Opinion of the Court by
Affirming.
In 1916, J. A. Dials executed to A. C. Albin an oil and gas lease on 215 acres of land in Lawrence county. It appears to be in tbe usual form of.sucb instruments with tbe usual provisions. Subsequently tbe lease was transferred to tbe Union Gas & Oil Company wbieb began the drilling of wells thereon. Six wells were drilled on the-leasehold premises. About 1924 a controversy arose-between the owners of the rqyalty interest, wbo are appellees bere, and tbe Union Gas & Oil Company,, tbe ,tben owner of tbe lease. It was insisted by tbe royalty owners-that tbe terms of tbe lease required additional develop *299 ment, while the owner of the lease insisted that the the development was sufficient under the terms of the lease. On August 20,1920, the Union Gas & Oil Company-submitted a proposal to the owners of the royalty in-' terest, wherein it offered to settle the controversy on the basis of paying a certain fixed amount each year in lieu of drilling a certain number of wells if the royalty owners would withdraw their claim that additional wells should be immediately drilled, and allow it to drill the wells as seemed to it best. The proposal was accepted, and an agreement was made substantially embodying the terms of the proposal. Subsequently to this agreement the Swiss Oil Corporation, appellant, acquired the lease from the Union Gas &' Oil Company. The Union Gas & Oil Company paid to the owners of the royalty interest the sum called for in the agreement, and the appellant continued these payments after it became the owner of the lease, but finally decided that it would not pay anything further under the terms of the agreement. Suit was instituted by the appellees to recover the amount due under the terms of the contract. The appellant defended on the ground that it did not assume the contract when it purchased the lease, and that it was purely a collateral contract and not a covenant running with the leasehold; that the agreement did not contain a covenant for payments running through an indefinite period; that the agreement to make such payments was without consideration and was made under a threat of litigation and in ignorance of its legal rights; that appellant made payments in accordance with the terms of the contract through inadvertence and in ignorance of the facts and of its rights, and its answer contained a counterclaim seeking to recover back the amounts which it had paid.
It is first contended that the contract did not require the Union Gas & Oil Company to pay any sum for any length of time. The proposal is definite and certain about the payments. It was to the effect that, if the royalty owners would allow the company to suspend drilling until such time as it might feel warranted in resuming drilling, it would pay annually, in addition to the wells then drilled, $100 for each five additional wells based upon one well for 25 acres, or $4 per acre, the same as if the wells had been drilled and were paying gas wells, with the provision that the payment should be made on the 1st day of August in each year, beginning with the year in
*300
which the contract was made, and that they should continue until the wells had been drilled, or until the lease should be surrendered. There was a provision that, when a well should be drilled without its producing gas in paying quantities, the payment for 25 acres should cease. One well was drilled after the agreement was made, and the amount to be paid annually appears to have been adjusted to conform to the terms of the contract. It is insisted that, as the lease had been fully developed* appellant should not be required to make additional payments, but the contract is to the contrary. It calls for a performance in accordance with its terms. It was not left to the judgment of the company as to whether it should drill additional wells. The case of Swiss Oil Co. v. Risner,
The case of Ward v. Daugherty,
It is urged that there was no consideration for the agreement on the part of the Union Gas & Oil Company to pay additional rentals. That there was a bona fide dispute between the parties at the time of the making of the contract cannot be questioned. The general rule is that, if there is a question between the parties about which reasonable men might differ as to the outcome, the parties themselves may adjust it by a compromise agreement, and the agreement must be upheld. Berry v. Berry,
It has been held that, where there is no controversy that is bona fide, or where men of reasonable minds might not differ about it, a settlement is not sufficient consideration to support the settlement contract. In such cases the claim must have beerf wholly without foundation, admitting all the facts as true. Davenport v. Anderson,
Neither do we believe that appellant has brought its case within the rules announced in Underwood v. Brockman, 4 Dana (34 Ky.) 309,
It is urged that the contract between the Union Gas & Oil Company and appellant was a collateral contract, and that appellant was under no obligation to carry out its provisions when it became the owner of the lease. There is no defence on the ground that appellant was without notice of the contract. Its conduct shows that it did have' notice, but, leaving all of that to one side, it appears to us that the contract, if not an amendment to the original lease contract, was one which touches and concerns the land itself, and, if that is true, the obligation in the con *302 tract passed with the ownership. It was a major part of the very substance of the contract. Since the rule in Spencer’s case (4 Coke, 16, 1 Smythe’s Lead. Cas., 9th Am. Ed. 174) it has been uniformly held that, when the covenant extends to a thing in being part of the demise, annexed and appurtenant to the thing demised, it shall- go with the land and shall bind the assignee, although he be not bound by express words. In 7 R. C. L. 1101 it is said
“If the thing to be done is merely collateral to the land, and does not touch or concern the thing demised, then the assignee is not charged, though named in the covenant. The covenant is merely personal, and does not affect the land demised.”
7 R. C. L. 1102 contains this statement:
“And so, where the covenant' concerns land, and is one which is capable of being annexed to the estate, and it appears that it is the intention of the parties as expressed in the instrument, then it should be construed as running with and charging the land thereafter in order to carry out such intention.”
Further along in the same paragraph it is said:
“The important consideration is whether the covenant is intended to be and is annexed to the estate. If this be so, the rights and liabilities of those who take the estate and possess the land during the term flow from a privity of estate and not from any assignment of right or contract.”
It is the general rule that, in order to make a cover nant run with the land of the covenantor, and bind his heirs and assigns, the covenantee must have such an interest in the land as to amount to a privity of estate between the parties to the covenant; and, strictly speaking, such privity must exist between the parties when the covenant is made. 7 R. C. L. 1103. There is no doubt that the owners of the royalty interest in the leasehold and the owner of the working interest had such an interest in the land as to amount to a privity in estate between them. When appellant became the owner of the leasehold, it was under the duty to assume the burdens placed thereon by its predecessors in title. The terms .of the contract are enforceable as written.
Judgment affirmed.
