230 S.W. 518 | Tex. App. | 1921
This appeal is from a judgment of the trial court awarding the appellee, Lee Farm Oil Company, as plaintiff in the court below, damages against the appellant, Osage Oil Refining Company, for breach of contract for the drilling of a well by the plaintiff on the premises of the defendant.
As the only assignments which we shall discuss deal with the question of the damages resulting from the violation of this contract by the appellant, we will confine our statement to such facts as will make such discussion intelligible. It appears that the said parties entered into a written contract under the terms of which the Lee Farm Oil Company, a partnership, agreed to drill a well on the property of the Osage Oil Company "to the depth of 2,000 feet, or down to what is known as the `big lime,' provided the said `big lime' is found at a less depth than 2,000 feet. Said first parties (Lee Farm Oil Company) agree, however, to stop the drilling of said well at a less depth than 2,000 feet in the event oil or gas is found in paying quantities at a less depth than 2,000 feet, and parties of the second part (the Osage Oil Refining Company) so desire and request." The Osage Company agreed to furnish the fuel and water necessary to do the drilling and pay therefor the sum of $3 per lineal foot. The plaintiffs alleged that upon the execution of the contract they moved their drilling machinery onto the said premises and drilled said well to about 300 feet, when the "defendant breached the contract in its entirety to plaintiff's damage in the sum of $3,000"; that plaintiff "would have made at least $3,000 had it been permitted to go ahead with said drilling and had the defendant complied with its portion of said contract." These being the allegations of damage, the plaintiffs were permitted on the morning of the trial to insert in their petition the following additional allegation:
"Plaintiff further alleges that the plaintiff, relying on the authority of the parties who made the contract, moved on the premises, and was out above $300 for moving thereon, and drilled to a depth of about 400 feet at a cost of $1,200, and that the defendant received the benefit of the plaintiff's acts and works, which was of the reasonable value of $1,500."
The following are the issues and answers of the jury thereto of damages submitted by the court to the jury:
"Special issue No. 3: Find what would have been the plaintiff's net profit, if any, after deducting all necessary expense of fulfilling said contract. Answer: $1,500.
"Special issue No. 4: Find what amount would reasonably compensate the plaintiff for the necessary expense of moving in to the Watkins farm and drilling the well that he did drill to the depth he did drill on said farm, and claimed to have drilled by reason of the contract introduced in evidence in this case. Answer: $435.
"Special issue No. 5: What did it cost the plaintiff to set up his rig? Answer: $75. *520
"Special issue No. 6: What did it cost the plaintiff to drill to the depth he did drill? Answer: $200."
The court entered judgment on the verdict of the jury in favor of the plaintiff for the sum of $2,210. The appellee has filed a remittitur in this court of the two items of $200 and $75.
We will discuss the first and third assignments together. The first assignment is to the action of the court in overruling a special exception to the petition, as it stood after the making of the insertion as to damages, as stated above, on the ground that two distinct causes of action were thereby alleged, one in quantum meruit and the other for damages, "with no plea in the alternative with regard thereto." The third assignment asserts that the court erred in submitting both such causes of action and entering judgment therefor, on the answer of the jury to the issues submitted. If the petition and the submission of the issues and judgment rendered thereon are to be construed as seeking and awarding recovery on quantum meruit, these assignments would be well taken. It is the law that one who has been wrongfully prevented from fully performing his contract after he has entered upon its performance, and partially performed it, may elect either to sue on a quantum meruit or to sue for a breach of the contract, but cannot do both. If he sues for a breach of the contract, he may recover his actual loss, which would be the expense incurred in the performance of the contract up to the time of its breach, and the profits he would have made out of the contract if they may be established with sufficient certainty. U.S. v. Behan,
Nor do we think that issue No. 4, as submitted by the court, is to be construed as submitting an issue as to the reasonable value of the work done by the plaintiff; but we think that the court intended, and the jury must have so understood it, to submit merely a question as to the amount of expense incurred by the plaintiff in the performance of the work, Evidence was introduced as to the cost of moving the drilling outfit upon the premises and setting up the rig and drilling the 300 or 400 feet, and the issue was evidently submitted for the purpose of getting the finding of the jury on such matter. The evidence in connection with the finding itself makes it clear that no element of profit was included in this estimate. The well was drilled one-fourth or one-fifth of the depth it was to be put down. The expense of moving and setting up the rig had been incurred, so that the amount found, $435, is so out of proportion to the total consideration which was to be paid for doing the entire work under the contract that it is almost demonstrated that nothing but the actual cost of this work was included in this finding.
The second assignment asserts error in the action of the court in overruling appellant's motion for a continuance, which was presented at the time plaintiff added the allegations to the petition, as above referred to; The appellant here also claims that this addition to the petition set up a new cause of action on quantum meruit, which entitled it to a continuance. As already stated, we do not construe the allegation to have this effect. It merely particularizes one element of plaintiff's damage. Whether this amendment was such as to take the other party by surprise, so as to entitle it to a continuance or postponement, was a matter to be judged by the trial court. Rule 16 for District and County Courts (142 S.W. xviii); I. G. N. Ry. Co. v. Howell,
Under the fourth, tenth, and eleventh assignments it is claimed that there was a double recovery allowed, in that the item of $435 found in response to the fourth issue included the items of $75 and $200 found in response to the fifth and sixth issues. The appellee has remitted the said sum of $275, so that it will not be necessary to discuss these assignments.
By the fifth and thirteenth assignments it is contended that there was error in the submission of the issue of profits as an element of recovery, because under the evidence the profits that plaintiffs might make out of the performance of the contract were so uncertain, speculative, and contingent that they are not recoverable. A further statement of the facts is necessary to the decision of these assignments. The evidence shows that the land on which this well was to be drilled was in the triangle formed by the towns of Iowa Park, Burkburnett, and Electra. The plaintiff offered evidence to the effect that hundreds of wells had been drilled in this territory; that the formation ran about the same and had been pretty well developed; that the formation known as the "big lime" was throughout that part of the country found at a depth of about 2,000 feet; that the oil sand in that portion of the *521
country leading west from Burkburnett, toward Electra, in which territory this well was located, was anywhere from 1,400 to 1,800 feet; that there was a well drilled on this very land to a depth of 1,500 to 1,600 feet, and other wells about 2 or 3 miles away that were also drilled to about this depth. It does appear that there is a field some 8 or 9 miles from this well, though not in the triangle referred to, where an oil-producing sand was found at about 800 feet, and in other parts of the county still shallower sands were found, and the witnesses testified that the oil sands varied more than the "big lime," and that they did not know at what depth a producing oil sand might be found at the place where this well was located. The witnesses also testified that an experienced and competent driller, drilling under ordinary conditions, would make a profit of from $1,500 to $3,000 in drilling a well in this locality to a depth of 2,000 feet, at $3 per foot; that these profits would be practically all made in drilling the first 1,500 feet, and the operator would about break even under such a contract as this in drilling from 1,500 feet on down to 2,000 feet. It is the appellant's contention that the uncertainty as to the depth at which the "big lime" formation or oil or gas in paying quantities might be found in the drilling of this well rendered the amount of profits which plaintiffs might make out of the contract so uncertain as to preclude a recovery thereof in this suit. The rule of law is that profits may be recovered on the breach of contract if the evidence warrants the conclusion that it is reasonably certain that the plaintiff would have made a profit out of the contract, and where the evidence furnishes data from which some reasonable calculation of the amount of such profits may be made, more certainty is required in the proof of the fact that some profits would have been made than as to the amount thereof. As to such matter there is necessarily more or less uncertainty in every case, and the defendant, whose misconduct has produced the situation, is not permitted to escape liability because the damage he has inflicted may not be determined with such exactness as to be free from all uncertainty or contingencies. American Construction Co. v. Caswell, 141 S.W. 1015; Fraser v. Echo Mining Smelting Co.,
The seventh, eighth, ninth, fourteenth, fifteenth, and seventeenth assignments are concerning the trial of an issue of the agency of the party executing the drilling contract in behalf of the defendant. Appellant's attorney, on oral argument, admitted that no claim of error can be successfully urged as to these matters because of the fact that there was no sworn denial of agency, as required by the statutes, so that we need not discuss these assignments.
The twelfth assignment complains of the refusal of the court to give a peremptory instruction in appellant's favor. The questions presented are disposed of by our rulings on other assignments, except that presented by the fifth proposition, which is as follows:
"There can be no recovery of profits, the difference between cost and contract price in this class of cases unless plaintiff shows that he could not have procured other employment and thus have prevented the damage."
If the proposition be sound, yet the court would not have been warranted in giving defendant a peremptory instruction; for there were other elements of damage on which the plaintiff had the right to go to the jury. This reason alone would require that the assignment be overruled. But we do not think the proposition itself is sound. It is true that, if the plaintiffs could have secured other employment for their machinery and diminished thereby their damages, they would not be entitled to recover such damages as they could thus have avoided. The courts apply a similar rule in such case, as in the case of contracts for personal service. Frazier v. Clark,
The sixteenth assignment complains of the refusal of the court to instruct the jury that, if they should find that the plaintiffs kept on drilling said well and refused to abandon the same after the defendant had repudiated the contract, then the defendant could not be charged with the costs of drilling said well after such repudiation. The evidence was sufficient to have warranted a finding that the plaintiff had notice of the unequivocal repudiation of the contract by the defendant after the rig was set up and before they began drilling. We think instruction should have been given. A party, while in the performance of a contract, when served with notice of its repudiation by the other party, cannot proceed with the performance of the contract except it be one of which specific performance may be enforced and increase the damages to which he would otherwise be entitled. Tufts v. Lawrence,
The eighteenth to twenty-first assignments complain of the admission in evidence of the opinions of various witnesses as to the profits that would be made out of the contract under ordinary conditions. The witnesses showed themselves to be qualified as experts so that this proposition under the assignments is not well taken. The other objections are that the questions and the answers did not take into consideration the contingency that oil or gas might be struck under the 2,000 feet. When the entire evidence of the witnesses is taken into consideration, it appears that their estimates of the profits were based on the contingency that the well would be drilled from 1,500 to 2,000 feet under the ordinary conditions prevailing in that section of the country. We think this character of testimony was admissible, and the jury could not have misunderstood the effect of the testimony of the witnesses, and we find no reversible error presented by these assignments.
In the event appellee files a further remittitur of the sum of $200, as herein suggested, within 15 days from this date, the judgment of the lower court will be affirmed; otherwise it will be reversed, and the cause remanded.