272 Pa. 95 | Pa. | 1922
Opinion by
Beginning at least as early as 1907 and lasting until 1920, when this litigation began, the Fidelity Title and
Because much of the property was a continuing expense and not a source of revenue, the trust company, at plaintiffs’ request, entered into negotiations with defendant, resulting .in a lease, dated October 31, 1918, drawn by it, but executed by plaintiffs and defendant personally, whereby plaintiffs “granted, demised, leased and let unto [defendant] his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, all the oil and gas in and under all that certain tract of land, and also said tract of land hereinafter described [being most of the farm, including the part laid out into building lots], with covenants of general warranty that [plaintiffs] had the sole right to convey the premises to [defendant], with the exclusive right of drilling and operating thereon for and
It will be noted that (with an exception not necessary to consider), this is a grant of all the oil and gas in and under the entire tract, including the plan of lots, and is also a lease of the tract itself; and gave to defendant as plenary powers in the use of the land, and the ownership of the oil and gas under it, as plaintiffs themselves previously had: Westmoreland Natural Gas Co. v. DeWitt, 130 Pa. 235, 251-2.
Defendant fully complied with the terms and conditions of the lease. He promptly bored two wells upon the property, each outside of the plan of lots, and obtained from them gas in paying quantities. With the intention of drilling a third well, he cut away some of the trees and thick undergrowth on a hilly part of the farm, at a point which he believed was outside of the plan, but before any boring was done an employee of the trust company informed him this was a mistake. Because of what he had been told, defendant expressed a doubt on the subject, but, rather than have a dispute regarding it, said he would not sink a well there, and would remove the derrick and machinery to another part of the property. The employee suggested, however, it
Before this work was begun, the trust company wrote plaintiffs: “The gas men are now boring on two more wells, one up in the wpods [being well No. 3] and one up the run near the park line”; but through some oversight failed to definitely advise them of the giving of said letter.
The obtaining of gas in large quantities from this well, caused other land in the vicinity to become valuable for speculative purposes, and the surrounding property was leased to other prospectors, who endeavored to draw the gas away from well No. 3, by drilling others near plaintiffs’ line. Fearing the success of such endeavors, and apparently recognizing it was a lessee’s duty to locate his wells with due regard to the operations on adjoining lands (McKnight v. Manufacturers Natural Gas Co., 146 Pa. 185, and Kleppner v. Lemon, 176 Pa. 502), the trust company, as attorney in fact for plaintiffs, entered into negotiations with defendant for the drilling of another well on plaintiffs’ property, within the plan of lots, at a point near the wells on the adjoining tract and so situated as to protect the outflow from well No. 3. A well bored off the plan would not have given the desired security. While these negotiations were pending, the trust company wrote plaintiffs that defendant “has finally offered 1/16 of the gas, if we grant him permission to locate another well on these lots [28 and 29 on the plan]. In the event that a well comes in as large as the other well, [which was well No. 3], our share will be
Defendant from time to time paid to the trust company the amounts due under the terms of the lease, and the latter remitted them to plaintiffs, specifying in the accounts for which well the rent was paid. Plaintiffs received them not knowing that well No. 3 had been bored within the plan of lots, and, immediately after definitely learning this fact, sent to defendant a check for the amounts paid for it, which he as promptly returned. The matter apparently remains in this shape, plaintiffs having the money and being ready to repay it to defendant. There was no return or offer to return any part of the royalty received from well No. 4.
A few days later plaintiffs filed their bill in equity averring that well No. 3 wag wrongfully bored upon the plan of lots, that by reason thereof all the gas derived from it belonged to them and not to defendant, and praying an injunction, an accounting for all gas taken, and an award of damages. An answer was filed denying plaintiffs’ right to any relief, the two pleadings setting up the facts substantially as above set forth; and, though much testimony was taken at the trial, nothing else of importance was developed.
The court helow held that defendant had the right, under the letter given by the trust company to him, to bore the well at the place he did; that an injunction would not be granted in any event, since it would do more harm than good; and that as the gas under the whole of the tract, including that under the plan of lots, had been expressly granted to Mm, the utmost plaintiffs could recover would be such damages as they suffered by reason of the location of the well on that plan, and as
In our opinion the decree is right. Much of the difficulty, under which appellants labor, would be removed if they did not attempt to extend the comparison made in Westmoreland Natural Gas Co. v. DeWitt, 130 Pa. 235, 249, far beyond the purpose for which it was intended. It was there said: “Water and oil, and still more strongly gas, may be classed by themselves, if the analogy be not too fanciful, as minerals ferae naturae.” The analogy is not too fanciful, when understood in the sense in which the words were used, as appears in the next sentence: “In common with [wild] animals, and unlike other minerals, they have the power and the tendency to escape without the volition of the owner”; but the first statement, whether or not qualified by the second, does not determine that oil and gas are not capable of ownership even when in place, or may not be the subject of a grant. On the contrary, in this State these matters are firmly established otherwise.
It has been many times decided that oil and gas are minerals, though not commonly spoken of as such, and while in place are “part of the land” (Kier v. Peterson, 41 Pa. 357, 362; Funk v. Haldeman, 53 Pa. 229, 249; Stoughton’s App., 88 Pa. 198, 201; Marshall v. Mellon, 179 Pa. 371, 374); like other minerals within the bounds of the freehold (which extends to the centre of the earth: Chartiers Block Coal Co. v. Mellon, 152 Pa. 286, 295), they may be the subject of sale (which is precisely what in legal effect this lease accomplishes: McIntosh v. Ropp, 233 Pa. 497, 512), separate and apart from the surface and from any other minerals beneath it. This being true, — and it is not disputed by appellants, — like all other minerals they necessarily belong to the owner in fee or his grantee, so long as they remain part of the property, and though he cannot use them until he has severed them from the freehold, exactly as in the case of
It is of course true that there is a distinction, upon questions of interpretation, between an oil and gas lease and an agricultural and even a coal lease (Wettengel v. Gormley, 160 Pa. 559; Kleppner v. Lemon, 176 Pa. 502; Burgan v. South Penn Oil Co., 243 Pa. 128), the reason being that leases, like all other instruments relating to a particular business, must always be construed with due regard to the known characteristics of the business (McKnight v. Manufacturer’s Natural Gas Co., 146 Pa. 185, 200) ; but “there is no difference [between them] as respects the interest or estate conveyed” (Prager’s Estate, 74 Pa. Superior Ct. 592, 595); and, as to the owner in fee and his grantees, their “dominion is, upon general principles, as absolute over the fluid as over the solid minerals. It is exercised in the same manner and with the same results”: Hague v. Wheeler, 157 Pa. 324, 341.
But it is said that defendant’s act in boring the well within the plan of lots was a trespass and hence no title could be acquired. For the sake of the argument both those claims may be conceded and yet plaintiffs will not have advanced a step along the road to the relief they ask. In the present case the title to the gas as between plaintiffs and defendant was vested in him by the lease, subject only to be divested through the action of natural laws which did not operate here. Therefore we do not have to decide whether or not a title can be acquired by a trespass, but at the most what recovery can be had against one who, by a trespass, obtains possession of his own property; and certainly this cannot be measured by its value. True, an injunction may be granted if the trespass threatens to be a continuing one, but in the instant case this rule does not apply for the reasons hereafter stated.
The decision of the main question is, therefore, free from difficulty. As between plaintiffs and defendant,
If plaintiffs themselves had sunk well No. 3, at the exact spot where it now is, the act would have been a wrongful one (Lynch v. Burford, 201 Pa. 52; Brown v. Spilman, 155 U. S. 665), all the gas obtained would have been defendant’s, because of the grant to him of “all the oil and gas in and under” the entire tract, and plaintiffs would have been required to account to him for its value. It necessarily follows that when, in good faith and in a belief that he had the right so' to do, he bored the well at that point, and thereby obtained the gas, he but reduced to possession that which plaintiffs had granted to him, and therefore, since he secured it during the term of the lease, this cannot result in re-transferring the title to them.
Nor did the court below err in refusing to grant an injunction. This writ is of grace, in the exercise of a sound discretion, and not of right; is ordinarily only preventive in its nature and not restorative; and will not be issued where it will harm a defendant more than it will benefit a plaintiff, and certainly never where, as here, plaintiffs would probably lose more than they would gain. Had defendant bored well No'. 3 in bad faith, or in a race with the law to accomplish his purpose before injunctive relief could be obtained, the chancellor doubtless would have issued the writ; for, under such circumstances, his conscience is too tender to permit a defendant to derive any advantage from his acts, even though it is difficult to' see how plaintiffs would be benefited. It was upon the first of these grounds we
Appellants’ claim to this character of relief is based largely upon their alleged inability to give to defendant a title to the gas, because of its fugitive nature, no matter what would be the natural construction of the language used in the lease; and for that reason, they say, he has no right to take it and ought to be enjoined from so doing. We have already answered this contention, and need only add that if there can be no ownership until the gas is reduced to actual possession, then plaintiffs themselves have no ownership, for it is as fugitive in their case as it is in his, and hence they have no standing to complain because he gets it. Perhaps this conclusion demonstrates, as effectively as any argument could, the fallacy of their contention that, as between the parties themselves, there could be no grant of ownership of the gas because of its fugacious character.
The inequity of granting an injunction is apparent when the matter is viewed from another standpoint. It is a well-known fact that oil and gas may be readily drawn from one part of the underlying field to another (Kleppner v. Lemon, 176 Pa. 502; Burgan v. South Penn
Plaintiffs, of course, had and have the privilege of refusing to accept any real and immediate advantage, and to stand on their strict legal rights, preferring a possible future gain, however remote, speculative and imaginary, it may be; but they can hardly expect a chancellor to follow them into this realm, to the injury of themselves and a still greater injury of defendant, who in good faith expended a large sum of money in drilling these two wells for their joint account. It is true, as the event
Nor are plantiffs in any better position on the question of damages. Having elected to claim them in this suit, plaintiffs had the burden of proof of establishing the amount thereof; they made no attempt to do this and when defendant proposed to show what would have been a proper royalty, the offer was overruled because of their objection that it was irrelevant and immaterial.
The quantity of gas derived from well No. 3 could not measure plaintiff’s damages, if any, not only for the reasons already stated, but because also it might all have been obtained by defendant (as indeed he testified it could, and no one contradicted him), through wells bored outside of the plan of lots, during the indefinite period he was entitled, under the lease, to retain possession for this purpose; and therefore a decree for an accounting would not have been an appropriate order. The hint that plaintiffs might be entitled to receive, as a royalty, the same proportion of gas subsequently provided for in the agreement relating to well No. 4, cannot be sustained, for the situation had seriously altered between the time well No. 3 was drilled and the date of this agreement. As a result of the great volume of gas obtained from well No. 3, landowners were justified in de
The decree of the court below is affirmed and the appeal is dismissed, at the cost of appellants.'