Vickers v. Peaker

300 S.W.2d 29, 227 Ark. 587, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 1177, 1957 Ark. LEXIS 363
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMarch 25, 1957
Docket5-1231
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 300 S.W.2d 29 (Vickers v. Peaker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vickers v. Peaker, 300 S.W.2d 29, 227 Ark. 587, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 1177, 1957 Ark. LEXIS 363 (Ark. 1957).

Opinion

Ed. F. McFaddin, Associate Justice.

From a decree of the Chancery Court refusing the plaintiffs’ prayer for cancellation of a certain instrument as a cloud on the title, there is this appeal. The equities preponderate in favor of the appellees.

The appellants are R. H. Vickers and his two sisters, Mrs. Humphreys and Mrs. Gray. They were plaintiffs below. As lessees, they own and operate an oil and gas lease (known as the “Murphy lease”) on 40 acres; described as the NW14 Sec. 28, Twp. 15 S, R 15 W, Ouachita County, Arkansas. On this lease there are four oil wells producing from the Blossom Sand, which is at the approximate depth of 2,400 feet. In order to have determined the possibility of production from the sands at a greater depth, appellants on July 21, 1955 executed an assignment 1 to Edward McNeil, granting the right to explore the formations helow 3,000 feet on the said 40-acre tract.

Appellee, Peaker, holds under the aforesaid McNeil assignment. 2 Somewhat similar assignments were executed by others holding interests in the said Sections 27 and 28; and appellee, Peaker, became the holder of enough of these assignments to justify him in testing the formations below 3,000 feet in said Sections 27 and 28. Peaker first drilled a well in the SE% NE14 of Section 28, known and referred to herein as the “Berg well.” 3 He made a contract with A1 Grandebush, a recognized driller, to drill the Berg well to a depth of 5,000 feet and to complete it in the Smackover lime. The contract price was $20,000. The time of commencement of this well will be discussed in Topic I, infra.

Grandebush drilled this Berg well to a depth of 3,416 feet, but was unable to carry the well to a greater depth; so he started a new well in the SW14 NWVt of Section 27, one-quarter mile to the East, and known as the “Reynolds Brothers well.” 4 He actually drilled the Reynolds Brothers well to the Smackover lime. The failure to drill the Berg well to the Smackover lime and the drilling of the Reynolds Brothers well to that formation will be discussed in Topic II, infra.

"When Grandebush found that he was unable to drill the Berg well to a depth greater than 3,416 feet, he tested the sand at that depth and brought in a producing oil well. That sand at 3,416 feet is now known as the “Cotton Valley Sand”; and the Berg well was the discovery well of the Cotton Valley Sand in Sections 27 and 28. "When Grandebush drilled the Reynolds Brothers well to the Smackover lime (approximate depth 4,800 feet), he found said formation to be non-productive ; so he made the Reynolds Brothers well into a commercial producer from the Cotton Valley Sand. This was on January 18, 1956,

Peaker then prepared to drill on the Murphy lease here involved (SW14 NW% Section 28). 5 On May 5, 1956, appellant, Vickers,, and his sisters, filed the present suit to cancel the McNeil assignment under which Peaker claimed. The complaint alleged that the terms of the assignment had been breached by (1) failure to commence the Berg -well on September 15, 1955, and also by (2) failure to drill the Berg well to the Smackover lime. Peaker and the other appellees denied both of the said claims; and also made the affirmative defense of laches and estoppel (which will be discussed in Topic III, infra)., The Trial Court dismissed the Vickers suit for want of equity, and this appeal ensued: presenting the three points now to be discussed.

I. When Did Drilling Commence On The Berg Wellf Appellants say: (1) that the McNeil assignment (under which Peaker claims) required that the drilling of the Berg well be commenced on or before September 15, 1955; (2) that the actual spudding in of the well was not until October 15, 1955; and (3) that, therefore, the assignment executed by appellants expired for failure of the assignee to perform its conditions. Appellants cite and strongly rely on our case of Vaughan v. Doss, 219 Ark. 963, 245 S. W. 2d 826, wherein we discussed the “unless” type of lease; and appellants point out that this is an “unless” type of assignment.

The record herein establishes the following: (1) some- time prior to September 12, 1955, Peaker entered into a contract with A1 Grandebush, whereby Peak-er agreed to pay Grandebush $20,000 to drill the Berg well, and Grandebush agreed to drill the well to the Smackover lime, estimated to be between 4,800 and 4,900 feet below the surface; (2) on September 12, 1955, the location was surveyed and'cleared; (3) on September 13th a road was constructed to the location; (4) on September 14th a permit was obtained -from the Arkansas Oil & Gas Commission to drill the Berg well; (5) by September 15th certain material had been moved to the drill site for the well, including drill pipe, butane tanks, pipe racks, and other material; (6) the entire equipment had been moved to the drill site by October 13, 1955, and on that day actual drilling commenced by the drill bit piercing the earth; (7) in the early part of November, 1955, the well had reached a depth of 3,416 feet, when sand was encountered in such quantities as to cause the mud pump to go out of commission; (8) on November 22, 1955, the Berg well .was completed as a producer from the Cotton Valley Sand at 3,416 feet.

Appellees argue that all of these matters taken together mean that drilling commenced on or before September 15th. Appellants say that drilling commenced only on October 13th, the day the drill bit actually pierced the earth. Which argument is correct? Does “drilling” commence with the operations for a well, or does it commence only with the piercing of the ground with the drill bit? Does “baking a cake” begin with the preparation of the dough, or only with the actual placing of the dough in the oven? In Haddock v. McClendon, 223 Ark. 396, 266 S. W. 2d 74, we had a somewhat similar question presented and, in refusing to declare the lease forfeited, we reviewed a number of cases and quoted from one of them in this language:

“ ‘We are cited to no case by plaintiffs, and we know of none, holding that actual drilling of an oil and gas well is not in fact commenced until, as contended by plaintiffs, all the equipment, machinery and materials necessary to drill and complete the well have been placed upon the leased property. In fact from the testimony of witnesses produced by both- parties, it appears that it is not customary, prior to commencing drilling operations, to have upon the land everything necessary to complete the well.’ ”

In considering all of the facts as recited herein, and considering also the estoppel issue hereinafter discussed in Topic III, infra, we reach the conclusion that the appellants cannot successfully claim that their assignment was forfeited in this case for failure to have the drill bit pierce the earth by September 15, 1955. 6

II. What Of The Failure To Drill The Berg Well To The Smackover Lime ? Appellants insist that the McNeil assignment they executed was forfeited because of the failure of Peaker to drill the Berg well to the Smackover lime. The portion of the assignment germane to this point reads:

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Bluebook (online)
300 S.W.2d 29, 227 Ark. 587, 7 Oil & Gas Rep. 1177, 1957 Ark. LEXIS 363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vickers-v-peaker-ark-1957.