Teel v. Rio Bravo Oil Company

104 S.W. 420, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 153, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 462
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 27, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 104 S.W. 420 (Teel v. Rio Bravo Oil Company) 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
Teel v. Rio Bravo Oil Company, 104 S.W. 420, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 153, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 462 (Tex. Ct. App. 1907).

Opinion

PLEASANTS, Associate Justice.

This is a suit, for injunction and to recover damages brought by the appellants against the appellees. The plaintiffs in the suit are B. Teel, who sues in his individual capacity and as survivor of the community of himself and deceased wife, Nancy A. Teel, and also as next friend of Clara Teel, a minor, J. B. Teel, J. W. Teel, Mittie Teel, T. F. Teel, Mattie J. Heeler, B-. E. Teel, Mittie Jordan, joined by her husband, Byron L. Jordan, and Etta Teel, a minor, who sues by her guardian, Mittie Teel.

The defendants are the Bio Bravo Oil Company, J. M. Guffey Petroleum Company, Producers Oil Company, and Gulf, Colorado & Santa Fe Bailway Company.

The third amended petition, upon which the case was tried, after setting out the names and places of residence of the parties, alleges that plaintiffs are the owners of the northeast one-quarter of the Thompson C. Gaines league of land situated in Hardin County, and that said land is traversed by Pine Island bayou, “a large stream suitable in proper seasons to navigation for logging, and affording abundant'water for stock, irrigation and other domestic purposes, and furnished plaintiffs fishing privileges, and thereby added to said land a large portion of its value.” The remaining allegations of said petition are as follows:

“That the plaintiff, J. B-. Teel, now owns 130 acres in the northeast corner of said quarter league, as shown by conveyance from B. Teel to J. B. Teel and adjoining him on the south, the plaintiff, J. W. Teel, now owns 160 acres of said quarters, shown also by deed from B. Teel to J. W. Teel, each of said tracts bordering on said bayou, and that the plaintiff, B. Teel, and the other plaintiffs herein, including the said J. B. and J. W. Teel, own the balance of said *157 quarter- league, except thirty acres thereof, as shown by the deed from J. E. Teel to said Brice, as tenants in common. That the plaintiffs, J. E. Teel and J. W. Teel, reside on their lands near said bayou, on which their lands abut, and the other plaintiffs, except Mittie Jordan and B. L. Jordan, Mittie Teel, Etta Teel and T. F. Teel, reside with E. Teel on his old homestead, owned by all the plaintiffs as aforesaid within about 300 yards of said bayou, where it runs south of their house and about one-quarter of a mile from where it runs west of their said house, said bayou making an elbow around said house, first south, to the west of the house and thence east on the south side of said house.
“That for the year just previous to the filing of this suit and ever since, the defendants have been operating for oil in what is known as the Saratoga Oil Field, which is located from one to one and a half miles northeast of the premises of these plaintiffs, and produce, store, pipe and handle large quantities of oil. That the Saratoga Oil Field, in which is situated defendants’ oil wells, is a low basin-like territory, with but little or no drainage. That the defendants have sunk many oil -wells thereon, from which they have brought to the surface large quantities of oil, salt water and other matter, and they have caused the same to be wasted and turned loose upon the surface, so that it has collected in large quantities and deposits about and through said field, and said defendants, acting together and in concert, by means of a system of ditching and by one or more of the defendants digging ditches, which by arrangement together, the other defendants are permitted to use, have drained and continue to drain said oil, salt water and other refuse matter off of and away from their lands, and disregarding the natural lay of the land and the natural drainage, the defendants acting together, conduct said oil, salt water and refuse matter by means of said ditches to said Pine Island bayou, or so as to precipitate the same into said Pine Island bayou. And plaintiffs say, that said oil, salt water and refuse matter, as aforesaid, althougla wrongfully permitted to collect and run over the land in and about the vicinity of defendants’ oil wells, would not, on account of the lay of the land, by reason of the natural processes of absorption and evaporation, reach said bayou, so as to pollute its waters, if it were not for the wrongful and intentional acts of the defendants as aforesaid, in conducting it by means of said ditches to said bayou or to such points as will carry it by the natural drainage on into said bayou.
“That such matter, consisting as aforesaid, of oil, salt water and other matter, is very obnoxious and carries with it poisonous and disagreeable sediments and gives rise to obnoxious and poisonous gases, and that thus and thereby the defendants have wrongfully polluted and poisoned the waters of said Pine Island bayou, and have destroyed all the fish in said bayou on plaintiffs’ premises, and now cause large quantities of oil and said obnoxious matter to be carried through said bayou and to stand as a scum on the water thereof, and have totally destroyed said waters for watering stock and for all domestic purposes, and said bayou being a stream" running through a low and flat territory, spreads over a wide area of the lands of plaintiffs during *158 the freshets and seasons of abundant rainfall, which frequently has occurred and will continue to occur, and thereby distributes oil and poisonous sediments on the lands of plaintiff, injuring, if not destroying, the trees and grass thereon, and gives rise at all times to obnoxious vapours and gases and disagreeable and nauseous smells, which pervade plaintiffs’ premises, which are specially disagreeable at and around the homes of plaintiffs, and tend to cause sickness and greatly depreciates the rental value of plaintiffs’ lands upon the market, as well as it. injures" them for the home uses and purposes of plaintiffs.
“That plaintiffs are engaged in farming and raising of stock and own large quantities of cattle, horses and hogs and, other domestic animals, which have no other place for watering except in said bayou, and for this purpose said premises are rendered almost, if not quite, valueless.
“And plaintiffs .further say that said oil is very combustible and likely to catch fire, and does at times catch fire and constantly keeps in danger the timber on the lands of plaintiff, which is valuable and plentiful, and is likely to be destroyed, and a large quantity has been destroyed by fire arising from the combustible character of said oil. Whereby the plaintiffs say that by reason of all the injuries herein alleged they have been damaged in common in the sum of $7,000 as to the property held in common by them.
“And plaintiffs further say that the defendants continue to so corrupt said water and injure plaintiffs, as aforesaid, and plaintiffs’ premises, and will, so far as plaintiffs believe and so allege, continue to do so, to their irreparable injury, unless restrained by this honorable court.
“Wherefore, plaintiffs pray that a writ of injunction issue, perpetually restraining defendants, their agents, servants and employees, from further maintaining the nuisances hereinabove described, and commanding them to desist from further injuring plaintiffs and their land and premises in the manner hereinbefore set out, and for the damages hereinbefore alleged, for all costs in this behalf expended, and for such other relief, general and special, as the court may deem adequate.”

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Bluebook (online)
104 S.W. 420, 47 Tex. Civ. App. 153, 1907 Tex. App. LEXIS 462, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teel-v-rio-bravo-oil-company-texapp-1907.