Wohnhas v. Shepherd

119 N.E.2d 861, 67 Ohio Law. Abs. 562, 54 Ohio Op. 436, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1352, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 406
CourtMonroe County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMarch 15, 1954
DocketNo. 14950
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 119 N.E.2d 861 (Wohnhas v. Shepherd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Monroe County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wohnhas v. Shepherd, 119 N.E.2d 861, 67 Ohio Law. Abs. 562, 54 Ohio Op. 436, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1352, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 406 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

[563]*563OPINION

By BELT, J.:

This is an action brought by the plaintiffs to quiet title to certain real estates in Green Township, Monroe County. The petition alleges, in substance, that plaintiffs executed and delivered to defendant, Harry J. lies, their certain oil and gas lease on the premises described in the petition under date of May 31,1950, which lease was duly recorded. The lease provides, in substance, that it was to continue for five years and so much longer thereafter as oil or gas are produced in paying quantities. Said lease further provides that the lessee is to commence a well on said premises within three months from the date of said lease or pay to the lessor $37.50 per quarter thereafter until such well is drilled or the lease surrendered. The lease further provides that upon payment to the lessor of $1.00 and all amounts due thereunder, the lessee shall have the right to surrender the lease by written notice or by returning the lease to the lessor. There is no forfeiture clause therein.

Harry J. lies is the President and General Manager of defendant, the St. Clair Oil Company, and owns the controlling stock therein, and said lease was taken in his name for the benefit of said corporation.

On or about the 17th day of August, 1952, plaintiffs executed and delivered an oil and gas lease on the same real estate to one, James W. Sachs, which lease was thereafter canceled and surrendered by the said James W. Sachs on or about the 4th day of August, 1953. On the 5th day of August, 1953, plaintiffs executed and delivered an oil and gas lease on said premises to defendant, Charles W. Lynch. All of said leases are recorded and in evidence and will be hereafter referred to.

Defendants, Harry J. lies and the said St. Clair Oil Company, assigned all their right, title and interest in said lease to defendant, A. C. Shepherd, on or about the 12th day of August, 1953, which assignment is in evidence in this case. The said A. C. Shepherd claims that the original lease is a valid and subsisting lease, and the said defendant, Charles W. Lynch, claims that his lease is the only valid and subsisting lease on said premises.

The evidence shows that following the execution and delivery of the lease to the defendant lies, the defendant lies or the St. Clair Oil Company made a location on a farm in [564]*564the block of leases owned by him, which included plaintiffs’ lands, and drilled a well; that the well was non-productive and in the latter part of 1951, not later than February, 1952, St. Clair Oil Company removed its rights and tools from the location on said block of leases in Green Township to the Northern part of Monroe County in the Beallsville district and at the same time ceased paying rentals on the Wohnhas lease and the other leases in that territory; that said company actually canceled and surrendered some of the leases in the block in question, at which time there were past due rentals on the leases canceled. The Wohnhas lease and the other leases in the block referred to, of which the Wohnhas lease was a part, was of a different form from that which Mr. lies and St. Clair Oil Company had formerly used; (their leases having a forfeiture clause therein) and Mr. lies believed and so testified that he supposed the leases were automatically canceled when he failed to pay the rentals called for in said leases at the time they became due and payable. Prior to defendant Shephard taking the assignment from the St. Clair Oil Company, he attempted to secure a lease on plaintiffs’ property from plaintiffs but failing so to do, he suggested to Mr. lies that the Wohnhas lease was valid and Mr. lies was liable for the unpaid rental. Mr. lies thereupon consulted legal counsel and found that there was liability for unpaid rentals, whereupon he sold and assigned his interest in the Wohnhas lease to defendant Shephard.

There is no forfeiture clause in the lease in question and therefore the mere non-payment of rental is not sufficient to warrant a court in decreeing a forfeiture. In fact, under the circumstances as presented by the evidence in this case, unless Mr. lies and the St. Clair Oil Company abandoned this lease, warranting a cancellation thereof for that reason, plaintiffs are not entitled to relief in this proceeding. This presents an inquiry as to the status of the law on the subject of abandonment. Counsel for defendant lies, St. Clair Oil Company and A. C. Shepherd have cited a number of cases to the court, which have little or no bearing on the question presented.

Summers on Oil and Gas, Permanent Edition, Volume 2 at page 454 and the following pages, Section 440 and the following sections, deals with this subject in a very elaborate way. The subject is also discussed under the title of Abandonment in Volume 1, O. Jur., Page 4, Section 4; also Volume 1, Corpus Juris, Section 11, in which is found the following language:

“Upon a question of abandonment, as upon a question of fraud, a wide range should be allowed as to the evidence, for [565]*565it is generally only from facts and circumstances that the truth is to be discovered and both parties should be allowed to prove any fact or circumstances from which any aid for the solution of the question can be derived.”
“Where an oil lease required payment of rentals in advance to continue the-lease if a well was not completed within the time fixed, but contained no provision forfeiting the lease for nonpayment on the due date, a delay of a few days only in tendering payment does not terminate the lease, though the lessor may sue lessee for the rentals.” A Kentucky Case, 247 S. W.. 753.
“An oil and gas lease binding the lessee to drill a well on the leased premises within a certain period or in lieu thereof make periodical payments of rental or delay money, and containing no clause of forfeiture, is not forfeited merely by non-payment of the rental. It can be terminated only by surrender, abandonment, or expiration of the term.” Reserve Gas Co. v. Carbon Black Mfg. Co., 72 W. Va., 757; 79 S. E. 1002.

In the case of Pure Oil Company v. Sturn, 43 Oh Ap 105, Judge Roberts of the 7th District Court of Appeals quotes with approval from the case of Orr v. The Pure Oil Company, a Licking County case, as follows:

“A mere delay for the matter of thirty days, when it is explained by circumstances such as are sought to be set up in this answer, the court does not think it would be an equitable rule to declare a forfeiture of the lease under those circumstances. If the nonpayment had continued for such a length of time through the negligence or delay of the defendant company to pay this rental in justice and equity the court ought to declare it forfeited.”

In the case of Martin v. Consolidated Coal & Oil Corp., a W. Va. case, reported in 133 S. E. 626, the rules are stated as follows:

“The general rule as to oil and gas leases is that such contracts will generally be liberally construed in favor of the lessor, and strictly as against the lessee. In case of failure to begin operations or pay delay money as provided in an oil and gas lease, recovery of the delay money is not the only remedy of lessor, where the lease contains a clause giving lessee the right to surrender the lease at any time on making a nominal payment.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 N.E.2d 861, 67 Ohio Law. Abs. 562, 54 Ohio Op. 436, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1352, 1954 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 406, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wohnhas-v-shepherd-ohctcomplmonroe-1954.