Amherst Land Company v. United Fuel Gas Co.

84 S.E.2d 225, 140 W. Va. 389, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 198, 1954 W. Va. LEXIS 76
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1954
Docket10678
StatusPublished

This text of 84 S.E.2d 225 (Amherst Land Company v. United Fuel Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amherst Land Company v. United Fuel Gas Co., 84 S.E.2d 225, 140 W. Va. 389, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 198, 1954 W. Va. LEXIS 76 (W. Va. 1954).

Opinion

Browning,, Judge:

This is a suit by which plaintiff seeks to obtain discovery of facts relating to all wells within an area designated as Storage Pool X-l in Putnam County, particularly as to the operation and production of Well No. 1388; an accounting of royalties allegedly due therefrom; a mandatory injunction requiring defendants to meter such well; and other general relief.

Plaintiff sets forth in its bill of complaint that, in 1936, its predecessor in title leased the oil and gas underlying a large tract of land, “with the exclusive right of mining and operating thereon for the production of oil and gas”, to the defendant Godfrey L. Cabot, Inc., hereinafter called Cabot, on a one-eighth royalty basis, pursuant to which Cabot drilled a number of wells into the Big Lime stratum, including two wells, Nos. 1060 and 1087, on a certain 795 acre portion of the leased tract. This 795 acres is now a part of defendant United Fuel Gas Company’s Storage Pool X-l, and is included in an agreement entered into by Cabot in 1948 with United Fuel Gas Company, whereby Cabot granted, in so far as it had the right to do so, “the exclusive right and privilege of utilizing said Big Lime Formation * * * for the purpose of forcing natural gas therein and subsequently removing same * *

This agreement provided, among other things, for delivery to Cabot of 340,000,000 cubic feet of gas to compensate for the recoverable reserves remaining in the Big Lime formation, less a certain percentage which United Fuel Gas Company would be required to pay to the owners of the royalty; for the purchase of six wells by United Fuel Gas Company, including Wells Nos. 1060 and 1087, heretofore mentioned; for the operation by United Fuel Gas Company of all wells then on the tract, with the privilege of drilling additional wells to the Big Lime formation, if required; and the assumption by United Fuel Gas Company of full responsibility of settling with the *391 lessors of the oil and gas in lieu of the royalties which would otherwise accrue to them from the recoverable gas reserves.

Subsequently, in 1949, plaintiff granted, in so far as it had the right to do so, the 795 acre portion “for the purpose of drilling wells to the Big Lime formation and operating wells heretofore drilled to said horizon, for the purpose of storing gas therein, [and] removing and marketing the same, * * to United Fuel Gas Company. Under the agreement, United Fuel Gas Company agreed to pay to plaintiff $150.00 a year for Well No. 1087, $150.00 a year for Well No. 1060, and $300.00 a year for each well drilled thereafter to the Big Lime stratum so long as such well should be utilized for the injection of gas therein, and the removal of gas therefrom. “The payments herein provided shall constitute the entire emoluments accruing to lessor [plaintiff] hereunder, for all wells heretofore or hereafter drilled to said Big Lime stratum; however the emoluments herein provided shall, in no wise, affect the emoluments accruing to Lessor for any well drilled to any stratum other than the Big Lime.” Article 9 then provides for payment of $864.36 to plaintiff for Well No. 1087, and $50.64 for Well No. 1060, for the estimated recoverable gas reserves in such wells. The execution of this agreement, made expressly subject to all the then existing oil and gas leases, was consented to by Cabot, who further agreed that the execution thereof would not relieve it of any obligations or duties under its lease of 1936.

The bill of complaint then alleges: That Cabot completed Well No. 1388 into the Big Lime formation in July, 1952, which well has a daily production capacity of 19,000,000 cubic feet, and sold its rights therein to United Fuel Gas Company; that defendants have refused to divulge any information concerning said well; that there was a large quantity of natural gas remaining in the Big Lime formation underlying the 795 acres, for which plaintiff had not been compensated for its loss of royalty; and *392 .that plaintiff is without information as to the amount of new or primary gas, as distinguished from storage gas, being produced by Well No. 1388. In conclusion, the bill prays for the relief heretofore stated.

Defendants demurred to the bill on the ground that it appears from the face thereof that plaintiff does not have such an interest in the subject matter of the suit as will enable the plaintiff to maintain it. The Circuit Court of Putnam County sustained the demurrer and ordered the bill dismissed from which decree this Court granted an appeal on May 17, 1954.

The ruling of the trial court was based upon an alleged conflict between the allegations of plaintiff’s bill and certain exhibits filed therewith and made a part thereof. The exhibits so filed that are pertinent to the issue here presented are: (1) The 1936 lease, Exhibit No. 2, between Cabot and plaintiff’s predecessor in title, by which Cabot acquired the right to produce oil and gas from all strata under a 2,762.72 acre tract, of which the 795 acre tract involved in this litigation was a part; (2) an executory agreement of May 7, 1948, between Cabot and United Fuel Gas Company, hereafter referred to as United, Exhibit No. 3, by which United would subsequently acquire the right to utilize the Big Lime formation under a tract of 3,537.90 acres, of which the 795 acre tract was a part, provided that United should, within a specified time thereafter, secure the necessary additional rights from the owners of estates therein other than Cabot; (3) the agreement of April 28, 1949, between plaintiff’s predecessor in title and United, Exhibit No. 4, whereby United secured certain rights in the Big Lime stratum underlying the 795 acre tract in question; (4) an assignment by Cabot to United, dated April 10, 1952, pursuant to the executory agreement of May 7, 1948, involving Cabot’s rights in the large tract comprising storage Pool X-l relative to the Big Lime stratum; and (5) the consent by Cabot to the execution of the agreement of April 28, ■ 1949, between United and plaintiff’s predecessor in title, which is a part of Plaintiff’s exhibit No. 4. ' . ...

*393 Upon the primary issue thus raised by the bill and demurrer thereto, as to whether plaintiff is entitled to royalties of one-eighth of the gas produced and marketed from Well No. 1388, assuming that all or some portion of such gas is primary or native gas, the trial court held that: “The rights asserted here in this cause were alienated by the agreement of April 28, 1949 (Exhibit No. 4 with the bill) and by the following language thereof; * *

It is clear from the exhibits filed with the bill that all the provisions of the 1936 lease between Cabot and plaintiff’s predecessor in title are still in effect, except in so far as they may have been altered as to the Big Lime stratum by the 1949 lease between United and plaintiff’s predecessor in title. It is also apparent, and not disputed, that by virtue of the 1949 lease, United has the right to use the Big Lime stratum underlying the 795 acre tract for the purpose of storing gas secured elsewhere- and injected into such stratum. The plaintiff contends that the production rights contained in the 1936 lease to the Big Lime stratum have not been affected by any subsequent agreement to which it was a party, and that such rights are not affected by the subsequent grant of storage rights in that stratum to United by the 1949 lease.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
84 S.E.2d 225, 140 W. Va. 389, 4 Oil & Gas Rep. 198, 1954 W. Va. LEXIS 76, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amherst-land-company-v-united-fuel-gas-co-wva-1954.