnsdall having developed a gas well on the land and then sold the lease to said company, as to the gas. That company afterwards sold the gas right to the Hochstetter Company. The oil light or privilege passed, by a number of successive transfers, into the hands of Shawmut Oil Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the State of Maine, which, after having drilled an unproductive and worthless well on the land, removed its machinery, tools and appliances from the premises, sold all its other leases on lands in the community and dissolved, and Suit claims the oil right, created by the lease, by purchase from the stockholders of said dissolved corporation. He also acquired, by purchase, one-half of the royalty in oil and gas, reserved by J. O. Linch by the lease, said Linch having sold it to S. P. Linch April 10, 1901, who conveyed it to Suit, March 30, 1904. He sets up another claim, derived as follows: Eleanor Marshall, once owner of the tract of land, containing 215 acres, conveying 100 acres thereof to Elzada I. Harrison, by deed, dated March 9, 1880, out of which she reserved and excepted “the [320]*320right to all minerals in and under” a certain fifteen acres thereof, aptly described. Out-of the same hundred acre tract, the land involved here, a tract of 44>4 acres, including' the 15 acres, the minerals under which were also reserved, came ultimately into the hands of J. O. Linch, the lessor of Barnsdall, and he had never acquired the title to the excepted minerals by any conveyances thereof. Eleanor Marshall having died seized of the minerals, so reserved, Suit claims to have purchased them of her heirs. If this reservation included the oil and gas, and the title so held has not been lost in any way, such as forfeiture for non-taxation, the lease executed by J. O. Linch confers no right to take these substances from said fifteen acres of the land.

The A. Hochstctter Oil Company is owner of the gas right, created by the lease from Linch to Barnsdall, as we have seen, and it claims the oil right also under a subsequent lease, executed March 29, 1904, by said J. O. Linch, to one David Grunsburg, who assigned the same to said Hochstetter Company. That company, as well as Linch, asserts abandonment and forfeiture of the Linch-Barnsdall lease, as to both the oil and gas rights, and denies Suit’s claim to one-half of the royalty, on the ground that the oil wells drilled by the company were put down under the subsequent Linch-Gruns-burg lease, to which Suit is not in any sense a party and under which he does not claim. They deny his right to the oil and gas in the 15 acre portion of the land on four grounds, of which the first is that the reservation was not intended by the parties to the deed to include the oil and gas or either of them, since at the date of the deed, no person had reason to believe these substances were to be found therein, and a substance believed to be silver, had been discovered thereon; the second, that Suit had not acquired the interests of all the heirs of Eleanor Marshall, if they had any title; the third, that J. O. Linch’s possession of the land, being adverse, has ripened into good title, and the fourth, that the title of Eleanor Marshall has been forfeited to the state for non-entry on the land books for taxation and transferred to Linch and those claiming under him.

The following grounds of demurrer are assigned: 1, Multifariousness; 2, want of necessary parties; 3, no title shown; 4, preclusion of equity jurisdiction by dispute as to title to the land.

[321]*321Suit claims the oil in the entiie tract of 44/4 acres under the Linch-Barnsdall lease and the Hochstetter Company claims the same thing under the subsequent Linch-Gunsburg lease, and there is a controversy between these two hostile claims, each extending to the entire tract of land. The fifteen acre tract, as to which Suit’s claim of title stands upon another and different foundation, is a portion of the same tract. Though the pleadings and evidence on the two issues thus presented are different, Suit bases two demands or grounds of action for the same thing and against the same parties on different claims of title, as to a portion of the matter in controversy, namely, 15 acres of the 44J4 acre tract. All the parties are interested in both of the issues so raised and the results will differ only as to the extent of the benefit or injury conferred or inflicted. All the parties will be affected by the event of each issue. Therefore, all are vitally concerned and their interests are directly antagonistic. If Suit should suceed on his first ground, he will take the oil in the whole tract, but if that should fail, he may take it in a portion of the tract. In the former case, Linch would receive a portion of the royalty, under the first lease, but, in the latter, none from the fifteen acres, under either lease. If he makes good his defense of forfeiture of the first lease, going to the entire tract, he and those claiming under him take the entire royalty to the exclusion of Suit. If not, Suit will get half of it, though he fail as to the claim of title, founded on the Marshall reservation, and all the oil in the fifteen acre tract, if that claim should prevail. In view of the close and intimate connection of the interests of the parties, and their relation to the same subject matter, we do not feel warranted, by the authorities, in holding the bill multifarious. The interests of all parties will be better subserved by one suit than two. It will save both costs and delay, without imposing any serious inconvenience. “The objection of multifariousness may be disregarded except in plain cases, where thereby the administration of justice will be furthered, and multiplicity of suits avoided.” Johnson v. Sanger, 49 W. Va. 405.

We do not perceive anything in the bill to sustain the view that necessary parties are wanting. No omitted party is named in the brief or otherwise indicated.

Want of sufficient disclosure of title is predicated on the [322]*322failure to exhibit with the bill the deeds from the heirs of Eleanor Marshall to J. Newman, to whom it is alleged they made conveyances of their interests in the mineral reservation, and who executed a deed to Suit, purporting to convey such interests. Purchase and conveyance of the interests of all the known heirs, constituting not less than seventeen-twentieths of the reserved minerals, as well as the ownership of the residue by the persons made parties as unknown heirs of Eleanor Marshall, are distinctly alleged, and an • offer to produce and file the deeds to Newman is made.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Dye v. CNX Gas Company, LLC
784 S.E.2d 703 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 2016)
Faith United Methodist Church & Cemetery of Terra Alta v. Morgan
745 S.E.2d 461 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 2013)
Kinney v. Keith
128 P.3d 297 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2005)
Keith v. Kinney
140 P.3d 141 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 2005)
McDonald v. Snyder Construction Co.
744 S.W.2d 550 (Missouri Court of Appeals, 1988)
Meagher v. Uintah Gas Co.
185 P.2d 747 (Utah Supreme Court, 1947)
Untitled Texas Attorney General Opinion
Texas Attorney General Reports, 1945
Bruen v. Thaxton
28 S.E.2d 59 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1943)
Holloway Gravel Co. v. McKowen
9 So. 2d 228 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1942)
Cole v. Philadelphia Company
26 A.2d 920 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1942)
Ozark Chemical Co. v. Jones
125 F.2d 1 (Tenth Circuit, 1941)
Burdette v. Bruen
191 S.E. 360 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1937)
Warren v. Clinchfield Coal Corp.
186 S.E. 20 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1936)
In Re Reynolds Estate
180 S.E. 6 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1935)
Prindle v. Baker
178 S.E. 513 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1935)
Stowers v. Huntington Development & Gas Co.
72 F.2d 969 (Fourth Circuit, 1934)
Park v. Adams
173 S.E. 785 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1934)
United Fuel Gas Co. v. Hays Oil & Gas Co.
163 S.E. 443 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 S.E. 307, 63 W. Va. 317, 1908 W. Va. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sult-v-a-hochstetter-oil-co-wva-1908.