On March 25, 1931, Monroe Oil Gas Company, assignor of Alfred Violette, plaintiff, acquired an oil and gas lease on property in Monroe county from Hugo C. Gaertner and Louise Gaertner, its owners. Plaintiff's assignor, as lessee, agreed to begin the drilling of a well on the premises within six months from the date of the lease unless prevented by unavoidable accident and delays, or to pay to the Gaertners an annual rental of $2 per acre until the drilling operations began. On June 1, 1926, the premises had been previously leased to Henry R. Montry, assignor of the Deerfield Oil Producing Company, a Michigan corporation, codefendant, but the Gaertners believed that the latter lease had terminated prior to the execution of the Monroe Oil Gas Company's lease. Shortly after March 25, 1931, the Gaertners sought to repudiate the Monroe Oil Gas Company's lease, claiming that it had been obtained through fraud, and they further attempted to reinstate the former lease of defendant Deerfield Oil Producing Company by a written declaration signed by defendant Hugo C. Gaertner on April 28, 1931, and duly witnessed and acknowledged. On April 30, 1931, the Monroe Oil Gas Company, plaintiff's assignor, filed a bill against the Gaertners who are also defendants in the instant cause, and asked that they be enjoined from interfering with plaintiff's possession, and that the lease of the Deerfield Oil Producing Company be decreed *Page 8 to be null and void as against any of the rights of the plaintiff. Defendants, in their answer to this first suit, attached as an exhibit the declaration by defendant Hugo C. Gaertner reconfirming all the rights of the Deerfield Oil Producing Company in the former lease, and asked that it be determined to be the only valid lease on the premises. The case came on for hearing, and in a decree rendered October 31, 1931, the circuit judge denied defendants' claims and decreed that plaintiff was solely entitled to the oil and gas rights under the lease of March 25, 1931. There was no appeal from this decree, and it became res judicata. Shortly after its entry, defendants Gaertner gave the Deerfield Oil Producing Company still another lease on the theory that, inasmuch as more than six months had elapsed since the giving of the original lease to plaintiff's assignors, the latter lease had become void because neither the drilling of the oil well had been begun nor the rent paid. Plaintiff, thereupon, began the instant suit to have his rights again determined. He showed that he attempted to go on the land and otherwise comply with the terms of the lease, within the six months following the date of the lease, and that he had also offered to pay the rent, but that his offers had been refused by Gaertner, who stated that he would await the outcome of the pending suit; that about three days after the decree was rendered in the first suit, he tendered the rental under the lease but it was refused. He asked that he be declared to be the lessee of the oil and gas rights of the premises.
The circuit judge held that the case was ruled largely by the decree in the previous case. He found that plaintiff, as assignee, was justified in not drilling *Page 9 under the lease during the first six months of its existence because of the litigation then pending, and also on account of the attempted repudiation of the lease and reinstatement of the former one of defendant Deerfield Oil Producing Company. He further found that within a very few days after the entry of the first decree on October 31, 1931, plaintiff did endeavor to pay the rental of $2 per acre, but the tender was refused; that previous to the expiration of the six months' period defendants Gaertner had notified the bank, to whom the $2 per acre was to be paid under the original lease, not to accept any payments; that the conduct of the Gaertners constituted a waiver of the provisions of the lease requiring drilling operations or payment of the rental within the designated period. Plaintiff's alleged default was caused by the action of the defendants, who could not gain any advantage thereby. Their conduct cannot be misinterpreted; it unequivocally amounted to an attempt to repudiate the lease with plaintiff's assignor. The instrument executed by Hugo C. Gaertner on April 28, 1931, reinstating the former lease with the Deerfield Oil Producing Company is conclusive to that effect. Under the circumstances, it cannot be argued that plaintiff was in duty bound to force his way upon the property and commence operations, nor was he bound to make a heavy investment on the property during the time while defendants treated him as a trespasser. See Mathews v. People'sNatural Gas Co., 179 Pa. 165 (36 A. 216); Consumers' GasTrust Co. v. Worth, 163 Ind. 141 (71 N.E. 489). It has been frequently held in similar cases that the provisions in regard to default and the commencement of drilling operations are postponed until the *Page 10 outcome of litigation instituted by lessor to cancel or declare leases forfeited. Transcontinental Oil Co. v. Thomas (C. C. A.), 29 Fed. (2d) 733; Lieber v. Ouachita Natural Gas OilCo., 153 La. 160 (95 So. 538); Leonard v. Busch-Everett Co.,139 La. 1099 (72 So. 749); Johnson v. Montgomery (Tex.Civ.App.), 31 S.W.2d 160. By the same reasoning, a similar result must follow when lessee is forced to begin litigation to enforce his rights under a lease, the repudiation of which is attempted by the lessor. Defendants insisted that neither plaintiff nor his assignor made any effort whatever to begin drilling operations during the first six months of the lease and made no tender or payment during such period, but the trial judge found to the contrary. He came to his conclusions after seeing the witnesses and considering the written declaration of Hugo C. Gaertner reinstating the Deerfield Oil Producing Company's lease, made only 34 days after the date of the lease to plaintiff's assignor.
The decree of the lower court is affirmed, with costs to plaintiff.
CLARK, C.J., and McDONALD, POTTER, SHARPE, NORTH, FEAD, and WIEST, JJ., concurred. *Page 11