122 Kan. 287 | Kan. | 1927
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Mary S. Jewett, for herself and as guardian of Stella Chrisman, brought this action against the Coffeyville Vitrified Brick and Tile Company, to cancel an oil and gas lease and recover a penalty and damages. Upon a trial plaintiff prevailed and defendant appeals.
On January 25, 1917, G. A. Chrisman and wife, parents of the plaintiffs, since deceased, executed an oil and gas mining lease upon a tract of real estate which has since become the property of the
In the latter part of 1924 the plaintiff demanded a release of the record of the forfeited lease, but the demand was refused. It was alleged that plaintiffs had opportunities to lease! the land to others which was frustrated by the refusal of the defendant to release and rid the records of the defendants’ lease, and that by reason of the refusal they were prevented from leasing the land at a rental of $10 per acre and thereby sustained damages in the sum of $1,010.
The jury found that rent was paid to January 25,1922, and royalties were paid to February 25, 1924; that gas for domestic use to plaintiff’s home was furnished free; that in October, 1924, a check for $163.36 was tendered to plaintiffs in payment of royalties to January 25, 1925, and deposited in the Peoples State Bank to the credit of the plaintiffs, according to custom, but it was not accepted. There was also a finding that plaintiffs were offered a fixed sum as
Defendants insist that there was no such failure of compliance with its terms as would justify the cancellation of the lease. So far as the damage is concerned, it is insisted that the testimony is insufficient to sustain the claim that plaintiffs could have obtained a lease from a Mr. Reynolds at $10 per acre.
Under the testimony the plaintiffs were entitled to a cancellation of the lease. It was given for a period of five years, and as long thereafter as oil or gas was produced in paying quantities. The term of the lease had expired and the wells which had been drilled had become unproductive. The statement in the letter of the defendant in respect to the removal of the meter is in fact an admission that the wells were not producing gas in paying quantities. It admitted that the product was only $1.50 per month and was not regarded by the defendant as worth the expense of measuring it. Defendant frankly stated that the wells had never been profitable up to that time, and it was only holding the lease for prospective value that there might be in the deeper strata. However, no other wells had been drilled and no search for gas made in the deeper strata. The only way the lease could be extended beyond the five-year period was a demonstration by the defendant that gas was being produced in paying quantities. When the term had expired and the wells had become unprofitable, the lease was at an end. Defendant was not entitled to hold it thereafter upon a possibility that they might find a deeper gas at some later time when they chose to drill for it.
There is complaint that there is insufficient testimony to uphold the finding of damages. The basis of that finding is that plaintiff had an opportunity to lease the land to one Reynolds for $10 an acre, but that he had declined to take the lease because of the recorded lease to defendant, which he refused to surrender. In that respect the testimony is meager, but under our rule for measuring testimony on an appeal it is deemed to be sufficient. It was the duty of the defendant to discharge the record of the forfeited lease upon demand. If plaintiffs were deprived of a sale of the lease by the refusal of defendant they are entitled to the damages sustained by such refusal. (Mollohan v. Patton, 110 Kan. 663, 202 Pac. 616,
“The depreciation in value during the time the defendant wrongfully prevented a sale, appears to be a just measure of damages in accordance with the usual rules notwithstanding the pendency of the litigation.” (p. 667.)
In that case testimony equally meager was deemed to be sufficient to sustain the judgment.
There is a suggestion in the brief of defendant that at one time defendant attempted to go upon the premises and drill additional wells, but was prevented from doing so by reason of an order of injunction obtained by plaintiffs. In a search of the record we are unable to find anything of that land in it.
Some complaint is also made of the instructions of the court, but they appear to be in accord with the view we have taken of the case.
No error being found the judgment must be affirmed.