Union Gas Oil Company v. Fyffe

294 S.W. 176, 219 Ky. 640, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 419
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedMay 3, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 176 (Union Gas Oil Company v. Fyffe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Union Gas Oil Company v. Fyffe, 294 S.W. 176, 219 Ky. 640, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 419 (Ky. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion op the Court by

Judge Logan

— Affirming.

These two appeals are heard together, hut will be disposed of in the same opinion separately.

The appellee, Fyffe, filed his petition in the Johnson circuit court, in which he alleged the ownership of two tracts of land in said county. The two tracts are not contiguous. It is alleged that one of the tracts contains 125 acres, and that the other contains 15 acres. In 1916 he executed an oil and gas lease on these two tracts of land to one A. 'C. Albin, by the terms of which the said Albin was given the exclusive right to explore for oil and gas on said property, and to operate the property for the purpose of taking out oil and gas, if any should be discovered. By the terms of the lease, as it is alleged in the petition, the lessor was to have one-eighth of all the oil produced and saved from the premises, and, if gas was found in sufficient quantities to transport, the lessee agreed to pay the lessor $100.00- annually for each gas well from which gas was transported. The lessee was to commence a well within twelve months from the date of the lease, or to pay at the rate of 10 cents per acre for each year drilling was delayed. It is alleged that in 1917 the said Albin transferred and assigned the said lease to the appellant, Union Gas & Oil -Company, and that the appellant accepted said lease, and paid the rentals thereon until about the year 1920, when a well was drilled on the larger boundary described in the petition, and gas was discovered in paying quantities; that the appellant thereupon paid the plaintiff $100.00 for said one well, but refused to further develop the property until in the latter part of July, 1922. The appellee served upon appellant a notice demanding that it proceed to further develop the property by drilling additional wells until the farm was fully developed. The appellee, so it is alleged, gave heed to the notice, and soon thereafter drilled another well on the larger tract, which produced gas in paying quantities, but refused to drill more than one additional well. 'The appellee again gave notice in October, 1922, which he had served upon *642 the appellant requiring it to drill additional wells, and to continue drilling operations until the property: was fully developed. But the apppellant failed and refused to give heed to his second notice, and two wells only have been drilled on the larger tract described in the petition, and no well has been drilled on the smaller tract. It is further alleged that there is an implied covenant growing out of the lease contract that the appellant would drill and operate on said two tracts of land such number of wells as would ordinarily be required for the production of all the gas and oil contained therein and thereunder, and such a number of wells as would afford ordinary production to the limits of said land so as to prevent damage to appellee by reason of drainage through wells on adjacent lands. It is then alleged in the petition that there are many active and flowing gas wells not on the lands of appellee, but in the vicinity, which are withdrawing the gas from the field, and to a large extent draining the natural gas contained in appellee’s land; that gas is of a fugitive, fugacious, and fleeting nature, and does not remain in one place; and that, unless said gas is withdrawn, it will be entirely lost through adjoining lands which are under operation by the appellant.

It is alleged in the petition that the appellee had been damaged by reason of appellant’s refusal to drill at least one well on the 15-acre tract, and five additional wells on the 125-acre tract, and that these wells should have been drilled five years before the institution of the suit, and that, by reason of the failure of the appellant to drill the one well on the smaller tract, appellee had been damaged $500.00, and, by reason of its failure to drill five additional wells on the larger tract, he had been damaged $2,000.00, and he prays for a recovery against the appellee in the sum of $2,500.00.

It will be seen that the basis of the action is that the property has not been fully developed as contemplated by the terms of the lease, and that appellee has not received the compensation which he would have received if additional wells had been drilled, and they had produced gas in paying quantities.

The answer controverts the material allegations in the petition. It alleges that, instead of their being 125 acres in the larger tract described in the lease, actual ■survey had shown that the tract contained only 81.8 acres, and that, instead of their being 15 acres in the smaller tract, there were only 12.2, as shown by actual *643 survey. It is denied that the lease has not been fully developed, and it is affirmatively pleaded that the two producing wells drilled on the larger tract were a sufficient number of wells to fully develop the property and produce all the marketable gás contained in and under the land, and that the said two wells were sufficient to prevent damage to the plaintiff by reason of draináge through wells on adjacent lands. The answer then alleged that the first well drilled on appellee’s land is within 220 feet of the nearest well in operation on the Lyon tract adjacent, and that the second well drilled on appellee’s land is within 560 feet of the next nearest well on adjacent lands which is on the Young lease. All other wells, as is alleged in the answer, are further away from the lands described in the lease.

In a second paragraph of the answer appellant alleged that one gas well would produce all the marketable gas from at least 33 1/3 acres, or that three wells would fully develop 100 acres, and, admitting that the two wells which had been drilled on the property of appellee did not fully develop the lands, it is alleged appellant had offered to pay appellee at the rate of $4.00' per acre on the excess of 44 acres, or $176.00 per annum, but the appellee refused to accept this offer. The answer continues its affirmative allegations by stating that in that gas field it was the custom or policy not to drill more than one well for each 25 acres.

The appellee by reply denied all of the affirmative allegations in the answer, and the issues were thus completed.

Thei'e is such a difference between the usual leases relating, to the production of oil and the usual leases relating to the production of gas that it is doubtful whether the decisions of this court relating to the royalty in oil have any bearing on the compensation provided for in the ordinary lease relating to gas wells'. When oil is found in paying quantities, the lessor receives his compensation from the proceeds of the sale of the oil; that is, he is usually entitled to one-eighth of the gross income from the sale of the oil, and naturally the amount of oil produced determines his compensation. This is not so in relation to the production of gas where the compensation of the lessor depends on the number of producing gas wells on the property. The lessor has no interest in the gas, and'his compensation is the same whether much or little gas is produced as long as the well produces gas *644 in paying quantities. It may be there is no good reason for the distinction, but it exists nevertheless, and has become well recognized and established. There is a further difference in that gas and oil are different one from the other in their nature, or at least such is supposed, to be true.

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Related

LAFITTE COMPANY v. United Fuel Gas Company
177 F. Supp. 52 (E.D. Kentucky, 1959)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 176, 219 Ky. 640, 1927 Ky. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-gas-oil-company-v-fyffe-kyctapphigh-1927.