(after stating the facts). Appellant seeks to defeat the claim of the Natural Gas & Petroleum Corporation on the ground that the gas furnished and used in drilling the oil wells in question was sold to the Center Oil Company on general account, and that the credit was given wholly to the contractor without reference to the use which was to he made of the materials. Hence it is claimed that there is no lien under the statute in favor of the Natural Gas & Petroleum Corporation. The evidence shows that the Natural Gas & Petroleum Corporation had pipe lines near where the Center Oil Company was drilling its oil wells. Without any contract, the Center Oil Company made connection with the main line of the gas corporation and used its gas in drilling its oil wells. Under this state of facts there was an implied contract on the part of the Center Oil Company to pay the Natural Gas & Petroleum Corporation for its gas which was used in drilling and operating said oil wells. It is true that the foundation of the right to secure a lien for labor performed or material furnished must be a contract with the owner of the land upon which the lien is sought to he enforced, and, if there does not exist such a contract, express or implied, the person claiming it must fail. Thornton’s Law of Oil and Gas, 4th ed. vol. 1, § 371. This holding is in accord with our construction of our materialman’s lien statute. In Burel v. East Arkansas Lumber Co.,
In the case at bar the lien is given by § 1 of act 615 of the Acts of 1923. General Acts of 1923, p. 500. The section provides, in effect, that any person who shall, under contract, express or implied, with the owner or lessee of any gas, oil or mineral lease in land, perform labor or furnish materials or supplies used'in digging, drilling and operating any oil or gas well, shall have a. lien on the whole of such leasehold interest in said land.
As we have already seen, when the lessee of the oil lease made the connection with the mains of-the gas corporation and used its gas in drilling its oil wells, there was an implied contract to pay for the gas, and this gave the gas corporation a lien upon the lease under the provisions of the statute above referred to. In no sense of the word could it be said that the gas corporation furnished the gas on general account and extended credit to the owner of the leasehold without reference to the use which was to. he made of the gas. There being an implied contract to pay for the gas, and there being no general credit extended to the owner of the lease, fhe provisions of the statute apply, and its provisions fit the facts exactly.
It is next insisted that the language of the statute does not give the -materialman a lien for gas used in operating the oil drill. In making this contention they refer to the language of the statute which .gives a lien to any person or corporation who shall “furnish fuel material. ’ ’ They contend that it was the legislative intention to give a lien to persons who furnish coal, wood or oil for fuel purposes. We cannot agree with counsel in this contention. It is perfectly plain to us that gas was intended to constitute “fuel material” just as much as coal, wood or oil which might be used for that purpose.
It is next contended that there is no lien under the statute because there was no separate contract for the oil wells. As we have already seen, the lessee connected with the-gas main of the gas corporation and used its gas in drilling the three wells. There was an implied contract to pay for the gas, and the transaction constituted an entire one. This court, in the construction of our mechanics’ lien statute, says that a lien for materials furnished may be filed against two or more buildings located.on lots which are not contiguous. Burel ,v. East Arkansas Lumber Co.,
In this connection it may be stated that the claim of the Frick-Reid Supply Company was for materials furnished and used in drilling the three oil wells under a single contract, and what we have said above applies with equal force to its claim. The liens of both claimants were filed within the statutorj7 length of time, and we need not consider whether or not they were superior to the liens of the laborers, because the appeal has been prosecuted for the benefit of the appellant- alone, who claims a superior lien by virtue of a mortgage which was assigned to it.
The mortgage given by the Center Oil Company and assigned to the appellant falls squarely within the rule announced in Ferguson Lumber Co. v. Schriber,
The construction we have given this lien statute is in accord with our holding in Pierce Oil Corporation v. Parker,
The result of our views is that the decree of the chancellor was correct, and it will therefore be affirmed.
