Union Gas & Oil Co. v. Diles

254 S.W. 205, 200 Ky. 188, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedJune 22, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 254 S.W. 205 (Union Gas & Oil Co. v. Diles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Gas & Oil Co. v. Diles, 254 S.W. 205, 200 Ky. 188, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 31 (Ky. Ct. App. 1923).

Opinion

Opinion of the Court by

Turner, Commissioner

Reversing.

In May, 1916, appellee executed an oil and gas lease on his farm in Johnson county to A. C. Albín, which lease was thereafter in 1917 assigned to appellant.

In April, 1921, appellee, acting under the provisions of section 4 of chapter 24 of the Acts of the General Assembly of 1920 (p. 110), which act became effective March 18, 1920, gave a written notice to appellant in which he recited that a producing oil well had been brought in on "the adjoining farm of John Rose and within two hundred feet of appellee’s line and that oil had been marketed and sold from said premises, and requiring appellant to drill on his, appellee’s, farm an offset to that well under the provisions of the act referred to.

Appellant having failed to drill such offset well, this equitable action by appellee was filed in September, 1921, seeking a cancellation of the lease on that account, and no •other.

Several issues of fact were made in the pleadings, and the chancellor upon, submission entered a judgment can[190]*190celling the lease, and from that judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

In view of our conclusion that the legislative act in question, in'so far as it attempts to impose upon the lessee an added duty not imposed by law at the time the lease-contract was entered into, and requires the drilling, after notice, of such offset wells therein described, is an-impairment of the obligations of the contract in contravention of the provisions of both the state and Federal Constitutions, we deem it unnecessary to consider any other question.

The lease contains no provision whatever requiring the lessee to protect the leased premises from drainage of oil or gas by reason of wells on adjacent or nearby property; but there is an implied obligation, read into such contracts, upon the lessee to protect such premises from drainage by wells drilled on adjoining lands. That implied obligation, however, is a general one, and from its-nature only imposes upon the lessee the general duty to-protect the leased property from such drainage, but imposes upon him no specific duty as to the drilling of offset wells where the wells on adjoining property are-within any named distance of the property line, nor does-it require of him the drilling of such offset well with diligence, or provide that his failure so to do shall automatically bring about the cancellation of his lease.

Not only so, where there are general provisions in an oil and gas lease imposing the duty upon the lessee to protect the property from drainage by wells on adjacent lands, or when such general duty is imposed upon him by implication of law, it is within the sound judgment of the-lessee to determine when and where the offset wells shall be drilled, or whether they shall be drilled at all. As said by the Circuit Court of Appeals in the case of Kellar v.. Craig, 126 Fed. 630:

“In all leases for oil and gas purposes, a covenant to-protect the ‘lines’ of and ‘well develop’ the land leased is. implied by law, and so it follows that the general words: relating to those matters, inserted in the lease under consideration, really add nothing to the obligations assumed by the lessee concerning such work. In such leases,' where general covenants of that character are found or are implied, the lessee or his assigns are permitted to determine the character of work to be done, and such ascer[191]*191tainment by him or them, in tbe absence of fraud, disposes of tbe question.”

Tbe legislative enactment in this state, by its terms in the second section thereof, is made to apply to “existing or future contracts and leases for oil and gas rights,” -and the fourth section thereof, imposing the duty upon lessees to drill offset wells, is as follows, to-wit:

“That in the event of oil or gas being discovered in paying quantities on an adjoining leasehold and the products therefrom being taken out of the ground and marketed and said well is within two hundred feet of another lessor’s property line, then within three months after written notice has been given lessee to the effect that such oil or gas has commenced to be transported off and marketed from the said adjoining premises the lessee or lessees of the land lying within two hundred feet of said wells shall begin to drill an offset well to each of such .wells so located, provided said offset wells to be drilled are not less than five hundred feet of each other, and upon his failure to so commence said offset well and complete .same with diligence the said contract and lease shall automatically expire and become null and void. Provided this shall not apply to leases that are being operated, or on which wells are being drilled. ’ ’

It appears, then, that in 1916 when this lease was executed only the general duty implied by law was imposed upon the lessee to protect the leased property from drainage by wells on adjacent property, and that same law which imposed that general duty on him clothed him, in the absence of fraud, with the discretion to determine when and how and to what extent, if any, such protection was necessary.

It would appear to need no argument to show that the act in question imposes upon the lessee duties and obligations different from and greater than those implied by law at the time the parties entered into the contract. The implied duty imposed in the first place did not require him to look to the distance the well on the adjoining property might be from the property line, nor did it require of him •diligent completion of an offset well upon pain of forfeiture of his lease. Not only so,- that implied obligation was •one which might be carried out by him in the exercise of a .•sound judgment if he acted in good faith, while the statute enacted in 1920 undertook to read into his lease contract •<an absolute duty upon his part to drill offset wells when [192]*192the conditions stated in the quoted section existed, irrespective of the exercise of his sound judgment and discretion, and without regard to fraud, upon penalty of having his' lease declared null and void.

To impair the obligation of a contract within the meaning of the 'Constitution it is only necessary to impose upon one of the parties a higher or greater duty than the one imposed upon him by the instrument itself, or by the implied conditions which the law will read into it. As said in Edwards v. Kearsey, 96 U. S. 595:

“The lexical definition of ‘impair’ is to make worse, to diminish in quality, value, excellence or strength, to lessen in power, to weaken, to enfeeble, to deteriorate. . . And the test does not depend upon the extent of the change which the law effects; any deviation in its terms by which conditions not expressed in the cpntract are imposed, or those stipulated in the contract are dispensed with, renders the act unconstitutional as impairing its obligation. ’ ’

When the contract was entered into the general implied obligation rested upon the lessee to protect the leased property from drainage, and he had the right to exercise his judgment and discretion in good faith in determining when and how and to what extent such protection should be given, if at all. The statute in question, however, not only deprives him of the right which he had under the original contract to exercise his judgment and.

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Bluebook (online)
254 S.W. 205, 200 Ky. 188, 1923 Ky. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-gas-oil-co-v-diles-kyctapp-1923.