Walker v. Lane

233 S.W. 634, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 930
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 9, 1921
DocketNo. 9553. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 233 S.W. 634 (Walker v. Lane) 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
Walker v. Lane, 233 S.W. 634, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 930 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

DUNKLIN, J.

J. M. Lane and wife, Lucy Lane, and A. B. Lane executed what is usually termed an oil and gas lease to B. B. Walker, on 1,602 acres of land situated in Palo Pinto county. The lease was dated February 21, 1917, and recited a cash cpnsid-eration paid by the lessee of $1,602, and the further consideration of the covenants of the lessee therein contained. It stipulated that it should continue in force for a period of 10 years and as much longer thereafter as either oil or gas shall be produced therefrom in paying quantities, and that the lessors should receive, as royalties, one-eighth of all oil produced from the land and a stipulated sum for the gas from each well in which gas might be found. It contained the further stipulation that if operations for drilling a well should not he commenced on the land on or before February 21, 1918, the lease wouiu terminate, unless the lessee should pay to the lessors $1,602, which would operate and he accepted as a rental for the next succeeding year, and that by paying a like rental before the beginning of each succeeding year the lessee should have the right to continue the lease in force for the full 10-yéar period without drilling a well. The lease contained this further stipulation:

“The lessee shall have the right to assign this lease, or any portion of the acreage covered thereby, in which last event the lessee shall be liable only for royalties accruing from operations on the acreage retained, and be liable only for such proportions of the rentals due under said lease as the acreage retained1 by the lessee bears to the entire acreage covered by said lease and the assigns of the lessee shall have corresponding rights and privileges with respect to said royalties and rentals as to the acreage so assigned.”

On February 5, 1918, B. B. Walker, the lessee, transferred and assigned to J. E. Whiteside all rights and interests he acquired under the lease, in and to two tracts covered by the instrument, aggregating 800 acres. The consideration for said assignment, as recited therein, was $1 cash paid and certain covenants and agreements which were not mere options, and some of which were as follows :

“As a part consideration hereof, grantee agrees to begin the operations for drilling a‘ well on the above-described premises before the 21st day of February, 1918, arid that grantee will continue in good faith to sink said well to the productive sand, in what is known as the productive sand of the Caddo field, unless oil or gas is discovered in paying quantities at a lesser depth. •
“Grantee agrees to pay all royalties provided for in said Lane lease and assume the conditions thereof so far as same applies to the land hereinabove described.
“It is understood that the said grantor herein is to have an undivided one-sixteenth (Vis) interest without cost to him in the first well drilled on said premises and is to have a Vt<¡ interest in all wells drilled thereon thereafter after all expenses of drilling, completing and making same ready for production is paid.”

J. M. Lane, who was the sole owner of the tracts, the lease on which Walker did not assign to Whiteside, instituted this suit against B. B. Walker and the Banker’s Oil & Refining Company and the Banker’s Oil Company, to whom the lease on those tracts was transferred by Walker, to cancel the lease as to those tracts. From a judgment in favor of plaintiff decreeing the cancellation prayed for, the defendants have appealed.

No drilling was done on any part of the land covered by the lease during the first year, and no rentals have ever been paid by any of the defendants on the S00 acres which defendant Walker retained. But plaintiff, Lane, joined by his wife and A. B. Lane, executed and delivered to Whiteside, Walker’s assignee, the following extension agreements, and received from him the considerations therefor recited in those agreements;

“State of Texas, County of Palo Pinto.
“Know all men by these presents that whereas A. B. Lane, J. M. Lane and Lucy Lane did execute and deliver to B. B. Walker a certain oil, gas and mineral lease of date the 21st day of February, A. D. 1917, on certain tracts, parcels of land laying, being and situate in Palo Pinto and Stephens counties, Texas, fully described in said lease; and,
*635 “Whereas, the said B. B. Walker duly assigned by this instrument in writing to J. E. White-side of Muskogee, Oklahoma, his interest in said oil, gas and mineral lease, on the following ■described tracts of land, to wit:
“First tract: One hundred sixty (160) acres of land, the N. W. one-fourth (%) of the S. E. one-fourth (%) and the S- E. one-fourth (%) of the S. W. one-fourth (%) of survey Ño. 11, block 4, and the N. E. one-fourth (%) of the S. E. one-fourth (%) and the S. W. one-fourth of the S. E. one-fourth (%) of said section 11, block 4.
“Second tract: All of section No. 14, block No. 4, T. & P. Tiy. Co., containing 640 acres, more or less, and as part consideration for said assignment, the said J. E. Whiteside agreed to drill a' well on said premises; and
“Whereas, owing to the various conditions arising out of transportation brought about by the present war that is now existing, it was impossible for the said J. E. Whiteside to commence the actual drilling of said well by the 21st day of February, 191S, and it was only possible to begin the operations for the drilling of said well by said time:
“Now, therefore, in consideration of the premises and further consideration of eight hundred dollars ($800.00) cash in hand paid by J. E. Whiteside, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged and confessed, we, the said A. B. Lane, J. M. Lane and Lucy Lane, do hereby extend the time for the actual beginning of the drilling of said well for six months from and after this date, and extend the conditions and provisions of said lease for said period of time.
“Witness our hands this 19th day of March,
A. D. 1918. [Signed] A. B. Lane,
“J. M. Lane.
“Lucy Lane.”
“Caddo, Stephens County, Texas,
August 5, 1918.
“This memorandum of agreement made and entered into this fifth day of August, 1918, by and between J. M. Lane, A. B. Lane and Mrs. J. M. Lane, parties of the first part, and Jas. B. Whiteside party of the second part, that, for the consideration of two hundred ($200.00) dollars, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, does hereby grant to the party of the second part an extension of forty (40) days time from the 21st day of August, 1918, to commence the drilling of a well and if the same is not commenced then said extension is dead.
“[Signed] J. M. Lane.
“A. B. Lane.
“Mrs. J. M. Lane.”

The drilling of a well was begun by White-side on September 28, 1918, which was within the 40-day extension provided for in the last extension agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
233 S.W. 634, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-lane-texapp-1921.