Wilson v. King Smith Ref. Co.

1926 OK 750, 250 P. 90, 119 Okla. 256, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 334
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 21, 1926
Docket17002
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 1926 OK 750 (Wilson v. King Smith Ref. Co.) 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
Wilson v. King Smith Ref. Co., 1926 OK 750, 250 P. 90, 119 Okla. 256, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 334 (Okla. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

PINKHAM, O.

The plaintiffs in error were plaintiff’s and the defendant in error was defendant in the trial court. The parties will be referred to as they appeared in the lower court.

On October 24, 1912, the plaintiffs were the owners of certain land in Creek county, and on that date they executed an oil and gas mining lease thereon to the Scott-Wilson Company, and thereafter the said lease was duly assigned to various parties, and the defendant, the King Smith Refining Company, became the owner of said oil and gas mining lease by assignment, and it was in possession of said property and operating the same under said lease at the time of the trial. A copy of the said lease was attached to plaintiffs’ petition.

The amended petition, after setting forth a description of the property upon which the lease in question was given and other information in regard thereto, contains the following allegations :

“Plaintiffs further allege and state that said product termed and known as casing-head gas is a product of oil wells made up of gas and evaporation of the lighter portion of crude oil, and that casing-head gasoline is produced from such casing-head gas, the gasoline being in fact neither a product of the oil from such wells, and not a product of the gas. Plaintiffs further allege and state that the product termed and known as casing-head gas is a product which has been produced by the defendant from the premises above described, and is a different and separate product from that mentioned or contained in the oil and gas lease above described, and that said defendant has been using said casing-head gas, and has been making therefrom a product known as casing-head gasoline, which said gasoline is a separate and different product entirely from that contained in the terms and conditions of the oil and gas lease above mentioned, and that at the time of entering into the contract for the oil and gas lease above referred to, said product of casing-head gas and casing-head gasoline was not contemplated by the partiesi and was not contained in the terms and condiitions of said oil and gas lease.”

The oil and gas lease attached to plain *257 tiffs’ petition contains the following clause:

“In . consideration of the said grant and demise, the party of the second part agrees to deliver to the parties of the first part one-eighth part of the oil realized from the premises, in tanks at the well without cost, or pay the selling price at the well therefor in cash, at the option of the parties of the first part. If gas is found in any well, or wells, on said premises, the parties of the first part are to have, upon dem.and, sufficient gas for domestic purposes free of charge; the remainder, with all the gas from the oil wells, to go to the party of the second part. If the party of the second part shall market any gas from any well producing gas only, then the parties of the first part shall receive therefor at the rate of $250 per annum for all gas so marketed or sold.”

Plaintiffs prayed judgment in their first cause of action for one-eighth of the total amount of casing-head gasoline or casing-head gas produced and saved from said premises.

After issues joined the court authorized the defendant to refile its demurrer to the amended petition without prejudice to trial, which demurrer was by the court sustained, and judgment was rendered against the plaintiffs on the first cause of action stated in the petition. The plaintiffs excepted to the ruling of the court, and elected to stand on their petition, and the case comes regularly on the appeal of the plaintiffs to this court by petition in error and case-made attached.

It is the contention of. counsel for plaintiffs that the averments contained in the first cause of action in the petition, taken in connection with other averments of the petition, state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in favor of the plaintiffs so as to entitle them to an accounting for casing-head gas taken from said premises and that the demurrer should have been overruled.

The plaintiffs seek to recover from the lessee for casing-head gas produced from the leased premises covered by said oil and gas mining lease.

The sole question' for determination is whether the defendant’s general demurrer to plaintiffs’ petition, to which petition a copy of the oil and gas lease was attached, was properly sustained.

It will be observed from an examination of the provisions of that clause of the lease above set forth that the parties to the lease contract provided for at least three products which might be produced therefrom: First, the lessee agreed to account to the lessor for one-eighth of the oil produced from the premises; second, the lessee agreed to account to the lessor for sufficient gas for domestic purposes free of charge, or for the sum of $250 per annum, if the lessee marketed or sold gas from the premises; and third, the lease provided that the remainder, with all the gas from the oil wells, should go to the party of the second part (lessee); and while it is true that no mention of easing-head gas is made in the lease, it is clear, we think,'from the language used, that after the lessee has delivered to the lessor “one-eighth part of the oil realized from the premises, * * * or paid the selling price at the well therefor in cash,” and furnished to the lessor “gas for domestic purposes free of charge, the remainder with all gas from the oil wells” became the property of the lessee; so that it conclusively appears that the parties had something in mind different and distinct from gas simply, or oil simply, and that was “gas from an oil well.”

‘ Whether the parties at the time of the execution of this lease contract in 1912 did or did not anticipate the production of casing-head gas is, we think, immaterial, in view of the decisions of this court that gas from an oil well constitutes casing-head gas. Mussellem v. Magnolia Pet. Co., 107 Okla. 183, 231 Pac. 526; Pautler et al. v. Franchot et al., 108 Okla. 130, 235 Pac. 209.

In the Mussellem Case, supra, the court said:

“From the above citations of the evidence, the definitions of such gas as here in question, from the departmental regulations and scientific treatises on the subject, ‘casing-head igas’ is nothing- other than gas from an oil well, and to concur in the contention made by plaintiffs would be tantamount to writing a modification into the third clause of the contract.”

The lease in the Mussellem Case contained ■ three clauses wherein the question of royalty was involved. The first referred to the royalty due the lessor in the event of tho discovery and production of ''41 The second referred to the royalty due the lessor in the event of the discovery and production of gas. The third was as follows:

“Third, to pay the parties of the first part for gas produced from an oil well, and used off the premises, at the rate of $50 per-year, for the time,” etc.

The third clause in the Mussellem Case is identical with that in the instant case, except that in the Mussellem Case the lessee" contracted to pay the lessor $50 per year for gas from each oil well- — that is to say, casing-head gas — whereas, in the instant case, *258

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1926 OK 750, 250 P. 90, 119 Okla. 256, 1926 Okla. LEXIS 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilson-v-king-smith-ref-co-okla-1926.