Withington v. Gypsy Oil Co.

1918 OK 236, 172 P. 634, 68 Okla. 138, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 316
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedApril 23, 1918
Docket8680
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 1918 OK 236 (Withington v. Gypsy Oil 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
Withington v. Gypsy Oil Co., 1918 OK 236, 172 P. 634, 68 Okla. 138, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 316 (Okla. 1918).

Opinion

RAINEY, J.

This is an appeal from the order of the district court of Tulsa county, Oltla., sustaining a demurrer to the petition of the plaintiff in error, G. M. Withington, filed by him in the district court of Tulsa county, Okla., in an action to recover from the defendant in error, Gypsy Oil Company, a one-fourth interest in all the gasoline produced from casinghead gas taken by it from (lie 120 acres of land described in the petition, less the cost of converting said casing-head gas into gasoline. The parties will hereinafter be designated as they appeared in the trial court.

The material facts, as alleged in the plaintiff’s petition, are substantially as follows : On Juna 20, 1906, one G. W. Barnes, Jr., executed and delivered to George J. Ko-busch and associates an oil and gas mining lease on the land herein involved, which base was subsequently assigned to the defendant in error, and the title to the land, after the execution of the lease, passed into *139 the hands of the plaintiff in error. The lease, which is attached to and made a part of the plaintiff’s petition, contains the following provisions with reference to the payment of royalties:

“In consideration of said grant and demise, the parties of the second part agree to deliver to the party of the first part one-fourth of the oil realized from the premises in tanks, at the well without cost. If gas is found in any well or wells on said premises the party of the first part is to have, upon demand, sufficient gas for domestic purposes free of charge, the remainder with all gas from oil wells to go to the second part.
“If the parties of the second part shall market any gas from any well producing gas, then the party -of the first parr shall receive therefor at the rate of one-fourth of all the gas so marketed or sold.”

Basing his action on these provisions of the lease, plaintiff proceeds to state his case as follows:

“V. That for about a year last past (precise time being unknown to the plaintiff), the defendant has been producing from each of several oil wells upon the said land gas, the same being commonly spoken of as -casing-head gas, and has been, in its own nearby plant, reducing or condensing the said gas to 'the form of gasoline, and has been marketing the said gas in the form of gasoline: that the defendant‘has marketed a very large quantity of such gas in the form of gasoline; and has received a very, large sum of money therefor, but the plaintiff does not know, and has no means of ascertaining, save by an accounting under the decree of this court, the precise amount of gas which the defendant has so marketed, or the amount of money that has berm received by the defendant therefor.
“YI. That by the terms of said lease of June 20, 1906, the defendant is obligated and bound to account to the plaintiff for the proceeds of the one-fourth part of the gas so produced by the defendant, and so marketed by it in the form of gasoline: that the amount so due to the plaintiff is the amount of the gross proceeds from which the defendant has sold, in the form of gasoline,' the plaintiff's one-fourth part of an interest in the said gas. less a reasonable allowance to th-e defendant for the cost to it of reducing or condensing the said gas .to the changed form: that is to say, to the form of gasoline, in which it has been sold.”

The above allegations are followed by the statement that the defendant has failed to account to the plaintiff for the one-fourth part of the proceeds of the gasoline produced, and by a prayer for an accounting.

In this case it is unnecessary for us to decide whether casinghead gas is oil or gas, since in their briefs counsel for the respective litigants have assumed that it is gas. The correctness, therefore, of the ruling of the trial court depends upon the interpretation and construction of two clauses in the lease, which are as follows:

“If gas is found in any well or wells on said premises, the party of the first part is to have, upon demand, sufficient gas for domestic purposes free of charge, the remainder with all gas fro-m oil wells to go to the second party.
“If the parties of the second part shall market any gas from any well producing gas, then the party of the first part shall receive therefor at the rate of one-fourth of all the gas so marketed or sold.”

It is the contention of counsel for plaintiff that, if the contract be read as a whole and given a reasonable construction, one that will give effect to every part of it, the first clause must be construed to -mean that the lessor is to have sufficient gas produced on the lease for domestic purposes, free of charge, and that the lessee is to have the remainder, with all gas from oil wells that is used on the premises, and that under the second -clause, lessee is to pay for all gas marketed from any and all wells on the premises.

It is the contention of counsel for defendant that a proper construction of the two clauses of the. lease would give the plaintiff no interest in the gas produced from an oil well, and that under the terms of the lease casinghead gas produced from igas taken from an oil well was free from royalty. We agree with counsel for defendant that, if the first provision stood alone, the only right the plaintiff would have to the gas produced from the land in controversy, whether from oil wells or gas wells, would be upon demand to have sufficient gas for domestic purposes, free of charge, and that he would not be -entitled to a royalty from gas produced from an oil well. But the provision does rot stand alone, and must be construed as affected or modified by the -clause immediately following, providing, if the lessee “shall market any gas from any well producing gas that the lessor should receive therefor at the rate of one-fourth of all the gas so marketed or sold.” (Emphasis ours.) These two clauses 'must -be construed together, as It is evident that the parties did not express all of their agreement in either clause. Union Trust Co. v. Shelby Downard Asphalt Co., 55 Okla. 251, 156 Pac. 903; Kansas City Bridge Co. v. Lindsay Bridge Co., 32 Okla. 31, 121 Pac. 639.

In arriving at their meaning, we must bear in mind that the primary object of all *140 rules of interpretation and construction is to arrive at and to give effect to the mutual intent of tlie parties, as expressed in the contract, and tbat, where a contract is ambiguous, the true intention of the parties, if it can be ascertained from the contract, prevails over verbal inaccuracies, inapt expressions, and the dry words of the stipulation. We must -also bear in mind that it is the duty ®f the court to place itself, as far as possible, in the position of the parties at tire time the contract was entered into-; then to consider the instrument itself as drawn, its purposes and the circumstances surrounding- the transaction, and, from a consideration of all these elements, to determine upon what sense -or meaning of the .terms used their minds actually. met. Kansas City Bridge Co. v. Lindsay Bridge Co., supra; Union Trust Co. v. Shelby Downard Asphalt Co., supra; Lamont Gas & Oil Co. v. Doop & Frater, 39 Okla. 427, 135 Pac. 392; Nelson v. Reynolds at al., 59 Okla. 168, 158 Pac. 301; Brown et al. v. Coppadge et al., 54 Okla. 88, 153 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
1918 OK 236, 172 P. 634, 68 Okla. 138, 1918 Okla. LEXIS 316, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/withington-v-gypsy-oil-co-okla-1918.