Amoco Production Co. v. Ware

602 S.W.2d 620, 269 Ark. 313, 68 Oil & Gas Rep. 416, 1980 Ark. LEXIS 1527
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 23, 1980
Docket80-76
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 602 S.W.2d 620 (Amoco Production Co. v. Ware) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas 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. Ware, 602 S.W.2d 620, 269 Ark. 313, 68 Oil & Gas Rep. 416, 1980 Ark. LEXIS 1527 (Ark. 1980).

Opinion

Darrell Hickman, Justice.

This is, an appeal from a Columbia County Chancery decree cancelling an oil and gas lease that the appellant,. Amoco Production Company, had been granted by C. O. “Jack” Ware and others.

The chancellor, found;that the lease should be. cancelled because Amoco had breached implied covenants of the lease, had failed to act in good faith and had abandoned the interests of the lessors.

■ On appeal, Amoco raises four allegations of error, essentially árguing that the chancellor was wrong in'his findings. Wé agree with Amoco that the court was in error in cancel-ling the lease and reverse the decree.

The particular tract of land involved in this case consists of about 73 acres and it is located in the South Half of the Southwest quarter of Section 31, Township 19 South, Range 18 West in Columbia County, Arkansas. A consideration of the issues in this case cannot be limited to just those concerning this tract of land because it part of what is called the Chalybeat Springs Oil and Gas Field. That field covered an area of about seven miles in length with a width varying from a half mile to two miles.

In 1971, Amoco drilled in this area and found oil. Thereafter, Amoco and others conducted extensive geological surveys, collecting data and drilling other wells. It soon became apparent that this particular oil field had a gas cap; a formation of natural gas existed on top of the oil formation. This meant that if the gas were drawn off, the oil could not be recovered because the pressure in the natural gas formation was needed to recover the oil.

Therefore, it was decided the only reasonable and prudent way to develop the field and recover the oil and gas from it was to do so by making the entire field one unit, a procedure called unitization. Unitization essentially means that all of those who have a legal interest in the oil and gas join together in a common plan to gain effective production from the field. In this case it was also decided that secondary recovery procedures should be used. Gas from some wells would be withdrawn and reinjected into the formation to maintain pressure in the formation so that oil could be produced from other wells. Amoco held the major working interest in the field. That interest was over 60%. Ware owned royalty interests elsewhere in the field besides the tract in question, and does not question Amoco’s dealings regarding those interests.

Before Amoco was able to get a unitization plan approved by the Oil and Gas Commission, Murphy Oil Company filed for a drilling permit in the SW-1/4 of Section 31-Murphy had a lease on most of 80 acres just north of Ware’s tract. According to the geological data introduced as evidence in this case, the outer limits of this oil field would not extend to the land that Murphy had a lease on. About six acres of the north half of this quarter section was depicted as having some of this field beneath it, the remainder having none of the field beneath it — in other words, the Chalybeat Field ended at about Ware’s north property line.

A hearing on the drilling permit was held before the Oil and Gas Commission. Amoco was there as well as Ware and others. The Oil and Gas Commission decided that a drilling unit would consist of all the SW-1/4 of Section 31, 160 acres. Effectively, this order meant that Murphy would be able to share in the oil and gas that was beneath Ware’s land — if one accepted the geographical data as correct. The Oil and Gas Commission generally determines what a drilling unit is on the basis of acreage rather than geographical formations underneath the earth. Amoco argued strenuously against Murphy, offering evidence that there was little or no oil and gas beneath Murphy’s tract and that it would be very unfair to permit Murphy to share in the oil and gas. Ware was at the hearing and testified on behalf of Amoco’s position.

Amoco filed a notice to appeal the Oil and Gas Commission’s ruling but did not pursue it. Instead it entered into a unitization agreement regarding the field which essentially permitted Murphy to come into the field and share in the oil and gas produced. Amoco presented evidence that Murphy was included simply because the Oil and Gas Commission had already effectively ruled that Murphy could share in the oil and gas produced from the SW -1/4 of Section 31-

Ware sued Amoco alleging that it should have appealed the decision of the Oil and Gas Commission, should not have entered into the unitization agreement, had permitted drainage to occur to his property and asked for money damages and cancellation of the oil and gas lease.

The chancellor concluded that Amoco had permitted drainage to occur to Ware’s tract of land but that Ware had acquiesced in the drainage believing that unitization would best serve his interests. Drainage is a term that simply describes the process where one would lose oil and gas beneath his property to wells operating on adjacent property. The chancellor declined to award damages for drainage but ordered the lease cancelled. The chancellor found that Amoco assured Ware of protection of his royalty interests and that Ware relied on these assurances; that Amoco abandoned Ware and, in effect, diluted Ware’s royalty interest by half; Amoco was solely motivated in furthering its own interests in entering into the unitization agreement and that Amoco, as a lessee, owed a duty to “protect the interest” of the lessor and had breached this duty.

Amoco certainly had a duty to act for the mutual advantage of both Amoco and Ware. However, in determining if Amoco did perform in a reasonable and prudent manner, due deference should be given to the judgment of Amoco, as an operator, regarding how development should proceed. Amoco had to use sound judgment and not act arbitrarily. Saulsberry v. Siegel, 221 Ark. 152, 252 S.W. 2d 834 (1952); Poindexter v. Lion Oil Refining Co., 205 Ark. 978, 167 S.W. 2d 492 (1943).

A preponderance of the evidence shows that Amoco acted at all times as a reasonable and prudent operator, that there was no implied covenant in the lease that was breached, and certainly there is not a preponderance of the evidence that Amoco acted solely in its own interests.

Amoco had a duty to all of the leasehold interests in this field, not just Ware. This duty was divided as to Ware because he had other royalty interests in the oil field. All other interests were best served by unitization.

The fact Murphy was granted a permit to drill a well in this quarter section was a determination of rights, a finding of principle — Murphy could share in the oil and gas produced from the quarter section. Nobody ever deemed a well desirable in the SW-1/4, not Murphy, Amoco, or Ware.

Ware indicated at the Oil and Gas Commission hearing he did not want a well drilled on his 80 acres for two reasons. First, it might produce a dry well and thereby deprive him of any interest in the oil and gas produced from this field. Second, he realized, and it was not disputed, that an oil well should not be drilled on this 80 acres because of the gas cap. Such a well could not be a profitable producer.

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Bluebook (online)
602 S.W.2d 620, 269 Ark. 313, 68 Oil & Gas Rep. 416, 1980 Ark. LEXIS 1527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/amoco-production-co-v-ware-ark-1980.