165 Ind. 243 | Ind. | 1905
On August 29, 1895, appellee and wife entered into a contract with the Huntington Light & Euel Company whereby appellee, in consideration of $120, in hand paid, conveyed to the light and fuel company all the oil and gas in and under 242 acres of described real estate, together with the right to enter thereon for the purpose of drilling and operating for oil, gas or water, and to erect such structures and pipe-lines as should become necessary for the production and transportation of oil, gas or water from the premises. Appellee was to have one-eighth of all the oil produced and saved, to be delivered in pipe-lines connected with the wells. If gas only was found, appellee was to have $100 each year for each well. Further stipulations were in these words: “In case no well is completed within six months from this date, then this grant shall become null and void, unless second party [light and fuel company] shall pay said first party $120 in advance for each six months thereafter that such completion is delayed, and second party shall have the right to use sufficient gas, oil or water to run all necessary machinery for operating said wells, and also the right to remove all its property at any time. * * * All conveyances and agreements herein set forth between the parties hereto shall extend to their successors, heirs, executors and assigns.”
The Huntington Light & Euel Company assigned its interest in the contract to appellant Ohio Oil Company. After the initial payment of $120 at the time of the execution of the contract appellant Ohio Oil Company and its assignor advanced a like sum three times at the end of consecutive six-month periods, thus postponing to August 29, 1897, the time in which a well should be completed. In March, 1897, a well was sunk on the land by the company, which proved to be what is termed a “dry hole,” whereupon the company took down and removed from the premises its drill and other appliances. Ho further periodical, payments were made or tendered, and no further step was taken
The assignment calls in question the sufficiency of the complaint, and the overruling of appellants’ motion for a new trial.
Whether it proceeds from design of crafty speculators in oil and gas leases to enshroud their contracts with doubtful, ambiguous, inconsistent and absurd provisions, as a means of promoting their interests; or whether it comes from a custom in the rural districts of employing unskilled draftsmen, it is a notable fact that few subjects of contract contribute to the courts an equal proportion of written agreements for interpretation. The fact is so patent that courts generally, in gas and oil states, have come to place such contracts in a class of their own, and to look critically into such instruments for the real intention of the parties, because it so frequently happens that they can not, on account of incongruous provisions, be enforced according to the strict letter of the contract. Woodland Oil Co. v. Crawford (1896), 55 Ohio St. 161, 177, 44 N. E. 1093, 34 L. R. A. 62.
In the case of Gadbury v. Ohio, etc., Gas Co., supra, it was stipulated that in case no well was completed within forty days from the date of the contract, the lease should he void, unless the company should pay the lessors $1 per day for the time completion was delayed heyond forty days. There was delay l)eyond forty days, and payment hy the company according to the contract.
In the case of Hancock v. Diamond Plate Glass Co., supra, no time was fixed for the commencement or completion of a well, and the contract was “deemed” to commence from its date, and to terminate whenever natural gas ceased to he used generally for manufacturing purposes.
In the case of Consumers Gas Trust Co. v. Littler, supra, no time was fixed for the beginning of operations, nor for the completion of a well, but a covenant by the company that it would pay $10 each year until gas was found in paying quantities, or until it was discovered that it did not exist.
Judgment affirmed.