Armstrong v. Skelly Oil Co., 4378.
Decision Date | 25 March 1935 |
Docket Number | No. 4378.,4378. |
Citation | 81 S.W.2d 735 |
Parties | ARMSTRONG et al. v. SKELLY OIL CO. |
Court | Texas Court of Appeals |
Appeal from District Court, Hutchinson County; E. J. Pickens, Judge.
Consolidated suits by M. B. Armstrong and by Minnie B. Byrd against the Skelly Oil Company. Judgment for defendant, and plaintiffs appeal.
Affirmed.
Lackey & Lackey, of Stinnett, for appellants.
Underwood, Johnson, Dooley & Huff, of Amarillo, for appellee.
M. B. Armstrong and Minnie B. Byrd each instituted a separate suit in the district court of Hutchinson county to recover against the Skelly Oil Company damages alleged to have been occasioned by the construction, operation, and maintenance of a pipe line across their respective lands by said company.
The two cases were, by agreement, consolidated and tried as cause No. 2420.
The pipe line in controversy extended across appellants' land a distance of 1,280 rods, for which damages were sought in the sum of $1 per rod.
The record shows that on May 3, 1922, the appellants leased to appellee "for the sole and only purpose of mining and operating for oil and gas and laying pipe lines" the land across which the pipe line here involved is constructed.
On November 17, 1928, the appellants, out of the land covered by said lease, demised and let, for a valuable consideration, all of which has been paid, to the same lessee, upon which to construct, maintain, and operate a gas plant, vacuum high-pressure booster stations, storage tanks, etc., for the manufacture of casing-head gas, the surface rights to a three-acre tract which is described by metes and bounds. The right of way was located and the pipe line constructed in 1929. The lease of said three-acre tract provides:
A portion of the acreage covered by the said lease of May 3, 1922, was relinquished and surrendered on September 15, 1932, but in our view this transaction is immaterial to the disposition of this appeal.
At the close of the testimony the court peremptorily directed the jury to find a verdict for the appellee.
The appellants' contention is that the stipulation in the three-acre surface lease, providing in effect that lessee had the right to lay and maintain pipe lines across any of the lands of the appellants for use in connection with the casing-head gas plant, is uncertain and indefinite, described no particular right of way for pipe line purposes, and is therefore within the statute of frauds and void.
The plant was erected on said three acres, casing-head gas manufactured and transported through the pipe line from the plant to Stinnett. Obviously this use of the pipe line was in connection with the purpose of the three-acre lease.
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