80 S.W.2d 956 | Tex. Comm'n App. | 1935
Fred C. Pabst and others, herein referred to as plaintiffs, brought this suit in the district court of Galveston county against Rox-ana Petroleum Corporation and the Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, herein designated defendants, to recover damages. The case went
It would make this opinion unreasonably long to even undertake to state in outline the substance of plaintiffs’ petition. In view of the fact that most if not all of the substantial portions of same have been incorporated into the opinions by the Court of Civil Appeals, it is unnecessary to reproduce same here.
It will be observed that the Court of Civil Appeals, in effect, held that the petition was fatally defective because in violation of article 1997 of the Revised Statutes, which provides that a pleading shall “consist of a statement in logical and legal form of the facts constituting the plaintiff’s cause of action”; and because in violation of article 2003, which requires a petition to contain, among other things, “a concise statement of the cause of action.” In the majority opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals it is said: “Its numerous paragraphs are so confused, contradictory, and inconsistent, and so interspersed with argument of counsel and pleadings of evidence as to destroy it as a petition consisting of a statement in logical form of facts constituting any definite cause of action. It is by no means a logical statement of any definite statement of facts constituting a cause of action. We are unable to ascertain from the petition, with any degree of certainty, upon what facts plaintiffs base their demand or demands for a recovery, and we have no doubt that the trial court was as much at a loss to discover such facts as we are. We think it fair to state that the petition may reasonably be construed as one attempting to present a suit in equity, an action at law for breach of contract, an action to enforce specific performance of contract, or an action for tort, without any alternative allegations. Averments undertaking to set up a cause of action should be certain and positive, and not left to argument or inference.”
The court, however, goes further and holds that if plaintiffs’ petition be treated as one attempting to allege an action for damages because of a conspiracy, it is fatally defective for several reasons. In his dissenting opinion Judge Graves does not disagree with the majority of the court on the proposition that the petition was not sufficient to charge a conspiracy, but does dissent on the ground that if all irrelevant, extraneous, and argumentative language of the .petition be disregarded, .there are enough allegations left (though considerably disjointed) from which there may be extracted an alleged cause of action for failure to reasonably develop the land for sul-phur, with consequent damages to some extent, though the extent of the -damages be not definitely alleged.
On motion for rehearing, Chief Justice Pleasants demonstrates, according to our view, that if it be conceded that the petition sought to allege such a cause of action,- it fails to show any damages, and is therefore insufficient as a basis for a cause of action upon that theory. For that reason; and for the further reason that we have concluded that plaintiffs had no intention of pleading a cause of action for failure to reasonably develop the land for sulphur under the lease, it is unnecessary to consider the petition further from that standpoint.
The fact, however, that the majority of the Court of Civil Appeals was unable to determine just what particular cause of action plaintiffs intended to assert, whether for damages on account of an alleged conspiracy, for specific performance, or for failure to reasonably develop the land for sulphur under the lease, and the fact that the dissenting, judge was able, after sifting the pleading and correlating isolated and disjointed allegations, to extract only an alleged cause of action for failure to reasonably develop the land; and the further fact that we have reached the conclusion that plaintiffs did not primarily intend to assert a cause of action on the theory of failure to reasonably develop, but attempted to allege only a cause of action predicated on a conspiracy — all show the inadequacy of the petition to “state the cause of action with such a reasonable degree of certainty as would give full notice to the defendants . of the character of the claim or demand made against them, so as to enable them to make their defense.”
Plaintiffs, however, in effect assert that if the petition contained allegations of fact sufficient to furnish the essential elements of a cause of action, although stated in a
However, without basing our opinion on this theory alone, we have carefully and diligently considered the pleading in the case, the brief of the plaintiffs in the Court of Civil Appeals, their, motion for rehearing in that court, and the petition for writ of error, and have reached the definite conclusion that plaintiffs have attempted to plead an action for damages based on an alleged conspiracy, and that the petition construed as one for that purpose was subject to a general demurrer.
Plaintiffs’ land consisted of the south one-half of a 50-acre tract, being a strip of land 441.1 feet wide by 2,407 feet in length. The north one-half of the 50 acres had been previously leased to Follett. Plaintiffs’ theory, so far as we are able to judge, appears to be this: That the defendant Roxana Petroleum Corporation sought and obtained a lease upon their 25-acre tract, not for the purpose of operating it and developing it for sulphur, but for the purpose of tying it up until it could obtain undivided interests in the ownership of sulphur in surrounding lands, and then turn it back to plaintiffs undeveloped; and that by reason of its ownership of undivided interests in adjacent and adjoining lands it was made impossible for plaintiffs to produce sul-phur from their tract. That it succeeded in carrying out this design, and surrendered the land back to plaintiffs, but under such conditions that they cannot realize anything from the sulphur thereunder. Consequently they have been damaged to the extent of the royalty on the entire amount of sulphur underlying their strip of land. Plaintiffs claim that this was all made possible by reason of the peculiar manner in which sulphur is produced from land. In their petition they allege: “The one and only method of extracting and producing sulphur from structures such as Clemens Dome is to force superheated water under high pressure down into wells, drilled thereon and cased with iron pipe, and thereby through heating same, melt the sulphur under ground, and it is such sulphur so melted that flows as a liquid to the well and up through an iron pipe to the surface. Such melting of the sulphur takes place as far as the hot water spreads laterally under the ground from the well into which the water is pumped at high pressure. Such hot water so spreads to a distance of more than 1,000 feet from the well in every direction. There is no means of preventing such spreading of the water and no means of" preventing the melting of the sulphur surrounding the well to a distance of more than 1,000 feet therefrom. There is no means by which the sul-phur under the 25 acres described in said lease of September 21,1925, can be extracted other than by pumping such heated water into wells drilled thereon and no means to prevent such hot water from flowing onto and invading the sulphur underlying the adjoining tracts of land and melting same and causing such sulphur to flow and come up into and be taken from the well so drilled on said Pabst 25 acres.”
Reduced to its last analysis, plaintiffs’ case rests upon a claim that defendants, from the very inception of negotiations, designedly and wrongfully conspired and co-operated together for the sole purpose of injuring plaintiffs in the use and the enjoyment of their property and making it impossible for them (plaintiffs) to ever produce the sulphur from their land, or for any one else to do so. One of the means adopted for this unlawful purpose was the winning of the confidence of plaintiffs by taking a lease on their land, thus preventing
It is our conclusion that the first fourteen paragraphs of plaintiffs’ petition had for their purpose the alleging of a situation showing a relation of confidence and trust between defendants and plaintiffs, from which it could be further alleged and argued that the actions- of defendants in acquiring interest in the sulphur in surrounding lands was a breach of trust, and therefore wrongful and actionable. As plaintiffs expressly alleged that the acquisition of the lease in the first instance was a part of the conspiracy to destroy the value of their land, and then rested their case upon the alleged fact of a trust and fiduciary relationship which made the action of defendants wrongful, it is obvious that these allegations were not intended to form the basis of a cause of action for failure to reasonably develop the land for sulphur. This being true, it is evident that the dissenting opinion is without support in the pleading, and the only ground of error upon which the jurisdiction of this court is invoked is in the first assignment. We believe this assignment within itself constitutes the best interpretation of the pleading, and for that reason we set it out here: “The Court of Civil Appeals erred in affirming the judgment of the trial court sustaining general demurrers to the third amended original petition and dismissing the suit, in that the petition alleged specific acts, circumstances and conduct showing that the Roxana Petroleum Corporation, by misrepresentation,- obtained a valuable sulphur lease from Pabst, without any intention of developing and producing the sul-phur but as part of a scheme existing between it and the Texas Gulf Sulphur Company to tie up the sulphur in the entire dome and prevent its production, and while holding the lease, and leases on the surrounding property on the dome and being in a position to produce, and while under implied covenants to use reasonable diligence and good faith to develop, protect and producé, and after discovering sulphur in large and paying quantities, they, in furtherance of the same fraudulent scheme and conspiracy and for the purpose of preventing any sulphur from being produced from the dome, in violation of plaintiffs in error’s contract rights and in violation of the anti-trust laws of the State, did so arrange the ownership of the sulphur rights on the surrounding property and on the entire dome, as to make it impossible for plaintiffs in error ever to produce sulphur from their property- without the consent of defendants in error or their assigns, thereby destroying the value and the use of the sulphur to plaintiffs in error and damaging them to the extent of the royalties they would have received if the contract had been carried out, after which defendants in error wrongfully abandoned operations and permitted the lease to terminate, which allegations constitute a cause of action for the damages sustained.”
For various reasons we conclude that plaintiffs’ petition was not sufficient to allege a cause of action for damages growing out of concerted unlawful or wrongful acts. It is necessary to mention only two reasons, to wit:
(a) Because the acts alleged to have been done by defendants were not under the circumstances alleged wrongful and actionable.
(b) Because of a lack of specific showing of damages or injury to plaintiffs as the direct and proximate consequence of the acts complained of against defendants.
These two reasons are considered together because the allegations showing the absence of these two essentials are the same.
Plaintiffs’ tract of land was a long, narrow strip containing only 25 acres. It is expressly shown by the pleading that considered alone the sulphur thereunder could not have been produced either by plaintiffs or by defendants. There áre manifestly two reasons for this. In the first place, under the modern and scientific methods of sulphur production, the expense of producing the sulphur
Thus it is demonstrated, it seems to us, that defendants were not either jointly or severally guilty of such wrongful and unlawful acts as subjected them to liability. In Delz v. Winfree, 80 Tex. 400, 404, 16 S. W. 111, 26 Am. St. Rep. 755, the law in this state is stated to be as follows: “A conspiracy cannot be made the subject of a civil action, although damages result, unless something is done which, without the conspiracy, would give a right of action. In other words, an act which, if done by one alone, constitutes no ground of action, cannot be made the ground of such action by alleging it to have been done by and through a conspiracy of several. That the true test as to whether such action will lie is whether or not the act accomplished after the conspiracy has been formed is itself actionable.”
What has been said likewise shows that plaintiffs have suffered no injury as a natural proximate consequence of the acts complained of on the part of defendants. No sulphur has been taken from plaintiffs’ lands. Before the execution of the lease, plaintiffs could not have produced sulphur from ’ this 25 acres without a community lease. They show no good and sufficient reason why they are prevented from obtaining leases on surrounding lands in order to arrange a community lease. They do not allege that ány one else has been prevented from acquiring a lease on the surrounding lands by reason of the ownership of undivided interests in the defendants. They make no direct allegations that defendants have refused to join in such a lease. They do not allege that they could or would be able to effectuate a community arrangement by which they would produce the sul-phur from their land had defendants not acquired interests in the. sulphur in adjoining-lands. In 12 Corpus Juris, p. 631, it is said: “In alleging damage it is not sufficient simply to state that damages did in fact result; but the facts should be alleged from which the court can see, if the facts are true, that damage would naturally or possibly result from the act stated.”
Apparently plaintiffs based their whole case upon the theory that defendants occupied towards them a relationship of confidence and trust which prevented the attempted acquisition of a community lease. We again call attention to the statement in their brief as follows: “The sole question in this case is whether Roxana, as lessee, occupied any position of confidence with respect to Pabst, and if so, whether during the time and while occupying such position of confidence or trust, it had the right to so arrange in undivided shares and interests the ownership of the sulphur in certain premises also under lease to it in such a way as to prevent Pabst from ever recovering the sulphur under his land.” We do not agree that defendants occupied such a position of trust as prevented them from doing the things alleged. On the contrary, assuming that they did occupy a fiduciary relationship, we think they could not properly perform the duties of that relationship without doing exactly what they attempted to do, to wit, obtain a community lease. If in attempting to do so it became necessary or expedient to obtain interests in the sulphur in adjacent lands (which is not denied), they did nothing
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals is in all things affirmed.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court.