Amerada Petroleum Corp. v. Sledge

1931 OK 514, 3 P.2d 167, 151 Okla. 160
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 15, 1931
Docket20154
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 1931 OK 514 (Amerada Petroleum Corp. v. Sledge) 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
Amerada Petroleum Corp. v. Sledge, 1931 OK 514, 3 P.2d 167, 151 Okla. 160 (Okla. 1931).

Opinion

CLARK, V. O. J.

This cause presents error from the district court of Grady county. For convenience parties will be referred to as they appeared in the trial court.

Plaintiffs, D. T. Sledge and Hettie M. Sledge, brought this action on the 3rd day of November, 1927, against the Amerada Petroleum Corporation, a corporation, Atlantic Oil Producing Company, a corporation, Walter H. Gant, and Knox L. Garvin.

Plaintiffs allege that on the 27th day of February, 1925, plaintiffs executed and delivered to defendant Amerada Petroleum Corporation an oil and gas lease on 110 acres of land (described in petition) for a term of two years from said date and as long thereafter as oil or gas or either of them is produced from said land by said lessee; tbe lease was tbe usual 88 form and provided for %th royalty of tbe gas or oil.

That thereafter Amerada Petroleum Corporation assigned an undivided one-half interest in and to said lease covering a part of said land to defendants Walter H. Gant and Knox L. Garvin. That the said Knox L. Garvin and Walter H. Gant assigned a one-half interest in and to said lease-covering- a part of the land therein described to the defendant Atlantic Oil Producing Company.

The record discloses that one-half interest of 40 acres in section 6 was assigned to Walter IT. Gant and Knox L. Garvin and that Gant and Garvin assigned one-fourth interest in said 40 acres to the Atlantic Oil Producing Company.

Plaintiffs further allege that prior to the expiration of the two-year term of said lease, about tbe month of November, 1926, defendants drilled and completed a gas well in tbe southwest corner of the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 6, -which gas well, since completion, produced large quantities of commercial gas, which had been sold by the defendants and such defendants had paid the plaintiffs part of their %th royalty on such gas, about the sum of $1,000. Plaintiffs alleged that the true amount of plaintiffs’ %th royalty on the gas produced and sold from said well amounts to a much larger sum.

Plaintiffs further allege that in the month of April, 1927, there was completed by some of the defendants a gas well in section 6 on lands other than that belonging to plaintiffs by offsetting the gas well on plaintiffs’ land hereinbefore described; such gas well has *161 since produced large quantities of gas from the depth of about 1,800 feet, being the same depth from which the well on plaintiffs’ land produced gas.

That immediately east of plaintiffs’ land there had been drilled several oil wells, the nearest of which is less than one-fourth of a mile from the east line of plaintiffs’ land and which oil wells have produced large quantities of oil. some of such oil wells producing two to four hundred barrels of oil per day and all of such oil wells producing such oil from a depth of 1,890 feet and less than 200 feet below the gas sand from which plaintiffs’ well is producing. That such territory in and adjacent to plaintiffs’ land has for several months been proven territory for the production of both oil and gas.

.That it was the duty of the defendants to develop plaintiffs’ land by drilling wells and producing oil and gas therefrom to such an extent as would benefit both plaintiffs and defendants, and that there has been at all times a ready and sufficient market for all oil and gas that might have been produced from the land of the plaintiffs. It was the duty of the'defendants to proceed with due diligence to drill a sufficient number of wells to develop said lands for gas and produce and market the same. But in violation of such duty and obligations, defendants have failed and refused to drill any wells on plaintiffs’ land, other than the gas well drilled thereon, almost a year ago, and have permitted the gas well drilled in section 7, immediately east of the plaintiffs’ land, to drain the gas therefrom, and have failed and refused to drill a well on plaintiffs’ land offsetting said gas well.

That on or about the 15th day of May, 1927, plaintiffs wrote a letter to the defendant Amerada Petroleum Corporation calling attention to said gas well offsetting plaintiffs’ land and in such letter requested and demanded that defendants drill a well on plaintiffs’ land to prevent drainage on such offset well.

This is the material allegations of plaintiffs’ petition; prayed that said lease be canceled, for an accounting and for all other relief equitable and legal that plaintiffs may be entitled.

Defendants, Atlantic Oil Producing Company, Amerada Petroleum Corporation, Walter H. Gant, and Knox D. Garvin, filed separate answers by way of general denial and further answered that plaintiffs had received the benefit of the gas well on said land and were now estopped from maintaining this action.

Plaintiffs filed a reply to answer of defendants, which consisted of a general denial; cause came on for trial before the court, without the intervention of a jury. Considerable testimony was introduced by plaintiffs and defendants as to their respective contentions; the record discloses that plaintiffs executed a lease as charged in plaintiffs’ petition to the Amerada Petroleum Corporation, and that the principal consideration for the execution of said lease was the development of the land for oil and gas. The record discloses that the Amerada Petroleum Corporation assigned an undivided one-half interest in said lease, covering 40 acres in section 6, to Garvin and Gant. That Garvin and Gant assigned an undivided one-fourth interest to the Atlantic Oil Producing Company.

The record further discloses that during the term of said lease a commercial gas well was completed on this 40 acres and was producing gas in paying quantities.

The record further discloses that there was a gas well producing gas in paying quantities on other lands, approximately 800 feet from plaintiffs’ line, and that the defendants failed and refused to offset this veil, also requested so to do by plaintiffs. Defendants’ reason for failing to offset this well was that it had drilled one well on the 110 acres and that same was sufficient to comply with the lease.

The record further discloses that on land adjacent to plaintiffs’ land oil wells had been brought in making from 35 to 400' barrels per day.

R. A. Burk, an employee of the defendant Amerada Petroleum Corporation, testified that his company did not intend to drill unless conditions got better; that oil was only worth about $1.30 at that time. There was a conflict in the testimony as to whether or not it would be profitable to develop said land at the price of oil prevailing at the time of the trial.

The court made findings of fact, which in substance are as follows: The court found plaintiffs the owners of the land described in the petition, same being 110 acres, and that plaintiffs leased the same to defendant Amerada Petroleum Corporation. The Amerada Petroleum Corporation assigned an undivided one-half interest in 40 acres in section 6 to Walter I-I. Gant and Knox L." Garvin, and thereafter Gant and Garvin assigned to the Atlantic Producing Company *162

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Bluebook (online)
1931 OK 514, 3 P.2d 167, 151 Okla. 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amerada-petroleum-corp-v-sledge-okla-1931.