Anderson-Prichard Oil Corp. v. McBride

1940 OK 439, 109 P.2d 221, 188 Okla. 384, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 476
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 29, 1940
DocketNo. 28834.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 1940 OK 439 (Anderson-Prichard Oil Corp. v. McBride) 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
Anderson-Prichard Oil Corp. v. McBride, 1940 OK 439, 109 P.2d 221, 188 Okla. 384, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 476 (Okla. 1940).

Opinion

HURST, J.

Plaintiff, McBride, holder of a preference right lease on school land, brought condemnation proceedings against defendant, Anderson-Prichard Oil Corporation, holder of an oil and gas lease from the state on the same land, to recover damages for the drilling and operation by defendant of an oil and gas well on the property during 1936. Plaintiff’s lease expired December 31, 1936. It was renewed for the year 1937, and in that year, defendant having completed two additional wells on the land, plaintiff brought another proceeding to recover the damages resulting from the drilling and operation of those wells. The cases were consolidated and tried to a jury, and from a verdict and judgment for plaintiff, defendant appeals.

The contentions of defendant may be reduced to three: (1) That plaintiff was not authorized to bring condemnation proceedings; (2) that the cases were improperly consolidated and tried together; and (3) that improper elements of damage were permitted to go to the jury.

1. The proceedings were instituted by the plaintiff pursuant to the provisions of section 5592, O. S. 1931, 64 O.S. A. § 288. Defendant contends that this statute confers the right to institute the proceedings upon the oil and gas lessee only. The statute provides that the oil and gas lessee may condemn “under the law of eminent domain to like extent and in the same manner and upon the same procedure and remedies as is provided for the assessment of damages and compensation to the owner of the ■ fee in case of condemnation for railway purposes.” Section 11931, O. S. 1931, prescribing the procedure to be followed *385 in ascertaining the damages to the landowner whose property is sought to be condemned for railway purposes, expressly provides that either party, the railroad or the landowner, may make application for the ascertainment of damages. The filing of the application or petition is procedural, and whether the petition he filed by plaintiff or defendant, the ascertainment of plaintiff’s damages is the ultimate result. We think that when both sections of the statute are considered together, it may be reasonably inferred that the proceeding to ascertain the damages to the surface of the land may be initiated by either party. In Sudik v. Sinclair Oil & Gas Co., 172 Okla. 334, 44 P. 2d 954, the proceeding was commenced by the surface lessee, although the question was not apparently raised.

2. The consolidation of cases for the purpose of trial is discretionary with the trial court. Exchange Trust Co. v. Palmer, 163 Okla. 33, 20 P. 2d 897. As the consolidated cases involved the damage to the same land for two successive years, and the same parties, and as no substantial right of defendant is shown to have been prejudiced by the consolidation, we hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in ordering the consolidation.

3. Defendant’s third contention is based primarily upon the submission to the jury of evidence showing the alleged loss and injury to plaintiff’s “preference right.” Over the objection of defendant that such evidence was improper, the trial court submitted it for the consideration of the jury, and the verdict reflects a substantial award therefor. Defendant urges that the trial court should have permitted evidence only of the usable value to plaintiff for the year 1936 of the portion of the leased premises taken by the operations of defendant during that year, and the usable value of the additional land taken in the year 1937 by defendant, together with the damage to plaintiff’s improvements and crops, to be considered by the jury, as plaintiff’s interest in the land was coexistent and coextensive only with such leases. Plaintiff contends that the jury could properly be permitted to consider the damage to the land occasioned by defendant’s operations as diminishing the value of his preference right to renew his lease or purchase the property, for the reason that such right was an appurtenant, and added to the ordinary value, of his surface lease and improvements, and was an element of damage for which defendant was liable under section 5591, O. S. 1931, 64 O.S.A. § 287.

Section 5591 provides that the oil lessee shall be liable to the surface lessee for “all damages or loss accruing to the surface interest in said land, and to all crops and improvements thereupon, and appurtenances and hereditaments thereunto belonging.” In a subsequent statute covering the same subject, section 28, art. 3, ch. 28, S. L. 1935, 64 O.S. A. § 92, it is provided that the agricultural lessee shall be reimbursed by the mining lessee “for all damage done to said agricultural lessee’s interest therein by reason of such mining operations.” While there is no contention that the latter statute superseded section 5591, it is apparent that the provisions of both designate substantially the same elements of damage for which the surface lessee is to be compensated by the oil and gas lessee. The question is therefore whether the preference right of the surface lessee is damaged or lost by reason of mining operations of the lessee of an oil and gas lease from the state. The state being the lessor in both leases, the assumption is that it contemplated that the rights of both lessees might exist and be enjoyed at the same time, and that the operations of the oil and gas lessee would not be violative of the provisions of the Enabling Act, which provided that the agricultural lessee should have a preference right to purchase the land in event it was sold by the state, and also provided that the land valuable for oil and gas might be leased for oil and gas purposes by the state.

The nature of the preference right of a lessee of school land to purchase or *386 re-lease such lands upon the expiration of his lease, its origin, and the various provisions of the Enabling Act, the Constitution, and the statutes in relation thereto, are exhaustively dealt with in Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Price, 86 Okla. 105, 206 P. 1033, affirmed in Price v. Magnolia Petroleum Co., 267 U. S. 415. From the discussion in these cases it clearly appears that such right is not originally a right given by the Enabling Act, Constitution, and statutes to the school land lessee, but an obligation imposed upon the state by sections 9 and 10 of the Enabling Act, in event the land should be sold by the state while in the possession of a lessee under an existing agricultural and grazing lease. The state was not obligated to sell or re-lease the land, but if it elected to sell, it was required to give the lessee an opportunity to purchase at the highest bid therefor received by the state. If the state elected to re-lease the land, it was obligated by the terms of the lease to give the present lessee thereof the first opportunity to take such lease at the rental fixed under the statute, section 25, ch. 28, S. L. 1935, 64 O.S.A. § 89. It is therefore apparent that the exercise of the so-called preference right was dependent wholly upon the election of the state to re-lease or sell the land. If it elected to do neither, the obligation no longer existed.

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Bluebook (online)
1940 OK 439, 109 P.2d 221, 188 Okla. 384, 1940 Okla. LEXIS 476, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-prichard-oil-corp-v-mcbride-okla-1940.