Texas & Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Stuard

269 S.W. 482
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 1, 1924
DocketNo. 10636. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 269 S.W. 482 (Texas & Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Stuard) 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
Texas & Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Stuard, 269 S.W. 482 (Tex. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

BUCK, J.

By their amended petition, filed May 81, 1922, plaintiffs, R. C. Stuard and wife, C. U. Stuard, alleged: That on October 26, 1917; they executed and delivered to appellants an oil and gas lease on 56 acres of land, out of the Blundell survey in Eastland county, for a consideration of $456 in cash and that drilling preparations be begun on said premises within 60 days from the date- of the lease. That in connection with and contemporaneous with the making of said lease, and as a further consideration for the signing of the same, W. K. Gordon, acting for appellant, verbally agreed to drill and complete an oil well upon said premises and to develop same after completion of said oil well with due diligence until said land proved to be unproductive of either oil or gas. That it was contemplated by both parties to said contract that any and all of said well or wells drilled on said premises should be completed in a workmanlike manner and should be kept in repair in proper and diligent manner so long as oil or gas, or either, should be produced in paying quantities. That appellants did begin drilling within 60 days, and the well, known as “Stuard No. 1,” was drilled to the oil and gas-bearing stratum, and a “tremendous volume of gas •was encountered, and considerable oil, the exact amount of which plaintiffs are unable to say, but proof of which will be offered on the trial hereof. That the drillers and contractor on said well had same in good shape and condition when the gas and oil was encountered, and would have completed said well in good shape and made same an excellent producer of oil and of gas, which would have been very beneficial to plaintiffs, they receiving 10 per cent, of the value of the gas and one-eighth of the oil produced from said premises, under the terms of the lease. That the agent and manager of the. defendant caused a control head to be placed upon the six-inch casing, through which said well was producing oil and gas, and ordered same to be closed in. The drillers and contractor protested to this and told said manager and agent of the defendant that to do so with a tremendous gas pressure .would in all likelihood cause the easing to be raised out of the well and ruin the same. That notwithstanding such protests, defendant’s agent and manager closed and caused to be closed the control head on said casing, and the tremendous pressure of the gas immediately lifted said string of casing out of the hole and up through the top of the derrick some 100 feet or more, and the control head finally was blown off and the pressure relieved, and the casing fell and dropped back into the hole and collapsed and ruined the well for oil and gas purposes. That the proximate cause of such collapse and ruin of said well was the negligence and mismanagement of *483 the defendant, its agents and employees. That in drilling down to the oil and gas strata salt water in large quantities was encountered and was necessary to be eased off, and which was eased off by the defendant; and that when said pipe was raised by the gas pressure as above described, salt water was permitted to come into said' oil and gas well and was permitted to remain therein, and the defendant failed and refused to keep said well in repair, and same was ruined by the negligence and mismanagement of the defendant, its agents and employees.”

Plaintiffs further pleaded that the defend-' ant thereafter drilled another well on plaintiffs’ premises and “struck much oil, and while setting, or attempting to set, the six-inch casing in said well, through the negligence and carelessness of the. defendant, its agents and employees, said casing was dropped for a considerable distance, collapsing same, and jamming said well and ruining same for oil purposes; that had said second well been properly handled same would have produced oil in paying quantities to these plaintiffs’ great benefit.” They further alleged that the defendant was under obligation to develop said premises with diligence for oil and gas purposes, but that it failed and refused to drill any other or further well to plaintiffs’ great damage. That defendant, though often requested by plaintiffs, refused and failed to drill and complete a well in a workmanlike manner, and thereafter to diligently develop said premises until fully proven. It was further alleged that the land of plaintiffs under lease was proven territory. Allegations of further damages, by reason of slush pits and other excavations alleged to have been left on said land, piles of old wire, casing, etc., and by reason of salt water being allowed to run over said land, were made.

The defendant answered by way of a general demurrer, a number of special exceptions, a plea of not guilty, and further alleged that it had within the proper time drilled two wells in a workmanlike manner and “produced considerable oil from well No. 1 and paid to plaintiffs all of the royalties due on said production; that oil in paying quantities was not discovered or produced from either of said wells; and that in the opinion of the defendant said land was, and is, unworthy of further development for oil and gas. purposes; that all of the rentals provided for in said lease were timely paid by defendant to plaintiffs and accepted by them.” Defendant further pleaded the two and four years’ statutes of limitation.

A trial was had before a jury and certain special issues submitted, which were answered by the jury as follows:

(1)That the defendant, through its agent, W. K. Gordon, agreed to drill and complete a well for oil and gas purposes on plaintiffs’ premises at the time of entering into the written lease contract with the plaintiffs.

(2) That it was-contemplated by both plaintiffs and defendants that any well or wells drilled upon plaintiffs’ premises should be completed in a workmanlike and proper manner.

(3) That the defendant did not complete a well for oil or gas purposes as contemplated by the parties at the time of the execution of the lease.

(4) That the defendant did not complete a well on plaintiffs’ premises in a proper and workmanlike manner as contemplated by their written contract.

(5) That the failure of defendant to complete a well upon plaintiffs’ premises was due to negligence.

(6) That plaintiffs have been damaged by such failure of defendant to drill and complete in a workmanlike and proper manner a well Upon plaintiffs’ premises.

(7) That $30,000 would reasonably compensate the plaintiffs for the damages suffered.

(8) That if either of the wells drilled on plaintiffs’ land had been drilled to a deeper sand by the defendant and completed in a proper and workmanlike manner same would have produced enough oil and gas to hav6 amounted in value to the cost of drilling, equipping, and operating the same, and would have' yielded in addition thereto a reasonable profit on the amount so expended.

(9) That if a third well had been drilled on the land leased by plaintiffs to defendant to the required depth, as contemplated under the contract between plaintiffs and defendant, such well would have produced enough oil and gas to have amounted in value to the cost of drilling, equipping and operating the same, and would have yielded in addition thereto a reasonable profit on the, amount so expended.

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Bluebook (online)
269 S.W. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-coal-oil-co-v-stuard-texapp-1924.