90 W. Va. 329 | W. Va. | 1922
This cause was formerly considered by this court ,on appeal from a decree sustaining a demurrer to, and dismissing, plaintiffs’ bill. Warren v. Boggs, 83 W. Va. 89. A statement of the facts, as set out by the pleadings, is there found.
The respective property interests of the parties in the subject matter of the litigation have been determined in a compromise agreement entered into by them and dated May 12, 1913. By that agreement the parties have designated the metes and bounds of the 94 acre tract, and the metes and bounds of the 17 acre and 115 poles tract, designated in the pleadings “as the 18 acre tract” which interlocks on the 94 acre tract. The controversy is now as to the proper location, with respect to these two tracts, of an oil well known as Boggs No. 5. If that well is.on the 94 acre tract the plaintiffs are entitled to 7/8 of the 1/8 royalty therein and defendants to 1/8 of the royalty; if the situs of the well is on the 18 acre tract, then defendant is entitled to all of the royalty. The lower court decided that the well was'on the 18 acre tract; that plaintiffs were not entitled to- any relief and dismissed their original, amended and supplemental bills. This appeal was awarded from that decree.
Having concluded that the survey of the 18 acre tract should be made by surface measurement, the method' by which Smith and Wells made their original survey in 1886' as shown by their deed to Hoff, and' it appearing that such measurement will place the situs of the well without the interlock and on the 94 acre or Warren tract, it follows that the decree must be reversed. All of the defendants’ surveyors ran out the lines and distances by horizontal measurement, giving proper magnetic variation from 1886 and extended the eastern line 16 1/2 poles by which method it was found that the well was within the 18 acre tract from 4.6 feet to 9.2 feet. Lawson Scott, by this method placed the well a little over 11 feet south of the northern line of the tract. It is argued that horizontal measurement should control inasmuch as nothing - is said in the compromise agreement about how it should be measured, and hence the statute reads into the agreement horizozntal measurement. It is argued that the reference to the deed of 1886 is a mere recital under a “whereas” clause- and yet when defendant surveys! the land the deed of 1886 is invoked and the survey made as. of that date; that is, the magnetic variation is calculated from that date. If the reference to the deed of 1886 be a mere recital and of no effect as evidencing the intentions of the parties, then the land should have been located under the calls and. distances of the agreement of 1913, and the magnetic variation calculated from that date. It is conceded by the surveyors that unless the variation is calculated from 1886 ánd used in the survey, the- well will lie north of the 18 acre tract. It seems that a survey of that tract, if it had been made as of the time of the agreement, and with horizontal measurement, would place the well without the 18 acre tract. As before stated, defendants cannot invoke the benefit of the recital, under the “whereas” clause in the agreement and ignore that which
In view of our disposition of this cause largely upon the evidence of defendants’ surveyors, in which it is shown that by surface measurement the well will be located on the 94 acre tract, we do not deem it necessary to pass upon plaintiffs’ exceptions to certain portions of defendants’ depositions. The decree will be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings in conformity herewith.
Reversed and remanded.