147 Pa. 173 | Pa. | 1892
Opinion by
This action is, in legal effect, a bill for specific execution. Unless the plaintiff presents a case upon which he would be entitled to a decree in equity, he is not entitled to a verdict. The facts are, that, in December, 1889, Schuler, in an agreement in writing, known as an oil lease, granted all the oil and gas in thirty acres off one side of his farm to Childs, giving him an exclusive right to operate upon the surface. The land was to be divided into three parts, containing ten acres each. A well was to be put down upon one of these subdivisions within six months; another within twelve months ; upon the third, within eighteen months from the date of the agreement.
If the terms can be agreed upon, within six months after the first well is completed and proves to be a paying one, then Childs may become a vendee, or lessee, as the case may be, by complying with them. It is quite clear, that this is not an option in the ordinary sense of the word. It does hot offer the forty acres to Childs upon terms of purchase, or of lease on royalty, that he may accept within a time limited, and so become, by virtue of such acceptance, a purchaser or lessee. It does not fall within the rule laid down in Corson v. Mulvany, 49 Pa. 88, and Napier et al v. Darlington, 70 Pa. 64.
The plaintiff contends, however, that it has been supplemented by a letter and telegram, by which Schuler has waived the completion of the first well, and determined his election whether to sell or lease, and named definite terms upon which he would lease at once. He alleges that these terms have been accepted by him, and that he is, by reason of such acceptance, a lessee of the land, and entitled to possession of the same.
The facts are admitted to be as follows: On April 5, 1890,
Treating this as Mr. Childs treated it, our question is, whether this is an acceptance such as binds Schuler.
The telegram stated the terms offered, and said: “ Answer immediately.” Mr. Childs chose not to answer immediately, and not to answer at all in the way or by the means of communication, which he knew he was expected to employ.
The hours passed, the parties were waiting, and, as Childs did not accept, Schuler made the lease to others. On the ninth, with full knowledge of all that had transpired meantime, the formal acceptance and tender were made. This acceptance came too late; Childs should have replied on the seventh, as the terms of the offer required. The offer was not an open, indefinite one, but definite in all its terms.
He had no more right to modify it as to the time within
If the offer was not accepted with reasonable dispatch after its receipt, it imposed no obligations whatever upon Schuler. If he accepted the offer to which he referred in his telegram, •or withdrew the land altogether from the market, Childs could not complain; but would have been left to stand as he would have stood if no telegram had been sent him, upon the terms ■of his contract as originally made. Not having accepted the terms offered him within the time required, he has no contract resting on the telegram. He has therefore no contract which can be specifically enforced at this time. The judgment is ■affirmed.