Opinion by
In this case we are again called upon to interpret an oil and gas “lease” containing the traditional “in paying quantities” habendum clause.
The “lease” in question was executed in 1927 and contained the following provisions: “Witnesseth: That the Grantors, in consideration of the sum of one
At the expiration of the primary twenty-year period in July, 1947, there was a well on the property but it was not equipped for production until some months later. From 1947 until 1953 the
grantor
pumped oil and gas for his own purposes, but at no time did the
grantee
produce any gas or oil. In 1952 appellees Robert and Joanne Haight acquired the grantor’s reversionary interest with knowledge of the grantee’s right to drill for oil and gas. One year later appellant Cecil Brown acquired the grantee’s right to produce oil and gas. When Brown informed the Haights that he intended to purchase the oil and gas rights, they voiced no objections. Brown produced oil and gas on the property from 1953 until 1967; during this time, the Haights accepted the stipulated royalty payments for the oil and gas produced. In April of 1967 the Haights leased the gas and oil rights to appellee Albert Beaver and thereafter refused to allow Brown to enter upon the premises to operate the well. Brown then instituted an action in equity seeking to enjoin Beaver from drilling on the land and asking that the land be restored to him with a declaration that his rights in the oil and gas were still in effect. The chancellor denied the requested relief, holding that since gas and oil had not been produced in paying
The traditional oil and gas “lease” is far from the simplest of property concepts. In the case law oil and gas “leases” have been described as anything from licenses to grants in fee. The document now before us is somewhat unusual in that it appears to grant in fee not only the gas and oil below the surface but also the surface of the land itself. In pertinent part the “lease” states that the “Grantors ... do hereby grant and convey unto the grantee, all the oil and gas in and under the following described tract of land, and also all the said tract of land....” (Emphasis added) Nowhere in the document do the words “lease,” “lessor” or “lessee” appear. In fact, the parties are in agreement that the document in question is a grant in fee and not a lease, but they differ as to what type of fee simple estate was created by the deed.
The appellant argues that under the deed the grantee was granted a fee interest in the gas and oil produced and in the land where the wells were drilled subject to the grantor’s right of entry at such time as the grantee ceased to produce oil and gas “in paying quantities.” From this the appellant argues that since the grantor retained only a right of entry, he could regain the property only through legal action or by actual entry upon the land. The appellees, on the other hand, argue that appellant’s interest in the oil and gas and the land was a fee simple determinable which would revert automatically to the grantor when the grantee ceased producing oil and gas in paying quantities. The appellees maintain that they had the right to terminate the deed at will any time after the condition occurred.
The fee simple grant of the oil and gas produced and of the land is qualified by the habendum clause which states: “To have and to hold the said lands and rights unto the Grantee for the term of twenty years
The next step in the appellees’ argument is that at such time as the condition became applicable and the deed thereby terminated automatically, the appellant remained on the property under a tenancy at will. For this proposition the appellees rely on
White v. Young,
The appellant has cited several cases which he claims lend support to his position that he possessed a fee simple subject to a condition subsequent.
Duquesne Natural Gas Co. v. Fefolt,
Appellant’s final argument is that the appellees should be estopped from cancelling the lease because of their actions when the appellant informed them that he intended to purchase the right to the oil and gas. The chancellor found as a fact that when the appellant told Haight of his intentions, “Haight did not dispute the title of the [appellant] hereto, and did not inform him of objection to [appellant’s] operation of the well. . . .” The appellant’s testimony would indicate that Haight said little if anything in response to his statement of his intentions. As a general rule mere silence is not a ground for estoppel unless there is a duty to speak. Here there was no duty to speak; the appellant was well aware of the Haights’ rights in the
Decree affirmed. Appellant to pay costs.
Notes
See, e.g.: Restatement, Property, §44 (1936); Moynihan, Introduction to the Law of Real Property, at 99 (1962).
One state which seems generally to interpret oil ' and gas leases as fee simple determinable grants is Texas.
See, e.g.:
Duke v. Sun Oil Co.,
See,
e.g.:
Miller v. Kellerman, 228 P. Supp. 446 (W.D. La. 1964) ; Hastings v. Pichinson,
