68 S.W.2d 622 | Tex. App. | 1934
Lead Opinion
Suit was by appellant, hereafter designated as the Humble, to set aside an order of the Railroad Commission granting a permit to Mrs. Gladys McCook, guardian of the estate of Dora May Johnson, a minor, to drill an oil well on 1 1/2 acres of land in Gregg *623 county, in the East Texas oil field, owned by said minor; and against C. H. Brown, lessee thereof, and O. C. Fisher his drilling contractor, to restrain them from drilling or producing oil from same; and to restrain the Railroad Commission from granting any further drilling permits thereon. From an order of the district court refusing any of such relief after a hearing upon the application for temporary injunction, the Humble has appealed.
The case arose as follows: The Humble acquired a lease on a 47/48 interest in 102-acre tract out of the G. W. Hooper survey in Upshur and Gregg counties in 1931. Dora May Johnson owned the other 1/48 interest subject to the life estate of her mother. On October 20, 1932, by a partition decree of the district court of Gregg county, there was set aside to said minor a 3-acre tract, 130 varas square, adjoining the south line of said 102-acre tract, near its southeast corner. On December 17, 1932, Mrs. McCook, as guardian, with approval of the probate court, and pursuant to previously executed contract with her attorneys, conveyed to her attorneys, Hamilton Hamilton, as compensation for their services, the minor's east half of said 3-acre tract. Hamilton Hamilton in turn conveyed same on December 19, 1932, to C. H. Brown who contracted on December 22, 1932, with O. C. Fisher to drill a well thereon. This well, after protests, suit, and other proceedings not necessary to set forth here, has been drilled on said east 1 1/2 acres. Thereafter, on April 10, 1933, Mrs. McCook, individually and as guardian, applied to the Railroad Commission for a permit to drill another well on the west 1 1/2 acres of said 3-acre tract, which permit was granted on April 21, 1933, under an exception to rule 37 to protect vested rights. On April 28, 1933, Mrs. McCook, as guardian, under authorization of the probate court, leased said west 1 1/2 acres to C. H. Brown, the same man to whom Hamilton Hamilton had conveyed the east 1 1/2 acres of said tract, who entered into a drilling contract with O. C. Fisher on May 4, 1933, to drill a well thereon. This suit was thereupon filed by the Humble which owned the lease on the lands to the west, north, and east of the 3-acre tract partitioned to Dora May Johnson.
Appellant charged in its allegations that the proceedings above outlined were effected pursuant to a conspiracy of all parties concerned to procure two wells on said 3 acres in violation of the conservation laws and of rule 37 of the Railroad Commission. There is substantial evidence to support these allegations, but we deem it unnecessary, in view of the conclusion reached, to pass upon that question. It is also urged that the contract between Mrs. McCook and her attorneys, and her conveyance to them in performance of same, for one-half of the lands of the minor as compensation for their services in recovering the minor's lands, is void under the holding in Glassgow v. McKinnon,
We are met at the outset with the contentions by appellees (1) that under article 6036 and 6049, R.S. 1925, as variously amended and supplemented since 1925 (Vernon's Ann. St. arts. 6036, 6049), no appeal herein is authorized by law; (2) that, since said well here involved has already been drilled to completion and is in operation as a producer, this case has become moot; and (3) that the Humble as an adjacent owner is not a "party at interest" within the meaning of the statute. Section 8, p. 46, c.
Appellee's first contention is based upon the language of section 11, Acts 1st C. S. 42d Leg. p. 46, c.
Nor has the appeal become moot because the well in question has been completed for two reasons. In addition to seeking to prevent the drilling of same, appellant attacked the validity of the Railroad Commission's permit to drill it, and also sought to restrain any production of oil therefrom. If said well had been drilled without a permit in violation of law and of the rules of the commission and created waste, the commission could, under the law, have clearly prevented production therefrom, even though the well was completed. And it is the baneful results and consequent continuing damage from its illegal operation that appellant sought to prevent by injunction rather than the mere drilling thereof. Consequently the subject-matter of the suit and the principal relief sought have not been destroyed nor altered by the completion of the well. We think the validity of the permit and the right of appellees to legally operate said well at all are the controlling issues in this case, and that the drilling of the well was but incident to these major issues, instead of the operation of the well being a mere incident to the drilling of it, the issue on which the decision in Gilbert v. Weber (Tex.Civ.App.)
The next question raised is urged not only by the landowner and her lessees but by the Attorney General on behalf of the Railroad Commission. That is that an adjacent owner is not such "interested party" or "party at interest" as is authorized under the statutes to attack an order of the commission granting a drilling permit. This contention is not sustained.
While the statute (Vernon's Ann.Civ.St. art. 6036a) does not undertake to define who are interested parties, it does provide that hearing must be held before the commission shall adopt a rule or regulation, after notice given in the manner and form prescribed by the commission itself. This we think clearly implies notice to those interested in or to be affected by the rule or regulation contemplated. The commission itself in rule 37, except in prescribed emergencies or in case of waiver, has obviously construed interested parties to include adjacent owners, by requiring that they be given notice where exceptions to the rule are applied for. Under the uncontroverted facts of this case, if the well on the 1 1/2 *625 acres involved be permitted to operate in such close proximity to appellant's adjoining lands, injury to those lands will directly result, drainage occur, and waste result. Thus the property rights of the adjacent landowner are immediately and directly affected. If that be true, the Humble is clearly an interested party in such permit within the purview of the statute. If the contention of appellees that only those interested in the land itself come within the statute and are the only parties authorized to attack such permit were correct, it is obvious that permits which were arbitrarily, unjustly, or unreasonably (in brief illegally) granted by the commission could seldom if ever be attacked. The commission would not attack its own order nor set it aside; and certainly those who had applied for it would not seek to do so. The result would be that only orders of the commission refusing permits would ever be reviewed; and unauthorized orders of the commission, such as the case before us presents, would stand undisturbed unless attacked by the state through the Attorney General, whose duty it is to represent the commission. Such a course would clearly afford no relief to adjacent leaseholders whose property rights are injured and whose rights the Legislature undoubtedly intended to protect.
Passing now to the merits of the appeal, we deem it unnecessary to discuss the various contentions made. This case is controlled by our decision in Sun Oil Co. v. Railroad Commission,
For the reasons stated and in accordance with our conclusions as fully set forth in the Sun Oil Company Case above referred to, the judgment of the trial court is reversed, and judgment here rendered granting to appellant the injunctive relief prayed for against production of any oil from said well, it being made to appear that same has been completed pending a trial of this case upon its merits; such injunction to issue upon appellant's executing a proper bond in such sum as may be agreed upon by the parties, or, in case of their failure to so agree, to be fixed by the court, and conditioned as provided by law.
Reversed and rendered.
Dissenting Opinion
For dissenting opinion, see Sun Oil Co. v. Railroad Commission of Texas,