United North & South Oil Co. v. Mercer

286 S.W. 652, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 725
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMay 19, 1926
DocketNo. 6981.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 286 S.W. 652 (United North & South Oil Co. v. Mercer) 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
United North & South Oil Co. v. Mercer, 286 S.W. 652, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 725 (Tex. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

BLAIR, J.

Appellee- Mercer executed to appellant, United North & South Oil Company, Ine., an oil- and gas lease covering 40 acres of land! in Caldwell county, with the usual grant “for the sole and only purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas and laying pipe lines and building tanks, power stations, and structures thereon to produce, save, store, and take care of such products.” He also executed a “pipe line permit,”, which authorized appellant to lay pipe lines and construct telephone lines in and upon the land. After the execution of these instruments, appellant developed the land for oil, bringing in eight producing wells, . and, as provided for in the lease contract, constructed necessary storage tanks, pipe lines-, pumps, flow lines, engines, power plants, telephone lines, pull lines, earthen storage tanks, ditches, and bleeding tanks to produce, save, store, conserve, transport, treat, and market the oil. Thereafter, over the protest of appellant, appellees constructed an earthen dump or dam across a natural depression on the 40-aere tract, for the purpose of maintaining and operating what is known as a “pick-up station,” to catch and reduce to possession abandoned or fugitive oil'escaping from oil 1 wells on two tracts of land lying immediately northeast and east of the 40-acre tract, but in which tracts and the oil production thereon neither appellant nor appellees had any interest. Rainwaters and waters and oil escaping from the wells on the adjoining tracts follow the natural drainage of the land to the public road which separates them from the 40-acre tract; thence down the drainage ditches of the road to a point in the natural depression on the 40-acre tract; thence down the depression across the 40-acre tract to the lower side into appellees’ pick-up station. Rainwaters have followed this course since 1887 or longer- Over the artifi *653 cial ditches along the public road neither appellant nor appellees hare any right of control. The depression across the 40-aere tract is by nature slightly lower than the surrounding land, and is from 120 to 140 feet in width, running across the tract, and was before the commencement of oil operations in that section of the country dry, except in wet weather. The waters and oils escaping from the wells on the adjoining tracts now furnished a considerable volume which must flow over this natural depression. Eive of appellant’s wells are on the north side of the depi*es»ion and three on the south side; but no waste or fugitive oil from them ever reached appellees’ pick-up station. Appellant was constructing on the north side of the depression a pick-up station with laterals and a ditch running across the 40 acres to it. This ditch parallels the natural depression, and is only a few feet to the north of it. The waste oil from the three wells on the south side of the depression has been piped across it to tanks on the north side. Appellant commenced to construct a ditch, going beyond the boundary of its 40-acre lease, so as to intercept the flow of water and waste oil from the adjoining tracts northeast and east at a point on the public road ditch only a few feet above where said water and oil naturally left the road ditch and flowed down the depression to appellees’ pick-up ■station. Appellee Eelix Hershap, who was employed by appellee Mercer as caretaker of his pick-up station, interfered with appellant’s workmen and teams, getting in front of them and refusing to permit them to construct this intercepting ditch, which would have diverted the .water and oil collected in the road ditches from other lands in no way connected with the lease of appellant, and caused them to flow through appellant’s artificial ditch and into its pick-up station, thereby changing the course of same from the natural channel and flow.

Appellant filed its application for an injunction against appellees Mercer and Her-shap, seeking to enjoin and restrain them (a) from interfering with its construction of the intercepting ditch, and (b) from maintaining and operating the pick-up station across the depression on the leased premises. The grounds alleged for the first order were that the waters and oils flowing down the depression covered and surrounded a large portion of appellant’s metal pipes and telephone poles, injuring them by rust and decay, that the waters and oils interfered with its repairing these instruments of operation and production, and that the construction of the ditch would confine the waste waters and oils of other lands to a very small area, thereby minimizing the injuries complained of and enabling appellant to conveniently and adequately carry on its operations on ap-pellee’s land as authorized by the contract. The grounds alleged for the second order were that appellees’ earthern pick-up station or dam across the depression caused water containing sulphur and other mineral substances to be impounded and to stand on the leased premises covering and surrounding a large area on which its pipe lines and telephone poles were laid and constructed, producing rust and decay, and interfering with appellant’s repair of them; that .appellees’ maintaining and operating the pick-up station or dam constituted a nuisance, and 'was in conflict and interfered with appellant’s superior right to use the land for the same purpose and other purposes granted by the terms of the lease contract.

On the following day appellee Mercer filed his petition for injunction, seeking to enjoin and restrain appellant (a) from constructing the proposed ditch which had for its purpose the diverting of waters and waste oils from their natural channel or course; and (b) from in any manner interfering with his maintaining and operating his pick-up station. The grounds alleged for the first order were that the intercepting ditch would change the natural course and flow of water from other lands over appellee’s land, and that the diverted water would wash and materially injure his land. The grounds alleged for the •second relief sought were that appellee’s pick-up station was upon, and along the natural channel or depression of the land and only intercepted waters and waste oils coming from lands not under the lease contract with appellant, that it did not back up , or cause water to stand over and around the pipes and telephone poles, and that it in no way interfered with appellant’s use of the premises for the purposes of the lease contract.

The two suits were consolidated by order of the court, and, after hearing the evidence in chambers, the court granted a part of the relief sought by both appellant and appel-lees; that is, appellees, defendants in the trial court, were restrained (a) “from in any manner interfering with the plaintiff in the digging and excavating of the .ditch, runways, and iaterals, set out in the petition of plaintiff,” and (b) from interfering “with the construction and completion of the pickup station mentioned in said pleadings of plaintiff and the use of said ditch and pickup station in picking up and saving all waste oil produced on said land of W. F. Mercer.”

On appellees’ petition, appellant, plaintiff in the trial court, was restrained (a) “from in any manner constructing a ditch so as to intercept or change the flow of water and oil coming onto this tract of land from other lands not under lease from* these defendants or either of them, to the plaintiff, from the natural channel over which said water and oil now flows” •; and (b) from in any manner preventing-“such water and oil from coming onto and passing over the lands of the defendant W. E. Mercer and into the pick-up

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Bluebook (online)
286 S.W. 652, 1926 Tex. App. LEXIS 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-north-south-oil-co-v-mercer-texapp-1926.