Winnett Pacific Oil Co. v. Wilson

239 P. 1040, 74 Mont. 318, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 151
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 10, 1925
DocketNo. 5,721.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 239 P. 1040 (Winnett Pacific Oil Co. v. Wilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Winnett Pacific Oil Co. v. Wilson, 239 P. 1040, 74 Mont. 318, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 151 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

In October, 1923, a contract was entered into between the Winnett Pacific Oil Company and Dan Wilson, by the terms of which Wilson agreed to drill an oil well for the company on the Flatwillow structure in Fergus (now Petroleum) county to a minimum depth of 2,500 feet or to a maximum depth of 3,500 feet. The company agreed to pay Wilson $8 per foot for the first 1,500 feet and $9 per foot for the excess, one-half of the contract price to be paid upon the completion of each 500 feet drilled, and the remainder on the completion of the well. The contract provided that the “first water” encountered should be shut off “with 20-ineh” easing through the Eagle sandstone, and that, as each payment became due, Wilson should pay for all labor and materials used by him in prosecuting the work or secure lien waivers from those who might be entitled to liens upon the property. When the well had been dialled to a depth of 502 feet, Wilson demanded payment of the $2,000 which he claimed was then due him, but the demand was refused. He then refused to proceed unless and until he was paid, and later this action was instituted to secure a cancellation of the contract.:

*320 In its complaint, the plaintiff charged that Wilson had violated the contract in these particulars: (1) He failed to shut off the water with twenty-inch easing through the Eagle sandstone, or at all; (2) he failed to use a drill of sufficient size to permit twenty-inch casing to be lowered through the Eagle sandstone, with the result that casing furnished by the .plaintiff of the value of $2,000 was rendered useless; (3) he failed to pay for labor and materials furnished, and failed to secure lien waivers from the claimants; (4) he ceased work on the well, and refused to proceed without just cause.

These charges were all denied, and by a cross-complaint defendant alleged that he performed every provision of the contract by him to be performed, until he was prevented from further performance by the wrongful acts of the plaintiff, which alleged wrongful acts are set forth in detail. He prayed for judgment for $4,000, the contract price for the 500 feet drilled. The allegations of the cross-complaint were denied by the reply.

The trial of the cause to the court without a jury resulted in a judgment dismissing the plaintiff’s complaint and awarding defendant' $4,000 upon his cross-complaint. From that judgment plaintiff appealed and has presented for our determination the single question’: Is there any substantial evidence to justify the trial court’s finding that defendant complied with the contract until he was prevented from proceeding further by the wrongful acts of the plaintiff?

There is not any controversy over these facts: Defendant drilled the well to a depth of 502 feet. He encountered water at a depth of 233 feet below the surface which he did not shut off in any manner or at all. He drove twenty-inch casing down the well to a depth of 221 feet, was unable to drive it to a lower depth, and, when he undertook to pull it from the well, the line parted, and he abandoned the effort.

The evidence discloses that on the Flatwillow structure generally the geological formations in' stratigraphic sequence are the Claggett or surface formation, the Eagle sandstone *321 immediately below the Olaggett, the Colorado shale immediately below the Eagle sandstone, etc. It appears also that locally the lower portion of the Eagle sandstone is designated the Yirgelle sand; that the Eagle sandstone is not a typical water-bearing sand, but does contain some water, particularly in the Yirgelle sand.

It is the contention of plaintiff that the Colorado shale does not contain any water-bearing sands; that the purpose of the provision of the contract requiring the first water encountered to be shut off through the Eagle sandstone was that the well might be drilled into the Colorado shale, dry; that the water encountered at 233 feet below the surface was the “first water” within the meaning of the contract; that the twenty-inch easing was not carried down through the Eagle sandstone or to a depth sufficient to shut off the water; that by drilling into the Colorado shale to a depth of 260 feet or more, with that water continuously present in the well, defendant violated the contract to the great damage of plaintiff; that the twenty-inch easing provided by the company at an expense of more than $2,000 was rendered valueless by being driven into the well from which it could not be removed; that the well itself, in the condition in which it was left by the defendant, is not of any value; that the defendant ceased work and refused to continue without any just cause; and that by reason of these wrongful and negligent acts, defendant had not earned, and was not entitled to, any compensation for the work he did.

It is the contention of the defendant that at the point where this well was to be drilled, the Eagle sandstone is the surface formation; that it does not exceed fifty feet in thickness; that the “first water” encountered in drilling was encountered in the Eagle sandstone only a few feet below the surface; that this water was shut off by means of the twenty-inch casing which was extended down through the Eagle sandstone and to a considerable distance into the Colorado shale; that the water encountered at a depth of 233 feet below the surface was the *322 second water encountered; that this water was in a sand seven feet in thickness in the Colorado shale; -that the reason for sinking the twenty-inch casing below the point where the first water was shut off was to case off the second water and thereby enable defendant to prosecute his work with greater dispatch; that the bit used in sinking the well drilled a hole sufficiently large to admit the twenty-inch casing through the Eagle sandstone; that the easing driven to a depth of 221 feet has not been lost or depreciated in value; that it is perfectly feasible to shut off the second water with fifteen and one-half inch casing and continue the work in strict compliance with the terms of the contract; and that the fact that the well below 240 feet was drilled with the second water present did not damage the plaintiff or lessen the value of the work done.

Each party produced witnesses who testified in support of his contention, but the only witnesses qualified to testify concerning the geological formations were C. J. Stone, a geologist who testified as a witness for the plaintiff, and Fred Stone, a geologist who testified in behalf of the defendant.

C. J. Stone testified that he located this well for the plaintiff company; that he has located many wells in that vicinity, particularly in the Cat Creek field; that the surface formation is the Claggett, the next below that is the Eagle sandstone, and the next below that is the Colorado shale; that the lower portion of the Eagle sandstone is designated locally the Virgelle sand. He testified further: “The Eagle will run from 50 to 150 feet thick. * * * I imagine the Eagle sand there [at the location of the well in question] would be somewhere in the neighborhood of 150 feet thick, but it may be not over 50 feet. The sands are irregular as to their pitch.”

F. C.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
239 P. 1040, 74 Mont. 318, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winnett-pacific-oil-co-v-wilson-mont-1925.