64 Pa. Super. 544 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1916
Opinion by
The defendant, the South Penn Oil Company, operated certain oil and gas wells in Green County under a lease from Florence Blaker and George Blaker, her husband. The company, claiming that the wells were not productive, secured a reduction of the rental from George Blaker who was acting as attorney for the heirs of Joseph Varner to whom Florence Blaker had transferred the oil and gas royalties or rights, she as one of the heirs retaining her part. His authority to make the reduction is the matter to be determined.
Originally the property belonged to Joseph Varner. His heirs entered into an agreement in regard to his real estate on September 16, 1896, and on the same day in furtherance of the agreement they gave George Blaker a power of attorney to make sale each month of all the oil of the estate and apply the proceeds of all the oil “which has run since the death of Joseph Varner and which may
If we examine the other papers which appear in the case, we cannot find any authority in Blaker to reduce the rental. If it does not appear in the written agreements of the parties that he had such power, defendant’s case must fail. Blaker’s authority cannot be proven by his declarations. The lease for the oil and gas to the defendant company was made by Florence Blaker June 14, 1898, and was for a period of ten years. Prior to that she had obtained a deed for the eighty-four acres so'léased from the other heirs, the date of the deed being April 1, 1898. On March 25, 1899, all the heirs of Joseph Varner by agreement duly entered into provided that the royalty and rentals arising from oil and gas on the lands of the said decedent should be divided among said heirs and should belong to them for the term of five years beginning April 1,1898, “notwithstanding any division or conveyance of said lands or any part of them that shall be made......It being understood and agreed that the undivided lands of said decedent......shall remain in common to the said widow and heirs subject to the written
We bave come to tbe conclusion that the power of attorney and tbe agreement of 1896 bad not in contemplation tbe exercise of any such powers as George W. Blaker assumed in reducing tbe royalties. We do not think tbe agreement of March 25, 1899, in any of its provisions authorized such act on bis part or amplified tbe powers which be bad under tbe agreement of 1896. Tbe court in its charge stated that Blaker bad authority from tbe Varner heirs to lease lands in West Virginia and Pennsylvania, but tbe paper purporting to give such authority, dated Nov. 23, 1897, was not executed. We conclude that tbe court erred in bolding that tbe plaintiffs could only recover tbe reduced royalties and that tbe case must go back for retrial.
Tbe judgment is reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.