163 Ind. 141 | Ind. | 1904
-Appellee instituted tills action on March 20, 1902. The complaint consists of two paragraphs, the first being the statutory form to quiet title to certain described real estate, containing in all fifty-four acres, situate in Madison county, Indiana. By the second paragraph it is sought to have declared null and void a certain written contract or lease relating to the same premises. This contract, it is alleged, was executed by appellee amj her husband to appellant on the 3d day of March, 1897, and recorded in the recorder’s office of said county, and that thereby she granted to appellant the right to enter upon the real estate described for the purpose of drilling gas and oil wells thereon. A copy of this instrument is filed as an exhibit with the second paragraph. Appellant unsuccessfully demurred to each paragraph of the complaint, and thereafter filed an answer to each of them. ' In each paragraph of the answer it embodied and set out the same lease, or contract, which appellee had filed as an exhibit with the second paragraph of the complaint.
The introductory part of the instrument in question is as follows: “This agreement made and entered into this 3d day of March, A. D. 1897, by and between James R. Worth and Elizabeth Worth, of the county of Madison, State of Indiana, of the first part, and the Consumers Gas Trust Company of Indianapolis, Indiana, party of the second part, w'itnesseth,” etc. The terms and provisions thereof may be summarized as follows: A grant of the lands in question by appellee and her husband to appellant, with the exclusive right of drilling and operating for petroleum and gas, and transporting such products through and over said lands, including also a grant of 'the following rights: To lay, maintain, and operate its main pipe-lines and other lines of pipe and telephone, in its discretion, as
Aside from the contract in question, the first paragraph of the answer alleges: (a) That, pursuant to said contract, on the 3d day of March, 1897, the defendant paid to the plaintiff $27; being the amount named as the acreage rental mentioned in said contract. On each succeeding 3d day of March until the 3d day of March, 1902, it is alleged that a payment of a like amount was made by the defendant to plaintiff for the same purpose. On said 3d day of March, 1902, defendant tendered a like sum to plaintiff, which she refused to accept or receive, solely upon the ground that she then and there had the right to terminate the contract in question. On her refusal to accept the money so tendered, the defendant deposited said sum of $27 with the Citizens Bank at Summitville, where it has remained ever since to the credit of the plaintiff, (b) • On the said 3d day of March, 1902, the plaintiff notified the defendant, in writing, that she proposed to terminate the contract at that time, (c) Defendant denies that such contract has ever been terminated as- provided therein, or in any other manner, and denies that said payment of $27 was the sole consideration for the option and right of defendant to drill on said premises for any one year, but avers that said sum was a part of the total consideration for all rights in the property granted by the contract, (d) That the several payments were made by defendant and accepted by plaintiff in full satisfaction for delay in drilling wells
The second paragraph of the answer, which is addressed to the second paragraph of the complaint, is substantially the same as the first paragraph. Each paragraph of the answer may he said to constitute a partial answer to the complaint, and thereon appellant bases or limits its cause of defense to the contract therein contained so as to conform to the holding in Messick v. Midland R. Co. (1890), 128 Ind. 81. A demurrer was sustained to each paragraph of the answer, and upon appellant declining further to plead, the court rendered judgment quieting appellee’s title to the real estate in dispute, and declaring the contract referred to in the second paragraph of the complaint, and set up in appellant’s answer, to be null and void.
Counsel for appellant contend that the court erred in holding the second paragraph of complaint sufficient on demurrer, and in sustaining the demurrer to each paragraph of answer. It is insisted by counsel for appellant that the second paragraph of complaint is had. We, however,' pass this question, and consider the point presented by the facts averred and set out in the answer. The written contract or instrument in controversy herein is substantially of the
The contract in question can not be regarded as merely awarding a mere license to appellant which may be terminated at the end of any year at the will of either of the parties, but, as its terms purport,- it is a grant upon a good consideration by the appellee and her husband to appellant for a limited purpose, viz., the exclusive right of drilling or sinking wells upon the premises described, and operating thereon for petr'oleum and gas, and transporting such products over and through said tract of .land, together with the right to lay, maintain, and operate its main pipeline, or other lines of pipe and telephone, as in the judgment of appellant may become necessary and proper; also the right to excavate for water, and to use the same to operate the necessary engines in conducting said business; the right of way over said premises, and the right to erect, maintain, and operate such buildings and machinery upon said lands as may be necessary to the full enjoyment of all the rights granted -to appellant.
The instrument in controversy grants to appellant the right to “have and hold the premises for the said purposes only during the full term of six months from the date thereof, and as much longer as gas or oil shall be found in such quantities, as to justify marketing the same, in the judgment of appellant, or the sums agreed to be paid herein are kept paid.” By its express terms, appellant is obligated to pay to appellee, as compensation, fifty cents per acre in advance each year, for said lands, until the completion of
It is evident that the contracting parties contemplated that the first well to be drilled by appellant on the premises was to be a “test well.” By this well it appears the question as to whether gas or petroleum existed under said lands in sufficient quantities to warrant the marketing thereof Was to be tested or determined. If the test well failed to 'disclose the presence of gas or oil in quantities sufficient to justify appellant in marketing such product, then and in that event it would appear that the parties by the contract intended that appellant should not be required to proceed to explore further by drilling additional wells on the land. ISTo time is expressly prescribed when this well is to be completed, but, until the completion thereof, appellant^ under the express terms of the contract, was bound and obligated to pay to appellee each year in advance, for its delay, the stipulated price of fifty cents per acre, or a total of $27 for the fifty-four acres of land. The answer discloses that appellant on March 3, 1897, the date upon which the contract was executed, paid $27 to appellee, and paid a like sum to her on the 3d day of March of each succeeding year until March 3, 1902. On this last date a like amount was tendered, but appellee declined to receive or accept it, for the sole reason that she asserted the right’' at that time to terminate the contract. It is alleged that on said 3d day of March, 1902, she gave appellant notice that she proposed to terminate the contract on that day, and on the 20th day of the same month she commenced this action.
That the facts, as alleged and set out in the answer, are sufficient to defeat appellee from quieting her title to the
The payment by appellant to- appellee in advance of a stipulated price for each year of its delay in exploring or developing the land for gas or oil w'as a matter about which the parties had a right to agree and regulate by their contract. Ray v. Western, etc., Gas Co. (1891), 138 Pa. St. 576, 20 Atl. 1065, 21 Am. St. 922, 12 L. R. A. 290.
Upon the refusal by appellee to receive the money on March 3, 1902, she, instead of notifying appellant to proceed to operate under the contract, upon the contrary notified it that the same was terminated. She seems to have assumed that by reason of appellant’s delay to develop the
As said in Island Coal Co. v. Combs, supra: “What may be regarded as a reasonable time depends, however, upon the circumstances of the particular case.” By accepting the money on March 3, 1897, and from year to year thereafter, appellee must be deemed to have consented to appellant’s delay or default in beginning to operate under the contract. Therefore, under the facts as shown, she occupied the same position on March 3, 1902, as she would have occupied had she refused to accept payment of -the money on March 3, 1897.
For the error of the court in sustaining the demurrer to the answer, the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded with instructions to the lower court to overrule the demurrer to each paragraph of the answer, and for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.