Upham Gas Co. of Texas v. Agnew

270 S.W. 1081, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedMarch 7, 1925
DocketNo. 10994.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 270 S.W. 1081 (Upham Gas Co. of Texas v. Agnew) 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
Upham Gas Co. of Texas v. Agnew, 270 S.W. 1081, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 331 (Tex. Ct. App. 1925).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

The Upham Gas Company, who owned an oil and gas lease on a tract of land in Palo Pinto county, employed the partnership firm of B. L. Agnew & Co. to drill an oil well on that lease. The contract of employment was in writing and executed by both parties. By its terms the Upham Gas Company, 'who was designated in the contract as “the company,” agreed to furnish to B. L. Agnew & Co., designated in the contract as “the contractor,” gas for fuel to be used by the contractor in the drilling of the well. It contained, among others, these further provisions^

“Said well, unless sooner discontinued by direction of the company, is to be drilled to a depth of 3,800 feet, the consideration per foot to be $2.62y2. * * *
“The company agrees to pay at the rate of $75 (or $40 for 12 hours) per day of 24 hours, for time occupied in testing of sands and pulling such casing as may be done at the direction of the company. * * *
“In the drilling of said well the obligations of the company shall be limited exclusively to the things herein stipulated by it to be done and performed. All other expense shall be borne by the contractor.” |

The contract was dated April 5, 1923.

On June 29, 1923, the well had been drilled to a depth .of 2,138 feet. The contract price of $2.62% per foot, amounting to a total of $5,612.55, was tendered to the contractor on August 6, 1923, at which time the company notified the contractor that it had decided to' exercise its optipn to discontinue the drilling. The depth of 2,138 feet was reached by the contractor on June 29, 1923, and after that date no further drilling was done.

The contractor refused to accept the amount so tendered by the company in full satisfaction of what the company owed under the contract. The claim was made that the company had breached its contract to furnish gas for fuel to prosecute the drilling of the well in a workmanlike manner, and that by reason thereof the contractor had sustained damages occasioned by unnecessary delays in drilling.

The contractor then instituted this suit against the company to recover $5,612.55, the contract price for drilling the well to a depth of 2,138 feet, and also for damages for the defendant’s alleged breach of its contract to furnish gas for fuel in the amount *1082 required to enable bim to drill tbe well without delays occasioned by a shortage of such fuel.

There were three counts in plaintiffs’ petition, in each'of which plaintiffs asserted a right to recover such damages. In the first of those counts it was alleged that, on account of a lack of sufficient fuel gas the drilling operations had been suspended entirely for several days, the dates being given, and that but for such delays plaintiffs would have drilled the well to a depth of 3,800 feet in the same period of time that was consumed in drilling to the depth of 2,138 feet, it being alleged that by reason of the formation of the earth and decreased size of the hole greater speed would have been made below the depth of 2,138 feet, and that therefore plaintiffs would have earned $4,362.75 at the rate of $2.62% per foot, in addition to the sum of $5,612.55, which the defendant admitted it owed and tendered.

In another count in the petition it was alleged that for lack of sufficient fuel gas drilling operations were shut down for a period of 46% days of 24 hours each, during all of which time his drilling crew, which he had employed, to work, was idle, and that the defendant became liable to the plaintiffs tor the reasonable value of such shut down time, which was alleged to be $75 per day, or in the aggregate of $3,487.50.

In another count in the petition plaintiffs alleged that the time actually consumed was 43% days, but that, if defendant had furnished sufficient fuel gas, the well would have been drilled to that depth in 22 days, and that therefore plaintiffs lost 68 days of time with its machinery, tools, and drilling crew, which time so lost was of the reasonable value of $5,100, and that amount was claimed as damages for the breach of defendant’s contract. However, that count in the petition fails to state at what date the 68 days of time so lost would have ended; whether on August 6th, at the time the defendant notified the plaintiffs that it had elected to terminate drilling operations, or whether the 68 days was the period of time within which the well would have been drilled to a depth of 3,800 feet.

Plaintiffs further sought to recover another item of $40 for fuel, casing, and testing the well, requiring the work of 12 hours, delays for which defendant was liable under a further provision in the contract that it would pay at the rate of $75 per day or $40 for 12 hours for such work. Another item of $40 was claimed for a 12 hour shut down in drilling operations due to the failure of defendant to furnish a drilling rig properly equipped as it had agreed to do.

In answer to plaintiffs’ suit the defendant, in addition to a general denial, pleaded specially that the fuel gas furnished by it to the plaintiffs was in quantities sufficient to have drilled the well without any delays for lack thereof if it had been economically used, but that plaintiffs had been guilty of negligent waste of it, and by reason of that fact the delays complained of had occurred. Defendant further pleaded that the machinery and appliances employed by plaintiffs to drill the well and which they had agreed to furnish were not in proper repair, and by reason of that fact more gas was used than was necessary; and, further, that the well was drilled in an improper manner as a result of which there was an obstruction left in the well when it was turned over to the defendant, by reason of which obstruction the defendant was damaged in the sum of $300. v

The trial was upon special issues submitted to the jury, which issues, together with the jury’s findings thereon, were in substance as follows:

(1) Whether or not the defendant furnished plaintiffs with an adequate supply of gas to drill the well with reasonable dispatch, if economically used? The jury made a negative finding on that issue.

(2) What sum of money paid now, if anything, in addition to the contract price of $2.62% per foot for the drilling of 2,138 feet in the well in question, and over and above the necessary expense of performing and fulfilling the contract in evidence, prior to August 5,1923, would plaintiffs have earned had they been furnished with sufficient gas for fuel to drill said well with dispatch, if they were so furnished? The finding of the jury on that issue was $1,300.

(3) Was there a defect* or obstruction in the well in question when it was turned over to the defendant by plaintiffs? To which the jury answered, “No.”

Upon the return of the verdict, the court entered a judgment in favor of plaintiffs against the defendant for $6,952.75, which included the item of $5,612.25, the amount which defendant had tendered to the plaintiffs, the same being the contract price for the 2,138 feet actually drilled; also the sum of $40 for fuel gas, and the item of $1,300 found by the jury.

Numerous objections were urged to special issue No. 2 before the court submitted the same to the jury.

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Bluebook (online)
270 S.W. 1081, 1925 Tex. App. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/upham-gas-co-of-texas-v-agnew-texapp-1925.