Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Barker

6 S.W.2d 1031, 117 Tex. 418, 60 A.L.R. 936, 1928 Tex. LEXIS 81
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMay 23, 1928
DocketNo. 4031.
StatusPublished
Cited by100 cases

This text of 6 S.W.2d 1031 (Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Barker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Barker, 6 S.W.2d 1031, 117 Tex. 418, 60 A.L.R. 936, 1928 Tex. LEXIS 81 (Tex. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice GREENWOOD

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Defendants in error Mrs. Suda Barker, M. H. Pickering, and W. M. Pickering sued plaintiffs in error Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company and thirty-one others to recover from the Coal & Oil Company one hundred thousand dollars in damages, and for specific performance of a contract for the mineral development of a tract of 112 acres of land. The petition on which the judgment was sought is so vague that a full statement thereof is necessary. The petition alleged that since December 31, 1919, the defendants in error Mrs. Suda Barker, M. H. Pickering, and W. M. Pickering, together with Bascom Morton, Leona Morton, H. B. Lane, L. C. Harlow, R. L. Gattis, Mary Boland, F. S. Boland, W. T. Gattis, Earl Gattis, B. P. Cozart, J. H. D. Fleming, W. P. Ledbetter, J. F. Ledbetter, C. A. Gattis, Will Slatton, W. T. Rutherford, J. M. Slatton, J. C. Galloway, Mrs. M. C. Jobe, Marvin Brown, L. G. Haslip, Mrs. Maggie C: Foat, A. L. Styles, R. H. Clem, W. L. Mansfield, J. B. Reed, C. A. Donovan, Mattie Hodges, Dallas Hodges, C. E. Cooper, and the Four Square Investment Company, were “joint owners in fee simple of the mineral right of” a described 112 acre tract of land; that on December 31, 1919, all parties to the suit except plaintiff in error “did make, execute and deliver a certain contract to the defendant Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company with reference to the operation and development of said above 112 acre tract of land for oil and gas purposes — the said defendant Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company having a lease upon said 112 acres of land, together with a lease upon 16 acres” off the South half of three certain tracts of land, which embraced said 112 acres as their North half, “said 16 acres being a strip of land 37 varas wide and 2324 varas long running the long way East and West off of the North side of the South half of the hereinbefore described three tracts of land”; that the plaintiff in error “agreed that if both tracts of land should be thrown together and be treated as constituting only one *424 tract of land consisting of 128 acres that the said Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company would,agree immediately to test and develop said 128 acres of land for oil and gas purposes”; and thereupon the parties to the suit other than the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company did enter into a contract with said Company on December 31, 1919, to that end, one of the provisions of such contract being:

“As a further consideration for the execution of this merger agreement the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company hereby agrees that within 30 days from the date of the delivery of this merger agreement to W. J. Oxford, General Attorney for the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. duly executed by all parties hereto that it will begin actual drilling of a well for oil and gas on some portion of said merged premises and will prosecute said drilling with reasonable. diligence until oil or gas is obtained in paying quantities or until such depth has' been reached as should obtain oil' or gas in the Ranger field, taking into consideration the depth of other producing wells in said section of the county. And it further agrees that it will give due protection to said merged tracts of land against all offset wells drilled on adjacent property near enough to require an offset on these merged tracts, and it further agrees that it will dedicate at least one string of tools to the development of said merged tracts and will keep the same operating until the said tract of land is developed, or until sufficient proofs have been made on said tract of land as to convince the said lessee that other portions of it are dry and unworthy of further tests.”

It was further alleged that plaintiff in error drilled a paying well on said merged tract of land which has produced three million cubic feet of gas per day since the-day of-in the year 1920; that after drilling said well plaintiff in error moved away its drilling equipment and tools and since failed and refused to further drill or test the land or to' permit any other person to drill or test the land, notwithstanding the oil and gas in the land was being drained away by numerous, specified wells within short distances of the land, all in violation of the express and implied covenants of the lease binding plaintiff in error to fully develop the oil and gas in said premises, and to protect the minerals on said premises from drainage from nearby wells on adjacent lands; that all other parties sued, save plaintiff in error, “were made parties hereto because of said defendants owning some royalty interest in said merged tract of land, but in this connection plaintiffs say that their interests and the interests of defendants are divisible and separated and these plaintiffs are not *425 suing for damages on behalf of said other defendants, but merely made said defendants parties in order that delay might not be had in the trial of this suit by the defendants claiming that they are necessary parties, and in this connection plaintiffs say that this is a suit merely for damages for and on behalf of the plaintiffs as to their particular interests in said merged tracts of land and for failure to properly develop and protect same”; that “the plaintiff Mrs. Suda Barker owns an undivided-interest in and to the minerals lying in and under said merged tracts of land; that the plaintiff W. M. Pickering is the owner of an undivided-interest in and to the minerals lying in and under said merged tracts of land; that the plaintiff M. H. Pickering is the owner of an undivided - interest in and to the minerals lying in and under said merged tracts of land, all of said interests being subject to the oil and gas lease owned and held by the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company.”

The prayer of the petition was for judgment against plaintiff in error for “the sum of One Hundred Thousand Dollars as damages because of said defendant Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company’s failure to develop and operate said premises for oil and gas purposes and for failure to prevent the drainage of plaintiffs’ land as aforesaid up to the trial of this cause; and plaintiffs further pray that upon final hearing hereof that said defendant be decreed and required to specifically perform its covenant, contract and agreement to drill offset wells upon plaintiffs’ premises; that it be required by order and decrees of this court to at once begin drilling of such wells' off-setting the well on the T. E. Davis tract; the two wells on the Gates Oil Company 25 acre tract; and one well on the Tex-Rickard Oil Co. 22^ acre tract; and one well on the W. W. Crab tract and for the drilling of such other and further wells as the Court in its discretion may adjudge that said defendant should be in equity and good conscience bound to drill in order to perform its obligations to diligently develop said tract of land, and for general and special relief at law or in equity.”

Plaintiff in error specially excepted to this petition upon the ground that it failed to state a cause of action for damages for failure to properly develop the oil and gas on the 112 acres, in that the petition “fails, with any degree of certainty to allege the extent and nature of the development required,” and in that the petition “fails to allege with any particularity, the drainage of oil and gas from said premises, or the. amount thereof and its value.”

*426

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Bluebook (online)
6 S.W.2d 1031, 117 Tex. 418, 60 A.L.R. 936, 1928 Tex. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-coal-oil-co-v-barker-tex-1928.