46 Ind. App. 3 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1910
Appellee brought this action against appellant to recover a certain sum of money alleged to be due on account of certain gas wells drilled on his land.
Tbe complaint was in three paragraphs, and a demurrer to each paragraph was overruled. Answer, in denial. Trial
‘ ‘ Should gas be found in any well on said premises, second party [appellant] agrees to pay first party $100 yearly, payable on demand, for each and every well from which gas is transported or used off said premises, so long as the gas is so transported. ’ ’
In the first paragraph' it is shown that appellant, or its assignors, entered upon appellee’s land and drilled wells, laid pipe-lines in and over his premises, and on December 1, 1902, “had completed six wells which produced gas, -and ever since have so continued, and from which gas has been and is being transported and used off the premises and marketed. ’ ’
The yearly payment of $100 for each well we may designate as royalty, and it does not appear that any claim therefor was made for any well prior to the year 1902. It is argued by appellant that the allegation fonnd in the complaint and herein quoted is not the direct statement of a fact, but is the conclusion of the pleader. We cannot so regard it. If appellant was in doubt as to the length of time or the number of years for which appellee was claiming a yearly royalty, his remedy was by a motion to make the complaint more specific. The first paragraph was not subject to appellant’s criticism.
The second paragraph alleged “that plaintiff executed
It is first insisted that the demurrer to this paragraph should have been sustained, for the reason “that appellant was under no legal obligation to find a market for and market the gas from said wells off the premises.”
It is assigned that the court erred in its conclusions of law. Prom the facts found, it appears that appellee was on June 16, 1900, and ever since that time has been, the owner of the real estate described in each of the two contracts to which we have referred. After the execution of the contract of August 31, 1901, of which appellant became the owner on October 14, 1903, four producing gas wells were completed on the real estate described in that contract, and continuously from October 14, 1903, to December 31, 1904, appellant transported gas from said wells off said premises. In the month of December, 1904, appellant wholly abandoned each of said wells and removed therefrom all the drivepipe, casing and tubing therein, and on March IS, 1905, released said contract of record, in the recorder’s office of Delaware county; that appellant paid all “rental” as provided in said contract, except that due from July 1, 1904, to January 1, 1905, which .was unpaid and with interest amounted to $172. After the execution of the gas and oil contract, of June 16, 1900, of which, by virtue of various assignments on October 14, 1903, appellant became the owner, six wells were completed on the land covered by that contract, all of which, except well No. 4, produced both oil and gas. Well No. 4 produced neither oil nor gas. Appellant at the time it became the owner of this contract owned pipe-lines and was engaged in piping and furnishing gas to consumers in Delaware and Madison counties, Indiana. It thereupon connected the wells drilled
Upon the findings, of which we have given the substance, the court concluded the law to be with appellee, and that he was entitled to judgment against the appellant for $1,000.
Judgment affirmed.