Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Stuard

7 S.W.2d 878
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 3, 1928
DocketNo. 341. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 7 S.W.2d 878 (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, 7 S.W.2d 878 (Tex. Ct. App. 1928).

Opinions

This is the second appeal of this case. A brief statement only of the nature of the case will be given. For a more detailed statement reference may be had to the opinion on the former appeal recorded as Texas Pacific Coal Oil Co. v. Stuard et ux. (Tex.Civ.App.) 269 S.W. 482. On the trial after reversal judgment was rendered for appellees against appellant for $80,000 based upon three items of damages found by the jury as follows: $50,000 for the failure of appellant to drill and complete a well in a workmanlike and proper manner upon appellees' premises; $25,000 for nondevelopment of such premises; and $5,000 for the failure of appellant properly to complete well No. 1 drilled on said premises and thereafter to operate same in a careful and proper manner. The only material difference between the pleadings of the appellees upon which they went to trial the last time and those under consideration upon the former appeal, of which we shall have occasion to take notice in this opinion, is the additional allegation of an express oral contract between appellees and the appellant, acting through its then vice president and general manager, W. K. Gordon, to the effect that within 60 days from the execution of said lease the appellant would begin actual drilling and thereafter drill and complete a well upon said premises through the "McClesky sand," or to paying production at a lesser depth, and develop such premises after the completion of said first well with due diligence. This express oral contract is alleged to have been made contemporaneously with and in addition to the contract expressed in the lease, and as a further consideration for the signing of said lease by the appellees.

The lease contains the following provision with reference to drilling:

"The Texas Pacific Coal Company agree to begin operations to drill a well on the land herein leased within sixty days from this date and failure to begin operations will act as a forfeit on this lease contract."

On the former appeal the record was in such condition as that appellant's pleas of limitation could not be considered by the court. As the record comes to us on this appeal, it contains a proper pleading, setting up the two and four year statutes of limitation with objections to the court's rendering judgment on each of the items of damages, on the ground that same were barred by the two and by the four year statutes of limitation. All of the pleadings of the appellees, together with their file marks, were introduced in evidence and are contained in the statement of facts. The question of limitation is therefore properly before us to be considered along with the other assignments of error.

On the former appeal the only judgment rendered against appellant was one for $30,000 for its failure to drill and complete in workmanlike and proper manner a well on plaintiffs' premises. The Fort Worth court reversed that judgment. In appellees' application for writ of error they alleged as grounds of jurisdiction in the Supreme Court that such decision was in conflict with a prior decision of the same Court of Civil Appeals in the case of Henry Oil Co. v. Head, 163 S.W. 311, and also that it was in conflict with the decision of the Court of Civil Appeals for the Fifth District in the case of Covington Oil Co. v. Jones, 244 S.W. 287. By dismissing the writ for want of jurisdiction, the Supreme Court determined that there was no conflict. We are clearly bound by that determination, and it is our duty to dispose of this appeal in the light thereof. Such holding by the Supreme Court must necessarily have been based upon one of two grounds: First, that under the provisions of the lease there was no obligation resting upon appellant to drill and complete a well; or, second, that the record disclosed that appellant had, in fact, drilled a well in accordance with its obligations. Otherwise, the decision on the former appeal would have been in conflict with the decisions in the cases cited, for it is unquestionably the settled rule, as announced in those cases, that if one obligates himself to drill a well for oil and gas to a certain depth and fails to do so, recovery may be had for the cost of drilling such well, and he will not be heard to say, in defense of an action for his failure so to drill, that he in good faith believed that such operations would not have resulted in the discovery of oil and gas in paying quantities.

That portion of the judgment in the instant appeal based upon the failure of the appellant to drill and complete a well on the premises must rest, if at all, upon the additional oral contract pleaded in appellees' second amended original petition, as above described. This item of $50,000 for failure to drill a well cannot stand. It is barred by limitation. If the obligation rested solely or in part in the parol agreement, the two-year statute would govern, and more than two years elapsed after abandoning work on well No. 2 before the filing of the original petition herein. The fact that, within the two-year period to the filing of the original petition, appellant caused some work to be done on well No. 1 in the hope of bettering its condition, could not operate to prevent the running of the statute, because the evidence discloses an agreement not to drill No. 1 *Page 881 further after the accident, which will hereafter be mentioned, happened thereto, and efforts thereafter made by appellant to increase the production of well No. 1 could not be construed as efforts to drill a well to the deeper sand below, known, as the "McClesky sand."

If the cause of action for this element of damages was not barred prior to the filing of the original petition, it was unquestionably barred before the filing of the second amended original petition in 1926. Under the holding upon the former appeal above referred to, this cause of action for the breach of a drilling contract was not in the case prior to the filing of this last petition, and limitation would run upon it until such time.

There is another reason why this item cannot stand. The sole purpose of actual damages is compensation. Appellees are not entitled to damages by virtue of appellant's breach of the contract greater in amount than the money they would have received had it not been breached. Upon their pleadings and evidence they were awarded $25,000 damages in this case as the total amount of royalties which would have accrued to them had appellant fully developed their premises by drilling. Clearly they are not entitled to this amount of damages and the additional amount of $50.000 which it would have cost appellant to drill one well. The cost of drilling a well is the correct measure of damages for the breach of a drilling contract; but since the plaintiffs saw fit to plead and prove that the total amount which they would have realized, had said well been drilled and the premises thereafter been developed, was less than the cost of drilling, then by such allegations and proof they made such amount the measure of their damages. If the facts pleaded and proved by the plaintiff show that either of two measures of damages will fully compensate him for his loss, then that measure must be adopted which is less expensive to the defendant. Otherwise, the defendant would be penalized in the name of actual damages. Certainly the plaintiff in such a situation would not be allowed to add the two measures and recover for both, as was done in this case.

The item of $5,000 for destroying well No. 1 cannot stand. The facts disclose that well No. 1 was drilled to a depth of approximately 3,200 feet, at which depth a large volume of gas was encountered. To prevent this gas from going to waste appellant caused a control head to be placed upon and fastened to the top of the inside string of casing.

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Bluebook (online)
7 S.W.2d 878, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-pacific-coal-oil-co-v-stuard-texapp-1928.