On January 18, 1915, W. H. Nolan executed to the Texas & Pacific Coal Company an oil and gas lease on a tract of land in Stephens county. The lease recited a cash consideration paid of $207.75 and contained a stipulation that it should continue in force for a period of five years upon condition that the lessee should pay an annual ground rental, in advance, of $207.75; the first payment to be made on or before the beginning of the second year, and the remaining payments to be made sucessively on or before the beginning of each year thereafter. The lease contained this further stipulation;
“It is further agreed between the parties hereto that in case either gas, petroleum, coal or other mineral substances are discovered on said premises that this lease should continue in force and effect so long as any of these is produced in paying quantities.”
The lease further stipulated that it should be assignable in whole or in part, subject to its conditions and stipulations.
J. H. Bratton purchased title to the land from W. H. Nolan, the lessor, and as owner thereof instituted this suit against the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, successor to the Texas & Pacific Coal Company, original lessee, and other persons claiming an interest in said lease and in the title to said land, to cancel the lease, and, from a judgment awarding plaintiff that relief, the defendant Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company and its codefend-ant, G. W. Watson, have prosecuted this appeal.
The five years’ period provided for in the lease expired at midnight on January 18, 1920. The grounds alleged in plaintiff’s petition for a cancellation of the lease were as follows;
“Plaintiff further represents that neither the defendant the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, nor any one for it, was producing natural gas, petroleum coal, or other mineral substances in paying quantities from said land at the time of the expiration of said lease, and represents that neither the defendant the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, nor any one for it, has ever produced any of the above-described minerals or any other minerals from said land in paying quantities; and plaintiff further represents that at the time of the expiration and termination of said lease neither the said defendant, nor any one for it, was producing any of the above-described minerals from said land in any quantities whatever; and plaintiff represents further that neither the de • fendant the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, nor any one else for it, has produced oil or gas or any of the above-described minerals, or any other minerals, from said land in paying quantities since the night of January 17, 1920, at 12 o’clock, the time of expiration of said lease, and that, by reason of the facts above alleged, said lease has terminated and expired and become null and void, and of no further force and effect.”
“When we were pumping well No. 1, I said that the first day we pumped 116 barrels, and the next day, eight hours’ pumping, and pumped 16 barrels. The next day we pumped twelve hours and pumped 8 barrels.”
He further testified:
“It is my judgment that that well could be made a paying well had we been able to have gone to the bottom of that well; I consider it would have been a paying well. The average wells in that country produce in the neighborhood of 55 barrels per day. That is, after they got over the flush production and settle down to production; that is, after they develop into a pumping well. That well made 140- barrels of oil according to my calculation. We saved that much oil and it was pumped into the tank. To the best of my recollection that oil at the time was worth $3 per barrel. It took two men to run this pump for the first 24 hours it was run. We have other witnesses, experienced oil men, who gave it as their opinion that the oil discovered in well No. 1 was in paying quantities.”
According to the testimony of other witnesses, plaintiff, who was keeping in close touch with well No. 1, expressed satisfaction with it as being a good well, producing as much as 65 barrels per day, but that it had been stopped up by the casing which had dropped into it.
The lessee also began another well on the land in controversy during the first part of November, 1919. That well was known as well No. 2, and was drilled to a depth of 3,603 feet, when it was shot with nitroglycerine in order to bring in the oil, at 4 or 5 o’clock in the afternoon of January 18, 1920. As soon as it was shot, the drillers began bailing it and bailed several barrels of oil, which were emptied into the tank. The well needed swabbing and cleaning out, and the drillers were endeavoring to clean it. The work in so doing was interfered with by a considerable gas pressure in the well. At midnight of January 18, 1920, and while the drillers were so engaged, further work on the well was stopped by the plaintiff J. H. Bratton, who notified them that the lease had terminated. Thereafter, on January 19th, plaintiff sued out a writ of injunction, which was served on the lessee’s agent on the. following day, restraining further operations on said lease.
The following were some of the special issues submitted to the jury, with their findings thereon, to wit:
“Question 1. Was oil in paying quantities discovered in well No. 1?
“Question 2. How many barrels of oil, if any, were produced from well No. 1? Answer by stating in figures the number of barrels, if any, produced. Answer: 100 barrels.
“Question 3. If you answer questions 1 and 2 that oil was discovered and produced from well No. 1, then answer this question, did the Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Company, after said discovery and production, diligently operate said well and the drilling of well No. 2? Answer: No. 1 did not use due diligence. No. 2, yes.
“Question 4. Was oil discovered in paying quantities in well No. 2 before midnight of January 18, 1920? Answer: No.
“Question 5. How many barrels of oil, if any, were produced from well No. 2? Answer by stating the number, if any. Answer: Five barrels.
“Question 6. How many barrels of oil, if any, were standing in well No. 2 after it was shot and on and prior to midnight of January 18, 1920. Answer: Twenty-five barrels.”
Appellee has cited several decisions of other states construing leases, stipulating that they should run for a certain period of time “and as much longer thereafter as oil and gas shall be found in paying quantities”; or, “so long thereafter as oil or gas shall be produced in paying quantities.” According to those decisions, in order to continue the lease after the stated period of time it is necessary that oil be discovered in paying quantities in the first instance; and that it be. produced in paying quantities, in the second instance, within the period of time fixed for the duration of the lease. The following are some of the decisions cited by appellee: Murdock-West Co. v. Logan, 69 Ohio St. 514, 69 N. E. 984 (Supreme Court of Ohio); Chaney v. Ohio & I. Oil Co., 32 Ind. App. 193, 69 N. E. 477; Northwestern Ohio Natural Gas Co. v. City of Tiffin, 59 Ohio St. 420, 54 N. E. 77; Western Pennsylvania Gas Co. v. George. 161 Pa. 47, 28 Atl. 1004. Those cases evidently proceed upon the theory that the language so quoted necessarily implies that oil must be discovered in paying quantities, or produced in paying quantities, during the term fixed by the lease.
[2, 3] As all rentals necessary to keep the lease in force during the five years’ period had been paid, the drilling of a well and the discovery of oil was necessary only as a basis for a continuation of the lease after the period of five years. Especially when the amount of oil actually produced from each of said wells is considered, it cannot be doubted that the lessee discovered oil within the five years’ period stated in the' lease, within the exact and literal meaning of the term “discovered.”
[4] The predicate for a continuation of the lease after the five years’ period having been stated to be simply the discovery of oil during the five years’ period, another predicate, namely, “the production of oil in paying quantities,” within the five years’ period, cannot be implied and read into the lease as a substitute for, or qualification of, the predicate stated, which is clear and unambiguous.
Nor was there any allegation in plaintiff’s Xjetition that oil in paying quantities could not be produced from the lease from and after the termination of the five years’ period.
[5] Having discovered it in such quantities, and with reasonable prospects of further successful development, the lessee, in common fairness and justice, was entitled to a reasonable length of time within which to continue the development work in order to reap some reward for the labor and expenses incurred, which would also be attended with profit to the plaintiff. And such we believe to be a reasonable construction of the terms of the lease. The following authorities, cited by appellant, accord with these views, and some of them, at least, involved the construction of leases of similar terms to those of the lease in controversy in the present suit: Eastern Oil Co. v. Coulehan, 65 W. Va. 531, 64 S. E. 836; South Penn. Oil Co. v. Snodgrass, 71 W. Va. 438, 76 S. E. 961, 43 L. R. A. (N. S.) 848; Ohio Fuel Oil Co. v. Greenleaf, 84 W. Va. 67, 99 S. E. 274; Roach v. Junction Oil & Gas Co. (Okl. Sup.) 179 Pac. 934.
[6] It is to be noted that by his pleadings jilaintiff did not base his right to cancellation upon an allegation that oil was not “discovered” within the five years’ period, or that oil was not “discovered in paying quantities,” within the five years’ period, but upon the allegation that it was not produced in paying quantities during that period. In other words, his right of action for cancellation was based upon the contention that, according to the terms of the lease¡ in order to continue it in force after the termination of the five years’ period, the lessee was required, not only to discover oil in paying quantities, but to produce it in paying quantities, before the expiration of the five years’ period, and that as the lessee had failed to comply with the requirement the lease had terminated, even though the evidence should show, as it reasonably did tend to show, that the lessee might have produced oil in paying quantities immediately following the termination of the five years’ period if further operations had not been forbidden by the plaintiff.
After plaintiff himself stopped further work on the lease at 12 o’clock on the night of January 18, 1920, the very minute the five years’ term expired, and thereafter prevented further operations by the lessee, by writ of injunction he is in no position to complain that the lessee did not continue its efforts to produce oil thereafter. McCallister v. Texas Co. (Tex. Civ. App.) 223 S. W. 859, writ of error refused; Leonard v. Busch-Everett Co., 139 La. 1099, 72 South. 749; Consumers’ Gas Trust Co. v. Ink, 163 Ind. 174, 71 N. E. 477. Nor did plaintiff’s petition contain any allegations that the lessee had at any time abandoned the lease.
[7] Under our views of the proper construction to be given to the instrument in controversy, it is unnecessary to discuss further what is meant by the expression, “in paying quantities,” as applied to the production or discovery of oil. But we will refer briefly to the decision of this court in an opinion by Associate. Justice Buck in the case of Texas Pacific Coal & Oil Co. v. Bruce (decided April 16, 1921) 233 S. W. 535, not yet [officially] published, in which it is pointed out that that expression means in paying, quantities to the lessee, to be determined by him in the exercise of good faith. And the evidence seems to establish conclusively that at the time plaintiff stopped the work the lessee, in good faith, believed that oil was being produced in paying quantities from well No. 2, with reasonable prospects for a further increase in that production, which the lessee likewise, in good faith, intended to bring about by further development work.
For the reasons noted, the judgment of the trial court, canceling the lease in controversy, is reversed, and judgment is here rendered denying his prayer for cancellation.
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