Amarex, Inc. v. Sell

1977 OK 250, 566 P.2d 456, 58 Oil & Gas Rep. 557, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 642
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedJuly 5, 1977
Docket46935 and 47081
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1977 OK 250 (Amarex, Inc. v. Sell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amarex, Inc. v. Sell, 1977 OK 250, 566 P.2d 456, 58 Oil & Gas Rep. 557, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 642 (Okla. 1977).

Opinion

LAVENDER, Vice Chief Justice:

William 0. Whitehurst died owning some 400 acres located in Ellis County. This ownership included surface and all the minerals, except one-half of the minerals as to 220 acres. By will and through the final decree of his estate, this ownership passed to his daughter, Lena R. Fields, as life tenant, and her living children at the time of her death, as contingent remaindermen. Thereafter, the life tenant gave an oil and gas lease. This lease was ratified by all her adult children. Another oil and gas lease was given by the guardian of all her minor children. The owner of these leases filed a forced pooling application before the Corporation Commission as to any unleased interest. Notice was given in the following form:

“Lena R. Fields, if she be living, and her known and unknown heirs, executors, administrators, devisees, trustees and assigns, immediate and remote, if any of them be dead, and all other interested parties.” (Emphasis added.)

Corporation Commission order was entered showing no protest. The order pooled the Morrow Formation on 640 acre drilling and spacing units already established. A $25.00 per acre bonus was fixed as bonus in lieu of participation in the working interest. Cost of drilling a well was set at $150,000. Owners of the outstanding mineral interest in the drilling and spacing units were required to elect within ten days to participate in the working interest or accept the bonus in lieu thereof. An owner electing to participate had 30 days to pay his portion of the drilling cost.

Amarex, Inc. (Amarex, leasehold owner, and appellee) became the principal working interest owner under the leases and the pooling order. After production, Amarex brought an action for appointment of a trustee to receive and invest royalty income under 60 O.S.1971, §§ 71 et seq. 1 Through cross-petitions, the life tenant (Fields), the contingent remaindermen in being (Fields known children), and the unknown contingent remaindermen (Fields’ unknown chil *459 dren) through guardian ad litem placed at issue the validity of the leasehold estate and sought appointment of a trustee. Additional third parties were joined as alleged owners of interest in the leasehold estate, having the same basic position as Amarex. Subsequently, the life tenant withdrew her cross-petition and supported the leaseholder, Amarex. Trial court granted judgment to Amarex on its petition, appointed a trustee, and decreed the oil and gas leases to be valid. The contingent remaindermen in being and the unknown contingent remainder-men by guardian ad litem appeal.

Appellants argue the exclusiveness of the procedure under §§ 71, 72, and 73 for the taking of an oil and gas lease on mineral interest owned by a life tenant with the remainder interest left to contingent re-maindermen. Appellants ask this court to follow Rudy v. Ellis, 236 S.W.2d 466 (Ky., 1951). They also contend lack of consideration for certain ratifications and leases taken from the contingent remaindermen in being. Appellee, Amarex, argues against exclusiveness. It would distinguish and not follow Rudy, supra. Amarex contends any outstanding mineral interest not covered by its leases and their ratifications comes to them through the forced pooling order.

Here, all parties sought the appointment of a trustee under § 71. Suggestion is made the trial court did not have jurisdiction since the application for a trustee was not by the life tenant as therein provided. We need not reach that issue for the life tenant did make application by her cross-petition. Withdrawing that cross-petition did not defeat jurisdiction. Jurisdiction of a court once acquired is not lost or divested by subsequent events. Jones Drilling Company v. Woodson, Okl., 509 P.2d 116 (1973); Turk v. Coryell, Okl., 419 P.2d 555 (1966).

The Rudy decision has been criticized for its exclusive position on statutory procedure for the leasing of a life estate and contingent future interest. 2 Morris, “Future Interests in Oil and Gas Law,” 3 Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Institute 597, 616 through 630. 3 In discussing the Oklahoma statute, *460 that author finds compelling reasons for a contrary view. First, the statutory language makes no suggestion a contingent future interest owner is powerless to lease, authorizing a judicial sale in certain instances does not foreclose a voluntary conveyance, and the policy of the law favors the free alienability of future interest. Second, these statutes are designed to facilitate leasing as affected by future interest, and not to restrict leasing. 4 The writer’s position is to give the court-appointed trustee the flexibility to lease those interests which have not been leased and leave undisturbed those interests previously leased. 5

Another commentary recognizes the life tenant and the owner of the future interest may join in the execution of a valid oil and gas lease in which case the lessee acquires full right. 1 Kuntz, “The Law of Oil and Gas,” § 8.4, p. 186. 6

The criticism of Rudy, supra, is justified. The rationale against the exclusive *461 ness of the § 71 et seq. procedure is more persuasive. We do not follow that position of the Rudy decision.

In present case, the life tenant gave a lease. That lease was ratified by all her adult children. Although not really argued, there is some suggestion one of the children, Clara Fern Smith, received no consideration for that ratification. She testified as to receiving no payment, but she did establish she wanted to see her mother, the life tenant, have the money and executed the ratification to aid her mother in that objective. Again, although not really argued, there is some suggestion three children were minors when they executed a ratification of their mother’s (the life tenant’s) lease. That same interest of the minor children comes to Amarex through a lease from those minors’ guardian. No attack is made on that guardianship lease. Amarex need not rely on the ratifications by the minors.

As heretofore indicated, the life tenant withdrew her cross-petition and no longer contests the validity of her lease. With our view that § 71 is not exclusive, we hold the leasehold estate as to the contingent remaindermen in being through either ratification of the life tenant’s lease or the guardianship lease to be valid and binding as to those parties.

We have difficulty in sustaining the Amarex position the forced pooling order covers an outstanding mineral interest that might be owned by a contingent remainder-man not now in being. This possibility is indicated at 1 Kuntz, “Life Estates and Complementary Future Interest,” § 8.3 saying:

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Bluebook (online)
1977 OK 250, 566 P.2d 456, 58 Oil & Gas Rep. 557, 1977 Okla. LEXIS 642, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amarex-inc-v-sell-okla-1977.