Amoco Production Co. v. Underwood

558 S.W.2d 509, 58 Oil & Gas Rep. 578, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3620
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 27, 1977
Docket5082
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 558 S.W.2d 509 (Amoco Production Co. v. Underwood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Amoco Production Co. v. Underwood, 558 S.W.2d 509, 58 Oil & Gas Rep. 578, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3620 (Tex. Ct. App. 1977).

Opinion

McCLOUD, Chief Justice.

This case involves the cancellation by lessors of a “gas unit” designated by lessee under the pooling provisions of eight oil, gas and mineral leases. The jury found that the designation of the gas unit by the lessee was not made in “good faith”.

Victory Petroleum Corporation entered into a “Farmout Contract” with Amoco Production Company whereby Victory agreed to drill a test well on Section 3, BS&F Survey, Wheeler County, Texas, and Amoco agreed to assign to Victory certain leases covering land located near Section 3. Amoco reserved an overriding royalty interest in the leases assigned. After the test well was completed as a gas well, Victory filed a gas unit declaration forming a 688.02 acre gas operating production unit designated as the Victory Petroleum Company et al, Circle Dot Ranch Gas Unit No. 1. As designated, the unit perpetuated beyond the primary term eight different oil, gas and mineral leases containing 2,252.03 acres of land. The unit affected the eight leases as follows:

Lessor Land Covered Total Acres in Lease Acres Included in Unit Acres Excluded From Unit

Walser (Circle Dot) See. 3 643.23 553.02 90.21

Walser (Circle Dot) Sec. 81 647.90 45.00 602.90

Underwood NW/4 & SE/4 of Sec. 2 320.90 10.00 310.90

Underwood N/2 of Sec. 1 320.00 20.00 300.00

Wright American United SE/4 of Sec. 1 160.00 10.00 150.00

Hefley SW/4 SW/4 of Sec. 4 40.00 40.00 0

Johnson N/2 SW/4 SE/4 SW/4 of Sec. 4 120.00 10.00 110.00

TOTALS 2,252.03 688.02 1,564.01

Circle Dot Ranch, Inc., acquired the Walser interest in Sections 3 and 81 after the execution of the leases in question.

Plaintiffs, L. T. Underwood and wife, Ora Lee Underwood, and Circle Dot Ranch, Inc., sued defendants, Amoco Production Company, Victory Petroleum Company, Westland Oil Development Corporation, L. C. Kung, Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America, American United Life Insurance Company, Sam J. Wright and wife, Gertrude Wright, Jack Hefley and wife, Bernice Hefley, Eula E. Johnson, individually and as Independent Executrix of the Estate of Jack I. Johnson, Deceased, Kenneth P. Clepper and wife, Peggy Sue Clepper, Euline S. Walser, a feme sole, and Leon L. Hoyt, Jr. and Hughes Seewald, Independent Executors of the Estate of Donald D. Harrington, Deceased, seeking, among other relief, cancellation of the Circle Dot Ranch Gas Unit No. 1. Defendants, Kenneth P. Clepper and wife, Peggy Sue Clepper, and Euline S. Walser, nonparticipating royalty owners, filed answers admitting all allegations con *511 tained in plaintiffs’ original petition and requested that they be realigned as plaintiffs. Defendants, American United Life Insurance Company, Sam J. Wright and wife, Gertrude Wright, Jack Hefley and wife, Bernice Hefley, Eula E. Johnson, individually and as Independent Executrix of the Estate of Jack I. Johnson, Deceased, and Leon L. Hoyt, Jr. and Hughes Seewald, Independent Executors of the Estate of Donald D. Harrington, Deceased, were served citations but failed to answer. The other defendants filed answers and participated in the trial.

The jury answered two issues. In special issue 1, the jury found “it was the judgment of Victory Petroleum Company, West-land Oil Development Corporation, Amoco Production Company, and L. C. Rung that it was necessary or advisable to designate the gas unit in the manner set out and described in the Unit Declaration dated May 20, 1975 in order to properly develop and operate the eight (8) oil, gas and mineral leases in question.” In special issue 2, the jury found that the designation of the Circle Dot Ranch Gas Unit by Victory Petroleum Company, Westland Oil Development Corporation, L. C. Rung and Amoco Production Company “was not made in good faith”.

Judgment was entered that the Unit Designation of the Victory Petroleum Company et al, Circle Dot Ranch Gas Unit No. 1 be canceled and held for naught; that the cloud upon plaintiffs’ title to the oil, gas and other minerals in and under the N/2 of Sec. 1, BS&F Survey, the SE/4 and NW/4 of Sec. 2, BS&F Survey, and Sec. 81, Block M — 1, H&GN RR Co. Survey, all in Wheeler County, Texas, by reason of the execution and recordation of the gas unit, be in all things removed; that the gas purchase contract by and between Victory Petroleum Company and Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America be canceled and held for naught insofar and only insofar as the contract covers the property described above; that the oil, gas and mineral leases dated May 29, 1970, executed by the Underwoods and Walsers as lessors, covering the above described property have terminated for failure of production; and, that Circle Dot Ranch, Inc., Euline S. Walser and the Estate of Donald D. Harrington, Deceased, are entitled to all royalties payable on gas and condensate heretofore or hereafter produced and sold from the existing well situated on Section 3, BS&F Survey, Wheeler County, Texas.

Amoco Production Company, Victory Petroleum Company, Westland Oil Development Corporation, L. C. Rung and Natural Gas Pipeline Company of America have appealed. We affirm.

Appellants contend the court erred in overruling their motion for instructed verdict and motion to disregard the jury’s answer to special issue 2 because there is no evidence that appellants were not acting in good faith in designating the Circle Dot Ranch Gas Unit. Appellees argue the appellants “gerrymandered” the eight leases as set out iii the unit designation to advance their own pecuniary interest without regard to the rights of appellees and the other mineral owners in and under the affected lands.

Appellees or their predecessors in title executed four oil, gas and mineral leases in favor of Amoco, dated May 29, 1970, with each containing a five-year primary term. The leases were assigned to Victory and each contained a pooling clause which, in part, provides as follows:

“Lessee, at its option, is hereby given the right and power to pool or combine the land covered by this lease, or any portion thereof, as to oil and gas, or either of them, with any other land, lease or leases when in Lessee’s judgment it is necessary or advisable to do so in order to properly develop and operate said premises, such pooling to be into a well unit or units not exceeding forty (40) acres, plus an acreage tolerance of ten percent (10%) of forty (40) acres, for oil, and not exceeding six hundred and forty (640) acres, plus an acreage tolerance of ten percent (10%) of six hundred and forty (640) acres, for gas, except that larger units may be created to conform to any spacing *512 or well unit pattern that may be prescribed by governmental authorities

The court in Elliott v. Davis, 553 S.W.2d 223

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Bluebook (online)
558 S.W.2d 509, 58 Oil & Gas Rep. 578, 1977 Tex. App. LEXIS 3620, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amoco-production-co-v-underwood-texapp-1977.