108 P.2d 784 | Okla. | 1940
Plaintiffs, F.P. Hill and Bessie Hill, brought this action against defendant, Black Gold Petroleum Company, to recover damages for breach of *330 contract. The case was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, and judgment was for plaintiffs. Defendant appeals.
The pleadings of the parties, and the contract sued on, are set out in Hill et al. v. Black Gold Petroleum Co.,
"It is understood and agreed that after said well has been drilled that we will leave your premises in the same condition as at the present time save and except the foregoing and subject to reasonable use thereof in moving in and moving out drilling machinery and equipment."
After the well was completed, certain structures necessary to enable defendant to produce the oil were placed upon plaintiffs' premises.
The defendant contends that the word "drilled" was by mistake used instead of the word "abandoned." The evidence is in sharp conflict on this question. The defendant urges the defense of mistake, among other defenses, but it is our view that the defense of lack of consideration is decisive, and we will confine our discussion to that question.
The oil and gas lease executed by plaintiffs recited that the lessors, for the consideration therein stated, and the covenants and agreements therein contained, "have this day granted and leased and hereby grant, lease and let unto the lessee for the purpose of mining and operating for, and producing oil, gas and casinghead gas and gasoline from the hereinafter described premises and the sole and exclusive right to use the same for the purpose of mining, drilling and operating for, and producing oil and gas, casinghead gas and gasoline, laying pipe lines, building tanks, storing oil, building towers, rigs, derricks, slush pits, operating boilers, engines, stations, telephone lines and other structures and appliances to produce, save, take care of and manufacture any and/or all of such substances and for housing and boarding employees. * * *" Under the lease the defendant acquired the right to use such portion of plaintiffs' lot as was reasonably necessary to perform the obligations of the lease. Marland Oil Co. v. Hubbard,
The contention of plaintiffs, which was sustained by the trial court, is that by the paragraph above quoted defendant promised to relinquish upon the completion of the well this valuable right as to plaintiffs' property, which rendered it necessary for defendant to purchase such right over again by paying rental for the portion of plaintiffs' lot necessarily used in the operation of the well, and paying such additional damage as might be sustained by plaintiffs by such use, in order to properly operate the well. This the judgment required defendant to do. If this contention is correct, and the paragraph was not written as the result of a mistake, but represented the agreement between the parties, certainly there must have been some advantage to defendant, or prejudice to some valuable right of plaintiffs, to sustain an agreement so injurious to defendant. But the evidence conclusively negatives any such advantage to defendant or prejudice to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs do not contend that the taking and use of their land by defendant is not necessary to enable defendant to properly operate the well and save the oil and gas produced, or that the operations were negligently carried on. There is no evidence that such use is unnecessary, but all the evidence indicates that the use is necessary, and plaintiffs' petition recognizes this fact. Therefore, a contract or agreement to surrender this right and remove from plaintiffs' lot its necessary equipment must be supported by a consideration to make it enforceable by plaintiffs. Smith v. Minneapolis Threshing Mach. Co.,
Consideration is an essential element of a valid contract. Section 9390, O. S. 1931, 15 O.S.A. § 2; Kinch v. Cole,
While the writing imported consideration, and the burden was upon defendant to show the want or absence thereof, the evidence conclusively establishes that the promise, if not due to the error of defendant's attorney, was wholly gratuitous and unilateral, and therefore it was unenforceable.
Reversed, with directions to enter judgment for the defendant.
BAYLESS, C. J., and RILEY, OSBORN, GIBSON, and DAVISON, JJ., concur. WELCH, V.C.J., and CORN and DANNER, JJ., absent.