delivered the opinion of the Commis sion of Appeals, Section A.
In the trial court petitioner, J. E. Whiteside, was awarded a judgment against respondent, Harry Trentman, Jr., for damages for breach of a contract to drill an oil well. The Court of Civil Appeals reversed the trial court’s judgment and remanded the cause.
It is thought that a brief statement will answer the purposes of this opinion. Whiteside and another, whose interest he later acquired, owned a block of contiguous oil and gas leaseholds in Brown county comprising 1294 acres. They assigned to Trent-man leases on four of the tracts aggregating 391 acres. Under the contract of assignment Trentman agreed to drill at least two wells at specified locations on the 391 acres. The first well drilled by him proved to be a “dry hole” and he never drilled the second well. His breach of contract in that respect is made the basis' of this suit for damages.
In answer to special issues the jury found that, if Trentman had drilled a second well, it would not have produced oil in paying quantities. It further found that a material object and purpose of Whiteside in entering into the contract and assigning the leases to Trentman was to create an increased demand and market value for the leases retained by him; that if Trentman had begun drilling a second well within the specified time after he completed the first well, the demand for, and market value of the leases owned and retained by Whiteside would thereby have been increased; that there would have been an advanced market value of the retained leases during the time said well was being drilled; the amount of such increased market value was fixed by the jury at $1,440.25 and judgment rendered for such amount.
The law question presented for decision is this: Does the amount which the retained leases would have increased in market value during the process of drilling the second well, had samé been drilled, measured the damage sustained by Whiteside, The Court of Civil Appeals held that it did not and we are of the opinion that its holding is correct. The only damage which Whiteside suffered, if any, was from loss of profits. As stated in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals:
Whiteside still stands upon the proposition that the trial court employed the correct standard for measuring his damages. The weakness of his position lies in the fact that there were no special issues submitted to the jury calling for findings on the question of whether or not Whiteside would have sold his leases while the drilling was in progress and, without such findings there is no basis for determining that he suffered any loss at all. The defendant prepared such special issues and requested the court to submit them, but the court refused to do so. The requested issues called for findings on whether Whiteside could have sold any of his leases, whether he would have sold same, and. how much money, if any, he would have received from the sale thereof. The Court of Civil Appeals held that, in the absence of findings on those issues there was no basis in the verdict for the trial court’s judgment,. grounding its opinion primarily upon our holding in Riddle v. Lanier,
We have concluded that there is no material distinction between the two cases. In the Riddle-Lanier case, as here, the jury found, in effect, that the well would have been a dry hole, and there, as here, there was no finding that plaintiff would have sold his retained leases while the well was being drilled. In. short, the two cases are almost identical in fact and in the find
• In the case of National Bank of Cleburne v. Pittman Roller Mill (Com. App.)
In the opinion in Riddle v. Lanier it was pointed out that there was good authority for the holding that this .character of alleged profit is too remote and speculative to form the measure of special damages, and in that connection there was cietd the case of Artwein v. Link, 108 Kansas 393,
The judgment of the Court of Civil Appeals reversing and remanding the case is affirmed.
Opinion adopted by the Supreme Court April 14 ,1943.
