Atlantic Refining Co. v. Moxley Moxley v. Atlantic Refining Co

211 F.2d 916, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1298, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4230
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedApril 9, 1954
Docket14676_1
StatusPublished

This text of 211 F.2d 916 (Atlantic Refining Co. v. Moxley Moxley v. Atlantic Refining Co) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Atlantic Refining Co. v. Moxley Moxley v. Atlantic Refining Co, 211 F.2d 916, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1298, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4230 (5th Cir. 1954).

Opinion

HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.

The suit was for the recovery of $270,-854.54, 1 wi th legal interest from March 1,1941, arising out of the claimed breach by the defendant of a sublease of an oil, gas, and mineral lease on forty acres of land in Claiborne Parish, Louisiana.

The claim was that defendant, in violation of the reassignment provisions 2 of the sublease, abandoned it while the sarqe was producing oil or gas without first giving plaintiffs the required thirty days prior notice of said proposed abandonment, causing plaintiffs to lose the lease and thereby suffer the damages sued for.

The defendant, denying the violation charged against it, alleged that it produced the property, as a prudent operator should and as required of it, as long as the premises were productive of oil or gas in paying quantities, and that before it abandoned the property, it gave the plaintiffs the required prior thirty days notice of its intention and offered to reassign the lease, and plaintiffs refusing the offer of assignment, defendant thereafter abandoned the lease, as it had a right to do.

Motions for summary judgment, supported by many affidavits, were filed by *918 plaintiffs and by defendant, and upon consideration by the court, in a written opinion, 3 overruled.

The case then coining on to be tried to the jury and submitted to it on a lengthy charge, which included a form verdict, 4 there was a verdict as follows:

A. --
B. --
C. $2000.00
D. $3000.00

Appealing from the judgment for five thousand dollars entered on the verdict, defendant is here insisting, for the reasons advanced and insisted on in its motion for summary judgment, that, as matter of law, the verdict and judgment may not stand.

It, therefore, urges upon us that the record fails to support plaintiffs’ charges that it breached its contract, that, indeed, it affirmatively and beyond any controversy establishes that it did not do so, and that the judgment should be reversed and rendered in its favor.

The plaintiffs, on their part, urge upon us that, under the admitted and uncon-tradicted facts, they were entitled to a verdict as matter of law, and the judgment should be amended so as to allow them a recovery, for $52,240.00 as the cost of drilling and casing the two wells, and $91,004.91 balance due on the oil payment. In the alternative, they pray that “the cause be remanded to the lower court with proper instructions for a partial new trial in order to correct and amend the judgment so as to allow the two additional items herein claimed, there being no issues of fact to be decided.”

This is not to say that plaintiffs, as appellants, do not assign procedural errors. As a matter of fact they specify forty-four. It is to say, though, that defendant-appellant is not claiming procedural errors or seeking a reversal because thereof, and that, while plaintiffs, as appellants, do assign many such errors, their real insistence is the same as defendant’s, that there are no issues of fact to be determined but only issues of law. The defendant, in short, urges that, upon the undisputed facts the judgment should be reversed and here rendered in its favor, while the plaintiffs insist that it should be amended to afford them the additional recovery sought.

Because the contention of plaintiffs that, as matter of law, the defendant breached its contract, and that of defendant that, as matter of law, it did not, 5 underlies the claim each puts forward for relief, and if defendant’s contention is sustained by us, both appeals will be thereby disposed of, we address ourselves first to defendant’s appeal.

Throughout these proceedings, in its answer, in its motion for summary judgment, on the trial, and here, the contention on which defendant rests its appeal has been consistently maintained. On pages 11, 12 and 13 of its brief, this contention is thus stated:

*919 “Defendant’s contention is that the original lease held by the plaintiffs, which was for a term of five years and as long thereafter as oil or gas be produced in paying quantities, was for a fixed term, to-wit: For a primary term of five years and, if the lease produced, as long as it produced in paying quantities. Parten v. Webb, 197 La. 197, 1 So. 2d 76; Caldwell v. Alton Oil Co., 161 La. 139, 108 So. 314, 318; Brown v. Sugar Creek Syndicate, 195 La. 865, 197 So. 583, and cases there cited; Gas Ridge v. Suburban Agricultural Properties, 5 Cir., 150 F.2d 363; that the plaintiffs assigned said lease for its remaining term subject to the election of the defendant to abandon the lease while it was producing oil. Plaintiffs had the right to sublet the lease for a lesser term, which they did not do. 32 Am.Jur. 340 § 417; Robinson v. Ewert, 8 Cir., 291 F. 9, at page 12; Audubon Hotel Co. v. Braunnig, 120 La. 1089, 46 So. 33; Ascher v. Midstates Oil Corp., 222 La. 812, 64 So. 2d 182; Wier v. Glassell, 216 La. 828, 44 So.2d 882-885 and cases there cited.
“Consequently, the term of the sublease sued on here was fixed: Said sublease was to last as long as the property produced in paying quantities, subject to the election of the defendant above mentioned, otherwise it would have been invalid for want of a fixed term. Sam George Fur Co. v. Arkansas-Louisiana Pipeline Co., 177 La. 284, 148 So. 51.
“Under the uncontradicted evidence in the record the lease and the sublease both ceased when the production was so small that the property could not be produced in paying quantities — that is prior to March 1941; that as the owner of the sublease the defendant had the right to produce the property throughout its term; and if, in the exercise of that right, the lease terminated because it was no longer capable of producing in paying quantities, it was no fault of the defendant and the defendant breached no obligation owing to the plaintiffs. United Central Oil Corp. v. Helm, 5 Cir., 11 F.2d 760.
“Defendant’s position is that in operating the property it acted throughout as a prudent operator under the circumstances. It produced the property until the wells dwindled to a barrel a day; that it was not required to produce or hold on to the property any longer because no prudent operator is required to operate at a loss; that it did not, during the life of the lease (and surely it was under no obligation to do anything after the lease expired), drill a deep well on the property because, under the conditions then prevailing, such an operation would not have been prudent.

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Moxley v. Atlantic Refining Co.
99 F. Supp. 499 (W.D. Louisiana, 1951)

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Bluebook (online)
211 F.2d 916, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 1298, 1954 U.S. App. LEXIS 4230, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/atlantic-refining-co-v-moxley-moxley-v-atlantic-refining-co-ca5-1954.