Union Producing Company v. Allen

297 S.W.2d 867
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 10, 1957
Docket6055
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 297 S.W.2d 867 (Union Producing Company v. Allen) 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
Union Producing Company v. Allen, 297 S.W.2d 867 (Tex. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

R. L. MURRAY, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from a judgment in the County Court of Angelina County in a suit brought by Alton Allen and his wife, appellees, against Union Producing Company, appellant, for damages to their land.

*868 The petition of appellees, plaintiffs in the trial court, in its entirety reads as follows :

“Now comes Alton and wife Flora Bell Allen, hereinafter called plaintiffs complaining of Union Producing Company, hereinafter called defendant and for cause of action and grounds for complaint would show the court as follows:

“(1)

“Plaintiffs are the owners in fee simple of the following real estate located and situated in Angelina County, Texas; all that certain tract or parcel of land described in that certain deed recorded in Book 151, page 606 of the Deed Records of Angelina County, Texas.

“(2)

“Heretofore, the deefndant drilled a gas well on said property and agreed before the commencement of said drilling, to pay to plaintiffs all damages caused by the drilling operation to the surface of their land, as well as for the loss of the use of said land. Defendant, as aforesaid, drilled a- gas well on a portion of the above tract' and in doing so caused surface damages and excluded plaintiffs from the use and benefit of approximately five (5) acres thereof. That plaintiffs’ damages are in the sum and amount of $950.00 for which they come now and sue.

“Wherefore, premises considered, plaintiffs pray that defendant be cited to appear and answer herein and that upon a trial hereof, they recover the sum and amount of $950.00 from the defendant, for cost of court and relief generally.”

Appellant answered by special exceptions, and general denial. The special exceptions were overruled. On appeal complaint is made of the court’s action in overruling only exception number one, which was as follows:

“Defendant specially excepts to that portion of Paragraph 2 of plaintiffs’ original petition wherein it is alleged that defendant ‘drilled a gas well on said property and agreed before the commencement of said drilling, to pay to plaintiffs all damages caused by the drilling operation on the surface of their land, as well as for the loss of the use of their land’ and says that the same is insufficient and should be stricken, for the following reasons:

“(a) The allegation does not specify whether the alleged ‘agreement’ is written or oral, and thereby does not give defendant fair notice of the character of agreement alleged or of the proof it will be required to meet. If written, plaintiffs should be required to attach a copy thereof to their corrective pleading, if any be filed.

“(b) The allegation does not identify the parties with whom the alleged agreement is said to have been made; defendant, being a corporation, is entitled to know in particularity the name, identity and authority of the person or persons alleged to have ‘agreed’ on its behalf.

“(c) The allegation is too general, vague and indefinite to accord defendant fair notice of the legal basis of the claim urged by plaintiffs, or of the date of the alleged ‘agreement’ or of the nature of the alleged ‘agreement’, whether formal or informal, written or oral, or of any breach thereof.”

The cause proceeded to trial before the court without a jury. The appellant had made request for a jury and paid the jury fee but not within ten days before the case was set for trial and the court refused the jury request.

The evidence on the trial showed that the appellees bought their land in May, 1950. The land was subject to an oil and gas and mineral lease held by the appellant Union Producing Company, dated May 14, 1948, filed for record in June, 1948. In the latter part of 1954 appellee Allen had a conversation with one David Teel, the Assistant Production Control Supervisor of the appellant. He informed Allen that the company was about to drill a well on the Allen *869 property under its lease; that they wanted to fence off two or three acres so the cows would not bother them and that if Allen would make no objections the company' would put up the fence, and when they got through drilling the well they would pay him for all damages for everything they did and would give him the fence. The well was drilled, gas production was achieved and Allen’s land was left in a worse condition than it was before the well was drilled. Allen’s crop of lespedeza grass and clover patch were destroyed along with some ber-muda grass growing with it. This was not a natural pasture grass, but was a planted and cultivated grass for grazing. Gravel was placed on some parts of the land which prevented grass from growing back. Allen testified that the land was producing a crop of 200 or 300 bales per acre and that the hay was worth $1.25 per bale. He testified to various other elements of damage to the land itself as pasture land. At the request of the appellant the trial court filed findings of fact and conclusions of law, including the ownership of the land in question, the lease in favor of the appellant, which contained a provision that “lessee shall pay all damages caused by lessee’s operations hereunder to growing crops or timber on said land”; and further that Teel was a supervisor and agent of the appellant, that Teel proposed to appellees that if they would not raise any protest concerning the proposed drilling the company would pay all surface damages caused by drilling operations; that Teel had the authority, “actual or apparent, expressed, or implied”, to make such agreement and bind the appellant; that the appellant drilled a gas well causing damages to the surface of the land and to the improved pasture, which was found to be a growing crop. The court found that damages to the land were in the sum of $950, and the damages to the growing crops on the land were in the sum of $950. The court concluded, as a matter of law, that the agreement made by Allen with Teel was a binding contract supported by consideration; that Teel was an agent of the appellant and had the authority to bind the appellant; that the appellant is bound by the terms of the oil and gas lease which provided that it should pay all damages caused by its operations to growing crops; that drilling operations caused damages to growing crops having a market value of $950. The court further concluded that the appellant owes appellees $950.

Judgment was entered for the appellees against the appellant for the sum of $950. The appellant has duly perfected its appeal to this court for review of the judgment.

Appellant excepted to-the findings of fact and conclusions of law, and also requested the court to find additional findings of fact and conclusions of law. It thereby requested findings that the damage or injury to the land was a temporary damage or in the alternative that the damage was a permanent damage. It also requested the court to find that the difference in the market value of the 5-acre tract prior to the commencement of the drilling operations and immediately thereafter was the sum of $150, and further find that the difference in value of the whole 66.8-acre tract immediately prior to the drilling and immediately following the drilling was $150; that the reasonable rental value of the 5-.acre tract is $1 per acre per year and for the 66.8-acre tract was also $1 per acre.

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Bluebook (online)
297 S.W.2d 867, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-producing-company-v-allen-texapp-1957.