66 W. Va. 633 | W. Va. | 1910
This is an appeal from a decree of the circuit court of Boane county, pronounced on the 29th day of August, 1907, dissolving an injunction which had previously been awarded to plaintiff, and dismissing his bill upon a hearing of the cause.
The suit grows out of conflicting oil and gas leases executed by Mrs. D. M. Hall and C. J. Hall, her husband, on a tract of 106 acres of land in Boane county. The plaintiff claims under a contract executed by the Halls to Lee Goff and A. S. Heck, bearing date February 29, 1904, and the defendants claim under a contract made by said Halls to S. L. Thornily, dated June 27, 1905. Both contracts were duly recorded, the first on May 4, 1904, and the second on August 7, 1905.
The object of the suit is to enjoin the defendants from operating on said land and from removing and disposing of the oil produced from the wells drilled by them on the premises
Thé lease to Goff and Heck was to remain in force for ten years, and as much longer as either oil or gas should be produced. The lessees were to deliver to the credit of the lessors free of costs in the pipe-line one-eighth part of all the oil, and were to pay $200 a year for every gas well the product from which should be marketed and used off the premises. The lease contract contained also the following provision: “Second party (Goff and Heck) covenants and agrees to * * * * complete a well on said premises within three months from the date hereof or pay at the rate of $26.50 Dollars quarterly, in advance, for each additional three months such completion is delayed from the time above mentioned for the completion of such well until a well is completed; and it is agreed that the drilling qf such well, productive or otherwise, shall be and operate as full liquidation of all rental under this provision during the remainder of this lease. Such payment may be made direct to lessor or deposited to their credit in the Roane County Bank at Spencer, W. Ya. It is agreed that the second party is to have the privilege of using sufficient water from.the premises to run all necessary machinery and at any time to re
About the same time Gofl: and Heck procured oil and gas leases upon other tracts of land in the same neighborhood, some of which were contiguous to the Hall tract. Shortly after obtaining these leases Gofl: and Heck, and others, procured a charter and organized the Lucky Oil & Gas Company. Gofl: and Heck assigned to it all the working interest in said leases, except one-eighth which they retained for themselves. The contract of assignment provided that the Lucky Oil & Gas Company was to pay the rentals thereafter to become due, and was to carry Gofl: and Heck for the full one-eighth interest free of cost to them, and bound said corporation to drill at least one test well on the territory covered by the leases, and gave it the privilege of drilling other wells on the premises. It further provided “that all surrenders and forfeitures of said leases, or any of them, shall be to said first parties,” that is, to Gofl: and Heck; and that “in no event shall any or either of said leases be forfeited or surrendered by the said second party to.the original lessors or their assignee or grantee or any person or persons for them.”
The first two quarterly rentals falling due on the Hall land were paid by the Lucky Oil & Gas Company. When the third became due, to-wit, on November 29, 1904, it was not paid, but Goff and Heck applied to the Halls for an extension of the time without payment of the rent, which was refused. No well was ever drilled on the Hall land by anyone claiming under this lease; but the Lucky Oil & Gas Company did, in the summer and fall of 1904, drill a well on the Donohue tract of land adjoining the Hall tract. It was completed just prior to the time the third quarterly rental on the Hall tract became due, and proved to be a dry well. In the drilling of this well the
The vital question in the case is whether, or not, the Goff and Heck lease had been voluntarily abandoned, or their rights thereunder relinquished by them before June 27, 1905, at which time the Halls made the second lease to Thornily, the lease under which defendants claim. It is true, as counsel for appellant contends, that there is no express forfeiture clause in the contract, but this does not prevent the lessees from voluntarily abandoning the lease. The contract expressly gave them the right to surrender the lease at any time, upon the payment to the lessor of one dollar. This provision in the contract was evidently intended for the benefit of the lessee and to avoid the payment of any further cash rental. This is one method by which the lease could certainly have been ended, but it did not 'preclude the possibility of terminating the contract by some other method. If the lessees chose to abandon the enterprise, and thus to put an end to the contract, without an actual return
There is an implied covenant in the lease under consideration that lessees will use diligence to develop the property. Steelsmith v. Gartlan, supra; Toothman v. Courtney, supra; and Parish Fork Oil Co. v. Bridgewater Gas Co., supra. In view of this implied agreement to use diligence in making development,' the failure to db so or to pay the cash rentals for a long time becomes a potent element of proof of intention to abandon.
Did Goff and Heck actually abandon their right to make exploration? Whether they did, or not, is a matter of intention; and their intention is to be determined from their conduct and declarations. It is shown by the testimony of a number of witnesses that both Goff and Heck considered that their rights to make further exploration terminated on the 29th of November, 1904, when the third quarterly cash rental became due, and was not paid. But it is argued by counsel for appellant that this was a misconstruction of the contract, a misapprehension of their legal rights, a mistake of law by which they should not be bound. But if such was their understanding of the agreement, and they acted upon it, how can they be heard to complain of their own mistake of law? If such was their interpretation of the writing, then it might well be said that such was in fact their agreement, so long as it did not militate against the rights of the .lessor. The lessor and lessees both put the same construction on the contract; they both thought that a failure to pay the cash quarterly rental, promptly in advance, terminated the contract; and if the lessees abandoned their rights in ignorance of what those rights actually were, they were not misled by the lessor to do so, and they have only themselves to blame. They were not vested with title to real estate by the contract; they simply had the right, by its terms, to hold the lease for a period of ten years, even without making any effort to develop. But they were also bound to pay at the rate of $26.50 a quarter as a consideration for this right; and, thinking their rights would cease if payment was not promptly made, they applied to the lessor for a continuation of the lease through another quarter without pay of rental, and this was refused. This shows the understanding of the contracting parties.
But it seems to be very clearly proven that Goff and Hcck regarded the lease of no value and that this is the reason for their abandoning the enterprise. Goff and Heck were both officers of the Lucky Oil & Gas Company which they had been instrumental in organizing for the purpose of developing this property. This company bored one dry well on a contiguous farm, and exhausted its funds in doing so. It hastened the completion of this well before the 29th of November, 1904, for the purpose of avoiding the payment of the cash quarterly rental then to become due. As soon as the dry well was completed the Lucky Oil & Gas Company ceased to do business and surrendered its charter. Shortly after the third rental became due, Heck tolc[ Sherman Nicholson, under whom they held an oil lease in the same territory, that the Lucky Oil & Gas Company had gone out of business and that if Nicholson wanted to give another lease on his land “to go ahead and lease.” This ivitness further says that Heck told him that the reason why they did not surrender the leases was because it would cost at least sixteen dollars to do so. John Nutter, who had also leased to them and whose lands joined the Donohue land, says that he had a conversation with Goff and Heck after the dry well was bored on the Donohue place and that in that conversation they told him that they had nothing to do with the leases, that they had sold the leases to the Lucky Oil & Gas Company. This was after the third rental had become due to Nutter whose lease was of the same date as the Hall lease. Linnie Nutter, wife of John Nutter, says that Heck was at their home in January, 1906, and asked her if Nutter had leased his land and when she told him that he had “optioned it” he replied that he ivas sorry
The fact that' Goff and Heck were financially responsible for the cash rentals and that such rentals could have been collected by legal process does not affect the merits of the controversy. The Halls could waive their right to sue, and had a right to treat the contract as at an end whenever Goff and Heck voluntarily abandoned their right to make further exploration.
There is another circumstance in the record which tends strongly to show abandonment. It is this, the minutes of the stockholders’ meeting of the Lucky Oil & Gas Company held for the purpose of dissolution is entered upon the book of said corporation in two places, one entry on page 9 and another on page 11 of the corporation’s book. The entry on page 9 was made a few days after the meeting of the stockholders which was held on the 24th of November, 1904, and appears to have been made by A. S. Heck. The resolution authorizing the return of the leases to Goff and Heck was not entered in the body of the minutes, but was entered on the margin of the page in pencil, afterwards by him. The same minutes are reentered on pages 11 and 12 of the corporation book by Mr.
We think the .court below was clearly warranted by the facts in finding that Goff and Heck had voluntarily abandoned their rights under the lease from the Halls prior to the execution of the second lease by the Halls to Thornily, and finding no error in the decree of the lower court the same will be affirmed.
Affirmed.