Willingham v. Bryson

294 S.W.2d 421, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 1094, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1849
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 5, 1956
Docket15774
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 294 S.W.2d 421 (Willingham v. Bryson) 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
Willingham v. Bryson, 294 S.W.2d 421, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 1094, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1849 (Tex. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

BOYD, Justicie,

"This suit was instituted by appellees, B: B. Bryson and others, primarily 'against appel- ; lant S. V. Willingham to cancel an oil and gas lease, or in’ the alternative to require ' further exploration under- penalty of cancellation.’ Appellees' are' the Heir-s- at law of ' Mary: A. Bryson, who, on^ April-21, 1928,. as lessor, executed the. lease in controversy; . The lease covered - 150 ‘ acres. :By mesne conveyances the lease-was subdivided into, three tracts-, :one of 25 ■ acres, -one of 44.47 adres, and one of 80.53 acres, the latter now-/ being owned by appellant and: being the” lease in controversy. In a trial to the court, judgment was .rendered requiring appellant to begin the drilling of a well -within ninety days after the júdgnient becomes final and to continue drilling with reasonable •• djlir gence to a depth sufficient to test the Marble Falls sand or to production in paying quantities at a'lesser depth, and that failure .so to do would terminate the lease except 'in so far as it covers ten acres around the‘one producing well thereon, the acreage to be selected by appellant.

The lease on the 80;53 acres was assigned to appellant on July 24, 1944. He has not drilled on the tract. Four wells had been drilled before appellant acquired the lease, one of which having ceased to produce before his’'acquisition and two of which 'having ceased to produce-shortly after he acquired the lease; The remaining well is producing oil in very small but paying quantities.

The lease contains the following provisions :

“1. Lessor, in consideration of * * * the'agreements of lessee-herein contained, hereby grants, leases and lets éxclusively unto lessee, for the p-Uf-fpose of prospecting and drilling for and producing oil and gas, **%.■-
' “8.' This lease shall never be forfeited, cancelled or terminated for failure'by lessee to. perform in whole or in part'any .of its, implied obligations, nor while oil or. gas is being produced in paying quantities fpr’any cause whatsoever unless 'there shall first be a final'. . judicial ascertainment that'such obliga-' ^ tion or cause exists and that lessee is in , default.. Upon such'final determination, lessee is hereby given a reasonable time thereafter to comply with such, obligation, dr, at lessee’s election to surrender the lease, with the option of. reserving, under the terms of this lease,.each producing well''and ten acres surrounding it to be selected by the lessee. Lessee shall not be liable in damages for breach of any implied obligation.”

*423 ■ Appellees alleged that the- producing well “was drilled and --completed long-prior to the development - of modern methods ¡ o,f completing a ■ well. • Such hole was not drilled and other sands' were no't tested under modern- methods now used in the drilling and completing .of wells in that vicinity.' There are other and different sands from the one from which the present well is producing some oil that have never been sufficiently explored and a reasonably prudent oil operator would have .drilled and .would now drill other and additional wells upon such Eighty (80), acres to such depth as to test all sands reasonably expected to be encountered in tliat vicinity, would run an electric survey on' each well so drilled .and test each sand which was encountered 'in its drilling. A, failure ,so to drill, and 'test has been and now is a breach of the .implied covenants of the lease, * *

Appellant-'contends that the judgment is without support - because there is no competent evidence, or sufficient evidence) ■ to ■ show that a reasonably prudent oil operator would drill such well; that there is no evidence, or •; sufficient' ¡evidence, to show what, would constitute reasonable develop■ment of the tract; and that there is no evidence to show that an additional well . could be drilled under • the spacing rules of the Railroad Commission.

In considering the sufficiency of the evi'dence to support the' judgment, we must first determine the exact nature of the 'questions presented by this record.

It is settled that there is an implied covenant reasonably to develop a' lease after production is obtained, for the breach of which cancellation may be decreed. W. T. Waggoner Estate v. Sigler Oil Co., 118 Tex. 509, 19 S.W.2d 27. The rule in such cases seems to be that the lessor has the burden of showing what would constitute reasonable development, that the lease has not been reasonably developed, and that his damage is uncertain and incapable of as'certainment. Fort Worth Nat. Bank v. McLean, Tex.Civ.App., 245 S.W.2d 309. An -operator has breached the -covenant df reasonable development when he refuses •further to drill under “such facts and cir.cumstances-as will-establish that a reason.ably prudent and -experienced' oil .operator, .with full knowledge .of all'of .such facts and -circumstances, in the exercise of ordinary care, would have drilled Additional wells on the land with a reasonable' expectation of- producing oil or gas therefrom in paying .quantities.” Summers Oil and Gas, Perin. Ed., sec. 414, p. 370. This duty is imposed upon the lessee because the failure .further .'to drill might leave untapped oil which could be- produced, or result in .permanent, loss, of otherwise recoverable oil or a slower rate of production, thus depriving the lessor of the use of the capital- represented by the unproduced royalty oil'.

• Appellant testified -that he did not intend to drill until he thought it would be .profitable. There was evidence- that since any drilling was done on the .lease, methods and techniques had been,, developed whereby wells are saved which otherwise would be worthless, and whereby production is in- . creased in producing wells. It was shown that production had been secured in the general area from the Marble Falls and the Mississippi sands, deeper formations -.than that from which the. present well is producing., One of .appellant’s witnesses, . a geologist-, testified that there was “a pos- . sibility that the Conglomerate and the Marble Falls would produce” on -the lease in question, “but it is just a possibility.” A witness for appellees testified,that he would be willing to take a farmout and drill another well to the lower zones.

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294 S.W.2d 421, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 1094, 1956 Tex. App. LEXIS 1849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willingham-v-bryson-texapp-1956.