Walker Valley Oil & Gas Co. v. Parks & Palmer

1928 OK 11, 262 P. 672, 128 Okla. 286, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 104
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJanuary 3, 1928
Docket17507
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 1928 OK 11 (Walker Valley Oil & Gas Co. v. Parks & Palmer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker Valley Oil & Gas Co. v. Parks & Palmer, 1928 OK 11, 262 P. 672, 128 Okla. 286, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 104 (Okla. 1928).

Opinion

HALL, C.

This was an action by Parks & Palmer, a partnership, against the Walker Valley Oil and Gas Company, a corporation, for the recovery of a Balance claimed as due and owing it on a performed contract for drilling an oil and gas well, or rather, a dry hole. The amount claimed and for which judgment was rendered is the sum of $2,929.10. Plaintiff had already been paid under this contract the sum of $4,897.00. The defendant contends that plaintiff failed to perform the 'terms of the contract, and therefore deny an>y liability. They also ask judgment against plaintiff for the sum. of $4,897.06, the sum which was paid plaintiff in this transaction, basing their cross-action on the theory that the payment was made through a misapprehension and a mistake of fact.

The essential facts in the case are as follows : Plaintiff and defendant entered into a written contract whereby plaintiff agreed to drill for defendant an oil and gas well to a depth of 2.500 feet, unless oil or gas was discovered in paying quantities at a lesser depth. This was to be done for a stipulated price, and it was expressly conditioned that in case the hole was not drilled to a depth of 2,500 feet, or to the alternative depth, the contract would not be complied with and' there would be nothing due plaintiff thereunder. The material, casing, derrick, slush pit, etc., were all furnished by the defendant. The contract is exceedingly lengthy, and it is impracticable to set out even a synopsis of it in this opinion, However, the vital and pivotal points of the contract, for the purposes of this litigation, are the provisions pertaining to the appointment and designation of an agent ¡of the defendant to perform certain duties, numerous and varied in their nature, for defendant, in connection with the drilling of this well. One of the provisions of the contract is that:

“The company shall have an agent on the premises under whose supervision all tests and observations shall be made, and the contractor agrees that no casing will be set in the well, and no show, indication or trace of oil or gas will be drilled through without the company shall have due notice and an opportunity to have present such special representative, as it may wish, to direct all set *287 ting of casing and such tests as he may desire before further drilling is done.”

Sandwiched in other paragraphs of the contract are provisions that the contractor is to sample all formations designated by the company, unless otherwise directed by the company’s agent; do certain core drilling when directed by the company’s representative, and the company’s representative was to have authority, indirectly, to discharge or remove any objectionable employees of the contractor, and that payment was to be made when the hole shall have been completed in a satisfactory manner and in conformity with the directions of the company or its agent.

The contract, however, expressly provides that it shall not be modified or altered except in the manner in which it was executed in the first instance — meaning, of course, the formal contract in writing executed by plaintiff and the defendant company.

The agent thus designated was one H. E. Wilson, who was the president of the company. The well was drilled to a depth of 2,418 feet, and at that point the company's agent, Wilson, directed a test, and with his consent a test was made at this depth by running in a string of perforated pipe about 100 feet in length — this particular pipe being designated as a “liner.” It appears from the evidence that both the plaintiff and the agent of defendant understood that there was a probability, or at least a possibility, that the liner might not be pulled or loosened from its anchorage, and if oil or gas was not discovered at this point, drilling to a considerable greater depth would be impracticable. Neither oil nor gas was found present where the liner was set in the well. Plaintiffs then had an interview with defendant’s agent, together with two directors of the company, relative to the matter of attempting to pull the casing or drop a smaller drill through the liner and drill to the 2,500 foot depth. Eighty-two feet from the bottom of the liner would have carried the hole to the depth of 2,500 feet. It appears that it was not possible to drill beyond the liner to a greater depth than about 200 feet.

It clearly appears from the evidence of both plaintiff and defendant it was understood between these parties mentioned, that is, plaintiff and Wilson, the special agent of defendant, or whatever he might be called, and the two directors of the company, that in order to pull the liner it was necessary to use a steel friction block called a “bull dog spear,” weighing about 150 pounds, which was designed to set inside a pipe, and with tension it would adhere to it, and then the “spear” could not be moved unless the pipe moved with it; and that in case this pipe could not be pulled, the well could be drilled to no other depth, as it was impossible to drill through the block of steel. These parties mentioned, representing the defendant company in the capacity we have heretofore mentioned, directed the plaintiff to attempt to pull the pipe or liner as above designated. It appears that the reason for the decision of the defendant to extricate the pipe or liner was the fact that there were some dry holes at the depth of 2,500 feet in neighboring territory, and it was not then expected to find a producing well at that depth; but the company did expect, at a later date, to drill the well to a depth of 2.900' feet to a supposed producing sand: and, therefore, at that time, they did not consider it any particular advantage to drill within the liner to only the contractual depth of 2,500 feet.

After the failure to extricate the liner, this agent. Wilson, authorized the purchase of material with which to plug the well. The secretary to the company paid the plaintiff the sum of $4;897 07 in the form of a cashier’s check, which had been issued by the bank some time previous to the date of payment.

Numerous errors are complained of by the defendant, plaintiff in error, in' this action, all dependent to a very large extent on one main proposition. Defendant contends that by virtue of the written contract and the express provisions thereof, the agent, Wilson, as a special agent only, had no authority, except as expressed in the contract, and that this agent, Wilson, and the two directors were without authority to authorize plaintiff to do the things which plaintiff alleges prevented it from complying with all the literal terms of the contract.'

Defendant cites the statutes arid numerous authorities from this court, declaring the principle of law that a written contract can be modified only by a written contract, or by a subsequent oral agreement fully executed.

While the question is not altogether free from debate, we think defendant’s position in this connection is untenable for two reasons : First, the authority of the agent, Wilson, as a representative of the company in this enterprise, was a part of the written contract. Some of this authority is clearly-expressed, some is somewhat vague, but taking the express authority together with the surrounding circumstances and the situation of the parties, it reasonably appears that this agent, Wilson, had the implied authority to direct the plaintiff to do the things concerning this subject-matter which ulti *288

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Bluebook (online)
1928 OK 11, 262 P. 672, 128 Okla. 286, 1928 Okla. LEXIS 104, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-valley-oil-gas-co-v-parks-palmer-okla-1928.