5 Pa. Super. 232 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1897
Opinion by
On the 25th of June, 1891, the plaintiff demised to the defendant a tract of land containing one hundred and eighteen acres “ for the purpose and with the exclusive right of drilling and operating for petroleum' and gas,” for the term of ten years “ and as much longer as oil or gas is found in paying quantities or the rental paid thereon.” The lease contained, inter alia,
In pursuance of this agreement the defendant drilled two wells on the premises and “ gas was found in sufficient quantities to justify marketing ” it, and for these the stipulated price per well was paid. But the defendant company failed to drill and complete a third well as called for by the agreement, for the alleged reason that to do so would seriously impair the producing capacity of those already sunk, by lowering the pressure and thus diminishing the flow of gas therefrom, or possibly rendering the wells valueless. This action was brought to recover the sum fixed upon for the failure to drill three wells as provided in the agreement, and the trial court directed a verdict for the plaintiff subject to the question reserved and embodied in the .first point of the defendant as follows: “ The undisputed evidence being that according to the opinion of expert witnesses the drilling of a third well, the failure to do which is the subject-matter of this suit, would have been certainly attended with tbe failure of the first and second wells, and a consequent loss to both plaintiff and defendant, we instruct you as a matter of law that no stipulation in the contract required the drilling of said third well where the same would be attended with this result, and your verdict should be in favor of the defendant.” ' No objection was raised to the substance of the question or the manner of reserving it.
There, is no ambiguity in the covenant sued upon. It clearly provides that the defendant shall complete three wells on the
The authorities cited in behalf of the defendant do not support the proposition sought to be established by them. Thus the claim of the plaintiff in Muhlenberg v. Henning, 116 Pa. 138, was based on a lease of iron ore, in which it was agreed that one thousand five hundred tons of ore should be mined
The action in the present case is based upon an express, absolute and unqualified covenant for the benefit of the plaintiff, and he has a right to enforce it. The manifest purpose of
In Springer v. N. Gas Co., 145 Pa. 430, it was set up in defense to a similar covenant that soon after the execution- of the lease it was discovered that the demised territory was worthless for either oil or gas and therefore the drilling of wells was abandoned. Our Brother Wickham before whom the motion for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense was made, in an opinion said: “ I do not think however that the fact of there being no oil or gas in the land no matter how soon found out, could avail the defendant. The lessors were entitled to insist that this fact should be made manifest in the very manner agreed upon, or to demand the sums stipulated to be paid for the delay. The covenant on this subject is’ absolute and unqualified, and provides for the doing of nothing that is illegal or impossible. If a clear, positive covenant like the one before us to do a lawful thing or pay a certain sum of money for not do'ing it, can be evaded by showing that the performance of the act would not benefit the covenantee, it is hard to tell where we could properly stop in applying the rule.” This case was affirmed by the Supreme Court on the opinion of Judge Wickham. And the principle just quoted was again applied in Gibson v. Oliver, 158 Pa. 277, where the above and other cases are cited in its support. In Cochran v. Pew, 159 Pa. 184, which was an action for rent on a covenant similar to the one in the- present case, the fact that the demised land was shown by adequate exploration of neighboring territory to be dry, and that the sinking of a well would be a useless expense, was held to be no defense in an action on the lease which stipulated that a test well should be sunk on the land demised; Mr. Justice Mitchell saying: “ The parties have clearly stipulated for the mode in which the trial shall be made, and it is to be by a well on this land. There is no room for science, any more than there is for a jury, to say that it will be of no use to do it. The parties have explicitly agreed on the exact thing to be done, and the exact amount to be paid for failure to do it. The scientific nature of mining in the present day, and the certainty of scientific con
It is needless to cite further authorities. The controlling .principle of those referred to rules the present case. The fact that the sinking of a third well might impair the value of those already in operation, and be a useless expenditure of money, does not affect the question at issue. The defendant may not be obliged to sink another well, and this action is not for the purpose of compelling that to be done. But a failure to perform that part of the agreement cannot operate to annul another substantially independent covenant.
The judgment is affirmed.