Superior Oil Co. v. Griffin

1960 OK 249, 357 P.2d 987, 87 A.L.R. 2d 224, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 240, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 510
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 13, 1960
Docket38603
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1960 OK 249 (Superior Oil Co. v. Griffin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Superior Oil Co. v. Griffin, 1960 OK 249, 357 P.2d 987, 87 A.L.R. 2d 224, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 240, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 510 (Okla. 1960).

Opinion

BERRY, Justice.

In his petition filed below, defendant in error, Ralph N. Griffin, hereafter referred to as “plaintiff”, alleged in substance in his first cause of action that on March 1, 1955 he executed and delivered to The Superior Oil Company an oil and gas lease covering 120 acres of land lying in Garvin County, Oklahoma; that partial interests in said lease were subsequently assigned to Jake L. Hamon and Don O. Chapell; that on or about August 1, 1957, owners of the lease, through Fleet Drilling Company, entered upon the leased premises for the purpose of drilling a test well for oil and gas; that under the provisions of the lease the defendants became liable and bound to pay damages caused to growing crops by their operations on the leased premises; that as a result of drilling operations a growing crop of lespedeza and King’s Ranch blue stem grass of the value of $200 and a growing crop of eight pecan trees of a diameter of six or more inches of the value of $800 were destroyed.

For his second cause of action, plaintiff alleged in substance that he entered into a contract with defendants, by the terms of which defendants were granted permission to construct a road from a drilling location to the north edge of the leased premises; that defendants, in constructing said road, agreed that a metal gate would be installed in the fence line at the north edge of the leased premises; that defendants failed to install the gate, and in lieu thereof constructed a cattle guard; that the cattle guard was negligently constructed; that on August 21, 1957 horses upon land to the north of the cattle guard passed over the cattle guard and into a pasture in which plaintiff kept his registered Angus bull; that the horses chased the bull through a barbed wire fence; that in going through the barbed wire, the bull’s genital organs were injured to the extent that he was rendered unfit for breeding purposes; that he was sold for $150 as beef; that the value of the bull prior to being injured was $1,000.

For his third cause of action, plaintiff alleged in substance that defendants constructed a slush pit at one of the drilling locations; that as a result of the pit being negligently constructed, a break occurred therein thus permitting poisonous chemicals, lead and caustic substances contained in the pit, to escape and flow into a creek running through one of plaintiff’s pastures; that plaintiff was warned to keep his cattle away from the creek; that he herded his cattle away from the creek for thirty days ; that his expense and loss from contamination of the creek was $10 per day, or a total of $300.

For his fourth cause of action, plaintiff alleged in substance that on October 10, 1957, defendants negligently and carelessly permitted oil to spray from a stuck valve on a completed well on the leased premises; that said oil destroyed a growing crop of native grass of the value of $50.

During the trial of the case, plaintiff dismissed his several causes of action as to all defendants except plaintiff in error, Jake L. Hamon, who is hereafter referred to as “defendant”.

In his answer to plaintiff’s petition, defendant denied all material allegations of the petition that were not therein admitted. In pleading further, defendant admitted *990 that he held an oil and gas lease covering plaintiff’s property; that he denied that any growing crops on plaintiff’s land were damaged; that pecan trees are not growing crops; that if damages resulted from horses gaming access to the pasture in which plaintiff kept his bull, the damages were attributable to plaintiff’s negligence and want of care in not promptly removing the horses upon learning of their presence in the pasture. In an amendment to the answer, the last referred-to allegation was enlarged upon.

In his reply to defendant’s answer, plaintiff denied generally the allegations of defendant’s answer and amendment thereto.

The case was tried to a jury. The verdict of the jury was that plaintiff should recover damages as follows: On his first cause of action, $750; on his second cause of action, $350; on his third cause of action, $200; and on his fourth cause of action, $50. After judgment was entered on the verdict, defendant filed a motion for new trial. Upon said motion being denied, this appeal was perfected.

The issue presented by plaintiff’s first cause of action is whether King’s Ranch blue stem grass, lespedeza and pecan trees are “growing crops” within the purview of the provision of the lease to the effect that “Lessee shall pay for damages by its operations to growing crops on said land”. The trial court concluded that under the facts of this case, the grass, lespedeza and pecan trees were growing crops within the meaning of the quoted provisions of the lease. The defendant earnestly contends that in so concluding, the trial court erred.

In making the first location approximately 31/2 acres of land were used, which acreage was laid bare by a bulldozer. Plaintiff testified that there was a good stand of King’s Ranch blue stem grass (hereafter referred to as grass) and lespedeza on the 3½ acres; that two-thirds of the stand was grass and the remaining one-third was lespedeza; that the stand of grass was established during the feeding months of 1956-1957 by feeding approximately 40 bales of grass to cattle on said acreage; that the grass had made seed prior to being baled and that the action of the cattle in eating the grass scattered and in effect planted the seed; that lespedeza seed had been planted more than five years before the location was made; that the stand of lespedeza resulted from seed produced by lespedeza plants in 1956; that the grass and lespedeza were used as pasturage. As indicated, lespedeza is an annual and blue stem grass is a perennial plant.

Plaintiff testified that eight pecan trees were bulldozed out; that the trees were from 15 to 20 years old; 'that they were from 6 to 10 inches in diameter; that the trees had borne nuts of a good qaulity; that the trees had been cultivated by pruning same, cleaning up leaves that had fallen around and near them and by cutting down trees and sprouts that grew in the grove; that if a pecan’ tree did not bear a good quality nut it was destroyed; that the trees in the grove were spaced “about 30 or 40 feet apart”; that there were other native pecan trees growing on the farm, some of which were larger than those that were destroyed ; that plaintiff harvested the pecans.

We held in Canadian Mining Company v. Cleveland et al., Okl., 312 P.2d 913 that a bermuda-grass and lespedeza meadow was a growing crop within the provisions of a coal-mining lease providing for payment of damages to growing crops which resulted from strip coal-mining operations, and in Cities Service Gas Company v. Christian et al., Okl., 340 P.2d 929, we held that grasses seeded for a pasturage crop constituted a growing crop within the provisions of a pipe-line easement providing for payment of damages to growing crops which resulted from laying a pipe line.

Defendant contends that neither of the cited cases are in point; that the fact that the bermuda and lespedeza crop was established in the first cited case in order to harvest hay therefrom serves to distinguish said case from the instant case, and the fact that our holding in the second cited case *991 was limited to the facts of that case serves to distinguish that case from this case.

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Bluebook (online)
1960 OK 249, 357 P.2d 987, 87 A.L.R. 2d 224, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 240, 1960 Okla. LEXIS 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/superior-oil-co-v-griffin-okla-1960.