171 S.W.2d 321 | Tex. | 1943
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit involves the construction of an oil and gas mining contract. The material question to be determined is whether^ or not certain royalty or mineral payments provided for therein were to be based on the value of the crude gas mined from the premises, or its value after the gas had been processed and manufactured into other products.
“Said Assignor hereby retains as a part of the consideration for this assignment and shall be entitled to receive one twenty fourth (l/24th) of all the oil, gas, casinghead gas, and other minerals produced, saved and marketed at the prevailing market price paid by major companies in the Gulf Coastal area from the properties above described free and clear of operating expenses if, as and when produced, saved and marketed, until it shall have received the sum of One Million ($1,000,000) Dollars, it being understood, however, that said payment does not constitute a personal obligation of the Assignee and does not increase the drilling- obligation upon said leasehold property, but shall constitute a lien thereon.”
A similar reservation clause contained in the contract read as follows:
“One Million ($1,000,000) Dollars payable out of one twenty-fourth (l/24th) of all the oil, gas, casinghead gas, and other minerals, if, as and when produced, saved and marketed at prevailing market prices paid by major companies in Gulf Coast area, from said properties. It is understood and agreed that this
At the time the assignment was made and the contract entered into, it was then known that the wells that had been drilled produced only “sweet gas,” but Hamill was of the opinion that they could be converted into oil wells. There was -no market in the vicinity at that time for “sweet gas.” The parties knew this. Danciger, through one of its subsidaries, was then engaged in the erection of a very expensive absorption or distillation plant on the leased premises for the purpose of separating the gas produced from the premises into its component parts. Hamill was unaware that the plant was being erected by a subsidiary corporation, but thought it was being built by Danciger. The raw or crude gas produced from the premises is now being run through the absorption or distillation plant, where it is separated, at considerable expense, into the following components: Gasoline, gas-oil, distillate, kerosene, butane, propane, and residue-gas.
Hamill sued Danciger for an accounting. It is Hamill’s contention that it is entitled to be paid one-twenty-fourth of the gross receipts of all products manufactured from the gas produced on the premises, without any deduction for the cost of processing the gas into gasoline and other products. It is Danciger’s contention that it is liable only for one-twenty-fourth of the value of the crude gas as produced. The judgment of the trial court was in favor of Hamill, and that judgment was affirmed by the Court of Civil Appeals.
After a most careful consideration, we have concluded that the trial' court and the Court of Civil Appeals were in error. Since the formal assignment and the contract were executed simultaneously, they must be construed as á single instrument. The assignment provides that the payments shall be made out of “one twenty fourth (l/2ith) of all the oil, gas, casinghead gas, and other minerals produced, saved and marketed at the prevailing market price paid by major companies in the Gulf Coastal area from the properties.” The contract provides that such payments shall be made “out of one twenty-fourth (l/24.th) of all oil, gas, casinghead gas and other minerals, if, as and token produced, saved and marketed at the prevailing market prices paid by major companies in the Gulf Coast area, from
Our holding on this question is' strengthened by the fact that the contract provides that the payments shall be made out of “oil, gas,” etc., yet it is conceded by Hamill that it would not be necessary for Danciger to refine the oil into other products as its expense in order to comply with the contract. But the same language is used with reference to gas as is used with reference to oil and other products. Which of the products must be refined, and which need not be refined ? If Danciger' was not required by the contract to rpfine the oil so produced, by that provision thereof is it required to refine any of the other products named therein ? Moreover, if some -of the products are to be refined, to what fineness are they to be refined? See Lone Star Gas Co. v. Stine (Com. App.), 41 S. W. (2d) 48, 49.
Hamill contends that since it was provided in the contract that the gas was to be paid for at the “prevailing market prices paid by major companies in the Gulf Coast area,” and since the parties knew at the time the contract was made that there was no market in that vicinity for gas such as was being produced from the lease, we should hold, in the light of these “surrounding circumstances,” that the parties contemplated that Danciger should, at its own expense, manufacture the gas into some product that would be marketable in that vicinity. We are not in accord with this view. It is not infrequent that contracts of this kind are entered into in new fields before a market has- been established for the products named. They are entered into in contemplation that a market will be created when the supply of goods justifies it. The mere fact that there was then no market in that vicinity for the product then being produced from the lease, is not alone sufficient to justify us in overturning the plain, certain, and unambiguous terms of the contract. In order for us to sustain Hamill’s contention it would be necessary for us to write into the contract terms that are not only not embodied therein, but that would be contrary to and in conflict with the terms used herein. Hamill’s contention in this respect is overruled.
This requires a reversal of the judgments of the Court of Civil Appeals and the trial court. If there is no market in the stipulated area for the crude gas as produced, Danciger is liable for the fair and reasonable value thereof. It does not appear that the case has been fully developed as to the reasonable value of
The judgments of the trial court and the Court of Civil Appeals are reversed, and the cause is remanded for a new trial.
Opinion delivered May 5, 1943.
Rehearing overruled June 2", 1943.