Zephyr Oil Co. v. Cockburn

215 S.W.2d 647, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1247
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 21, 1948
DocketNo. 12004.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 215 S.W.2d 647 (Zephyr Oil Co. v. Cockburn) 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
Zephyr Oil Co. v. Cockburn, 215 S.W.2d 647, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1247 (Tex. Ct. App. 1948).

Opinions

This suit was brought by appellant, a corporate oil well driller, against appellee, an oil operator, to recover a balance alleged to be due for the drilling two wells in exploring for oil and gas in Falls County. By cross-action, appellee sought to recover amounts which he alleged he advanced to appellant during the operations, and which he alleged appellant agreed to repay. The wells were known as Gilliam No. 1, and Buie No. 1. They were completed as dry holes.

Appellee entered into a written contract with an officer of appellant by the terms of which said officer personally bound himself to drill the Gilliam well for the consideration of $50,000.00 in money, and a third of the oil well and the oil rights of appellee in the tract on which the well was to be drilled, and for an additional consideration of certain oil leases. With the consent of appellee, this contract was assigned to appellant. After the Gilliam well was abandoned, the parties entered into a written contract by which appellant was obligated to drill the Buie well for a money consideration of $30,000.00, and the terms of the contract were otherwise very similar if not identical with the terms of the first contract.

In its suit appellant sought an accounting and an appropriate recovery on the following items:

(1) $12,257.00, the cost of fishing a sidewall sampling gun belonging to the Schlumberger Well Surveying Corporation out of the Gilliam well.

(2) $6,500.00 alleged to be two-thirds of the cost of the extra testing of the Gilliam well, which it was alleged that appellee orally agreed to pay.

(3) Appellant alleged that appellee was liable for two-thirds of the sum of $20,282.50, which appellee paid for material and equipment in the completion of the Gilliam well.

(4) $7,815.10, the cost of extra work done by appellant upon the Buie well which it was alleged that appellee had orally agreed to pay.

Appellant's petition concludes: "Because of the foregoing written contracts and oral agreements and the other facts hereinabove alleged, defendant H. C. Cockburn is obligated to pay to plaintiff Zephyer Oil Company the sum of $15,070.96 in connection with the drilling of Gilliam No. 1 well and the sum of $7,815.10 in connection with the drilling of Buie No. 1 well", making a total of $22,886.06, for which appellant sued. Appellant sought to recover the entire cost of the fishing job. It was not disputed that appellee had not paid the last $2,500.00 of the $50,000.00 cash consideration.

Appellee urged various motions for a directed verdict. Both sides urged objections to the charge as given, which submitted the case upon 45 special issues, and both sides urged the submission of specially requested special issues. Upon the coming in of the verdict, appellant filed a motion to set aside certain of the jury's findings and for judgment upon certain of the findings notwithstanding other findings, and in said motion requested the court to make certain additional findings. Appellee also urged that certain of the findings of the jury be disregarded and asked that judgment be rendered for him upon certain other findings. *Page 649

The court granted in part and refused in part the aforesaid motions, and rendered judgment:

(a) For appellant in the sum of $16,815.10; and

(b) For appellee in the sum of $16,925.42.

The sum, so adjudged that appellant was entitled to, was made up of these items:

The cost of the extra testing in the Gilliam well (jury's answers to special issues 18, 19, 20), $6,500.00;

The extra cost on the Buie well (jury's answers to special issues 24, 25, 26, 27, 40, 41), $7,815.10:

Unpaid balance of $50,000.00 ........................ $2,500.00

Total $16,815.10

The sum of $16,925.42, which the court awarded appellee, was made up as follows: It was not disputed that appellee had paid the sum of $20,282.50 for material and extra work done on the Gilliam well. Of this sum appellee paid McCullough Tool Company for testing, $5,431.03. Of the said sum of $5,431.03, it was undisputed that $395.40 was the exclusive obligation of appellant. Two-thirds of the balance after $395.40 was deducted from $5,431.03, or $3,357.08, was found to be appellee's obligation. The sum of $20,282.50 paid out by appellee on the Gilliam well (other than cash payments out of the $50,000.00 cash consideration), less the sum of $3,357.08, amounts to the sum awarded to appellee, $16,925.42.

The court by judgment awarded execution to the appellee for the sum of $110.32, being the excess of the sum awarded appellee over the sum awarded appellant. Costs were taxed equally against both parties. Both parties excepted to the judgment, but only appellant filed a motion for new trial, and appealed.

Appellant prosecutes this appeal upon 13 points, being substantially as follows:

1. The court should have awarded the cost of the fishing job in the Gilliam well to appellant, and not to appellee.

2. The court should have adjudged two-thirds of the cost of casing, tubing, cement and cementing the Gilliam well to appellant.

Appellant's points 2 to 13, inclusive, relate to procedural matters, such as the court's declining to re-open the evidence after the parties closed; the court's refusal to give certain special issues; the complaint that the answers of the jury to certain special issues rendered the verdict so fatally defective that no judgment could be rendered thereon; the court's refusal to admit certain evidence; the court's exclusion of certain evidence; and the giving of special issue No. 37 is asserted to have been reversible error. These procedural points will be discussed after we dispose of the first two points.

In order to understand the first point, which we overrule, it is necessary to make a detailed statement.

Paragraphs 3 and 4 of the contract covering the Gilliam read in part as follows:

Paragraph 3. "In the drilling of said well, the Second Party (appellant) shall at his own expense take such cores and make such drill stem tests as in his judgment are deemed advisable, and is to stand by, at his own expense, while the Schlumberger is being run. (It is now contemplated running the electric at 3000 feet, 6000 feet and on completion). All Schlumberger expense is to be paid by the First Party. The Second Party shall at his own expense furnish all equipment, including derrick, bits, fuel, labor, insurance, hauling and everything in connection with the drilling of the well under this agreement. * * *" (Emphasis supplied).

Paragraph 4. "Second Party shall drill said well as an independent contractor, and as such, except as herein provided shall save and hold First Party harmless from all expenses and liability incurred in the performance of this contract. * * *"

The Schlumberger electric logging device, which is a device for taking pictures, was run in the Gilliam well by the Schlumberger Well Surveying Corporation on two separate occasions and at two successive depths without incident prior to February 6, 1945. On that day a depth of 6852 feet was reached, and a crew of the Schlumberger Company was summoned to take another electric. Appellant "stood by" for this operation to be made; its tools were *Page 650 withdrawn. The Schlumberger made the electric without incident, and the film was developed in a few minutes. It was then decided to have the Schlumberger take sidewall samples. For the purpose of passing on this point, the facts will be taken as evidencing the disapproval by appellant of having the Schlumberger take sidewall samples on the ground that there was too much danger of the sampling gun getting stuck in the hole.

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Bluebook (online)
215 S.W.2d 647, 1948 Tex. App. LEXIS 1247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zephyr-oil-co-v-cockburn-texapp-1948.