Gillespie v. Fulton Oil & Gas Co.

Mr. Justice Dunn

delivered the opinion of the court:

The appellee filed a bill in the circuit court of Crawford county against the appellants for an injunction, accounting and other relief. Answers were filed, a hearing was had on the pleadings and evidence and a decree was rendered dismissing the bill for want of equity. The Appellate Court affirmed this decree, but upon the complainant’s appeal to this court it was reversed and the cause was remanded, to the circuit court, with directions to enter a decree in accordance with the prayer of the bill. (236 Ill. 188.) Upon the filinsr of the mandate the circuit court entered a decree in favor of the complainant, from which the defendants have appealed, and they now insist that the decree is not in accordance with the directions of this court.

Two objections are made to the decree: First, that it adjudicates the question of the estate of homestead of the appellant S. C. Bowman; second, that it requires the surrender to appellee of the personal property on the premises.

The pleadings and evidence appear in the report of the case when it was here on the former appeal. The bill made no reference to the homestead. We held that there were no averments in any of the answers showing the existence of a homestead and no proof to sustain such averments, and directed that a decree should be entered in accordance with the prayer of the bill. The prayer was for an injunction against taking oil or gas from the premises, selling any oil or gas obtained from the premises and drilling wells thereon, and against preventing the complainant from entering upon the premises and operating them for oil and gas; for a decree that the complainant’s lease was the only subsisting lease on the premises for oil and gas purposes, and for .the cancellation of the lease to T. N. Rogers as a cloud upon complainant’s title; for a discovery and accounting of the amount and value of the oil and gas taken from the premises; for the appointment of a receiver to take charge of and operate the property pending the suit, and for general relief. The decree rendered provides as follows: “As to the issue made by the said defendants as to the estate of homestead of the said S. C. Bowman in the premises described in said lease given to the said T.' E. Pierce by the said Bowman, the court finds said issues against the said defendant and in favor of the said complainant; that said defendant cannot have any advantage of the defense that the premises were a homestead, and that the said complainant and his associates should, during the existence of said lease, control, manage, operate and enjoy said lease and the leasehold estates conveyed by the said S. ,C. Bowman to the said T. E. Pierce under the lease hereinbefore. set out at length, as fully and to all intents and purposes as to the said defendants the same as they could have done if the estate of homestead had been regularly waived in said lease as is by the statute in such case made and provided.”

Since neither the allegations nor prayer of the bill mentioned the homestead and the answers raised no issue in regard to it, the decree could not properly make any finding or order in regard to it. The effect of the decree adjudging that the complainant’s lease is a valid and subsisting oil and gas lease, and the only one ever given on the said premises; that the complainant is entitled to the immediate possession, occupancy, use and enjoyment of the leasehold estate; that the interest of the defendant S. C. Bowman is subject to the complainant’s rights, and enjoining the defendants from hindering the complainant from using, operating and enjoying said premises and leasehold estate, is to preclude defendants from any advantage of the homestead estate, as against complainant’s rights, as effectually as would a direct finding and decree as to the homestead estate. It is, however, within the issues while the latter is not. Since it does not substantially affect the appellants’ rights it would not be necessary to reverse the decree on account of the adjudication in regard to the homestead estate, if the decree were otherwise free from error,.

In the other particular complained of, the decree went beyond the prayer of the bill and beyond the rights of the complainant. It contains the following provisions:

“It is further ordered, adjudged and decreed by the. court that said defendants surrender and deliver up the possession of said leasehold estate, together with all the property thereon and all the hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining, to the said complainant or his agents or attorneys, and that said complainant, his associates, their heirs, assigns, legal representatives or agents, be permitted to occupy, use, control, manage and enjoy the same fully and to all intents and purposes,' under the terms of the said T. E. Pierce lease, without any intervention or objection on behalf of said defendants or either of them, or anyone for them, and that upon refusal and in default of such delivery the said defendant or defendants so refusing or defaulting be considered in contempt of this court. * * * It is further ordered and decreed by the court that the said defendants, and each of them, do at once deliver up to the said James M. East, as receiver, the above described property, real, personal and mixed, including the leasehold estate, together with all the oil wells, pipe line, shackle-rods, books and papers, with all the well records and records of shots, with all the hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in anywise appertaining.”

There was no allegation in the bill in regard to any property placed upon the premises and no prayer in regard to such property. It is alleged that the defendants have drilled and completed one producing oil well and are drilling and about to drill others, all with notice of complainant’s rights and to the irreparable damage of the premises and his estate. The complainant had no title to the premises nor even to the oil and gas under them. What he acquired by the lease was merely the right to go upon the premises and explore for oil and gas, and if found, to produce them according to the terms of the lease. (Watford Oil and Gas Co. v. Shipman, 233 Ill. 9.) It is this right which the defendants invaded. The fact that they did so did not forfeit their ownership of the property which they brought on Bowman’s premises, ¿ven though it was used in prosecuting their illegal operations, nor did it transfer such ownership to the complainant. The case of Bruner v. Hicks, 230 Ill. 536, is not in point, for there David C. Brubaker and Mary E. Brubaker were the owners of the property, and it was upon their cross-bill that the court enjoined the original complainants from removing .property which they had attached to the real estate with full notice of the Brubakers’ rights. Here nothing has been attached to the complainant’s property. He has a right to an injunction against the defendants drilling wells on the premises. Whatever work of that kind has been done he is entitled to the benefit of, without payment for it. Whatever material has been used in the work which cannot be taken away without injury to what has been done should be left in place. But machinery or materials’ used in drilling wells or in pumping, conveying or storing the oil, not being a part of the wells themselves, the defendants should be permitted to remove.

The decree will be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to re-enter the same, modified by omitting all reference to the homestead estate, by limiting the injunction against the removal of property to that which cannot be removed without injury to the wells, and by fixing another date for the making of the detailed statement of oil and gas produced.

Reversed and remanded, with directions.