United Fuel Gas Co. v. Cabot

123 S.E. 922, 96 W. Va. 387, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 109
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 123 S.E. 922 (United Fuel Gas Co. v. Cabot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Fuel Gas Co. v. Cabot, 123 S.E. 922, 96 W. Va. 387, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 109 (W. Va. 1924).

Opinion

Lively, Judge :

Having overruled a demurrer to the bill, the lower court, upon joint application, has certified its ruling for review.

The bill is for the purpose of enjoining defendant Cabot from taking oil or gas out of a tract of 45 acres more or less leased to him by W. S. Simmons in 1920; cancelling the said lease and removing it as a cloud on plaintiff’s lease on the same tract, and for an accounting of the gas already extracted therefrom under defendant’s lease. ■ The litigation *389 arises by virtue of two leases each executed by W. S. Simmons and wife, the first dated the 17th. day of August, 1905, to Joseph H. McDermott; and the other to Cabot dated the 16th day of June, 1920, both being duly recorded. Plaintiff, as successor in title to McDermott, claims that its lease was intended to and does cover the 45 acres tract in dispute; while defendants assert that it does not as shown by the lease itself exhibited with the bill. Prom the allegations of the bill it appears that W. S. Simmons, prior .to 1905, owned approximately 1869% acres of land in Roane county lying on the waters of Henrys Pork, acquired by him from different parties by, sixteen separate deeds, the different tracts lying-together and all forming one boundary, the acreage as shown by .the deeds being approximately 1869% acres; from this acreage he had sold and conveyed away prior to August 17, 1905, four parcels .aggregating 282% acres, leaving a residue of 1587 acres. In 1900 he executed ah oil and gas lease to the South Penn Oil Company, embracing 725 acres, described in the bill, and lying to the northeast of his other lands. On the 17th of August, 1905, he and his wife executed the lease to McDermott now owned by plaintiff, describing the land as situated in Smithfield district of Roane county, West Virginia, on the waters of Henrys Pork “bounded substantially as follows:

On the North by lands of J. B. Stone,
On the East by lands of W. S. Simmons,
On the South by lands of D. J. McGlothlin,
On'the West by lands of Boss Hudki-ns,

Containing 1223 acres, more or less, and being same land conveyed to the first parties by J. M. Simmons by deed, bearing date -1877, reserving however, therefrom 200 feet around the buildings on which no well shall be drilled by either party except by mutual consent.”

The lessee was to. complete a well within nine months or pay ran annual rental in quarterly payments of $305.75 each; in case oil was found one-eighth went to the lessor, and in case gas was found $100 per well per year was to be paid to the lessor while, the gas was marketed and used; and upon completion of a well the rentals ceased for the remainder of *390 the term, which wias ten years and as long thereafter as oil and gas or either of them was produced.

The bill charges that in 1910 McDermott sunk a well and obtained gas in paying quantities and that all the obligations imposed by the lease have from its inception been carried out by the lessee and his successors and assigns. The bill charges that the McDermott lease executed by Simmons and his wife was upon a printed form and there was not sufficient space therein for inserting and reciting the eleven separate deeds under which Simmons had acquired the land, so that the draftsman simply filled in an incomplete and incorrect reference only to one of the deeds, that is in the clause which says: ‘ ‘ and being same land conveyed to the first parties by J. M. Simmons by deed, bearing date- 1877”, but the bill charges that it was the intention of the lessor to embrace and include in the lease the- entire acreage owned by Simmons, less the 725 acres previously leased to the South Penn Oil Company; and "to include a tract of 175% acres acquired by W. S. Simmons from C. E. Monroe and others by deed dated January 6, 1897, excepting 123% acres thereof which had been previously sold, leaving at that time in the Monroe tract approximately 51% acres; and that this 51% acres, which, is the tract in controversy, was intended to be and was included in the McDermott lease, although the deed recited that the land leased was that which had been, deeded to lessor in 1877 by J. M. S'immons. A map showing the different tracts and the many and various contiguous land owners is by stipulation made a part of the record, and if it could be reproduced here it would add much to the clarity of this opinion. The bill further charges that W. S. Simmons, on June 16, 1920, leased to defendant Cabot a parcel of land described as 45 acres, for oil and gas purposes, which acreage is a part of the Monroe tract, deeded to Simmons on January 6, 1897, and the Cabot lease is exhibited with the bill. It appears that Cabot took possession of the 45 acres and commenced drilling upon it in April, 1922; and on the 29th of that month plaintiff notified Cabot that it claimed the 45 acres as covered by its 'lease of August 17, 1905, to McDermott, and that it had the exclusive right to operate on the land. Whereupon, Cabot temporarily *391 ceased drilling; but a short time afterwards continued to drill, obtaining a productive gas well, and since that time has been taking the gas therefrom. The various deeds to W. S. Simmons made to him prior to 1905 are exhibited with the bill; and it appeared that the deed from J. M. Simmons is darted December 20, 1878, and conveys to him a tract of 260 acres, more or less, on which tract McDermott sank the well in 1910. The bill was filed at November rules, 1922, but no injunction was asked for or awarded. The demurrer was filed May 21, 1923, and overruled the 8th day of the following December.

There are many grounds variously stated in the demurrer on which it is insisted 'that the bill is insufficient. The substance of the demurrer may properly come under three' points: (1) that equity does not have jurisdiction; there being a plain, adequate and complete remedy at law by ejectment; (2) that while the bill charges that the McDer-mott lease was intended to include and does include the 45 acres in controversy, yet the lease itself exhibited with the bill shows that it does not; that the 45 acres tract is not and never was a part of the land deeded from J. M. Simmons to W. S. Simmons in 1877 or 1878, but that it was a part of the C. E. Monroe tract which was deeded to W. S. Simmons by Monroe and others in 1897; that the McDermott lease as to the territory included is vague and uncertain except as to the land deeded to W. S. Simjmons by J. M. Simmons, as set out in the lease; (3) that even'if equity has jurisdiction and the McDermott lease can possibly be construed as to include the 45 acres in controversy the plaintiff is barred by laches in standing by and permitting Cabot to spend money in drilling on the-45 acres tract and then after he had found a producing well to institute this-suit to take it from him.

Does equity have jurisdiction? Where there is a senior and junior! oil and gas lease upon the same land from the same owner equity has jurisdiction at the instance of the one in possession, to remove and cancel one as a cloud upon the title of the other, to preserve the status pending the litigation, and to settle the equitable rights between the parties. Reserve Gas Co. v. Carbon Black Mfg. Co., 72 W. Va.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 S.E. 922, 96 W. Va. 387, 1924 W. Va. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-fuel-gas-co-v-cabot-wva-1924.