B. J. Stumpf v. Fidelity Gas Co., a Corporation, Montana-Dakota Utilities Co., a Corporation and Shell Oil Company, a Corporation

294 F.2d 886
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 11, 1961
Docket16833
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 294 F.2d 886 (B. J. Stumpf v. Fidelity Gas Co., a Corporation, Montana-Dakota Utilities Co., a Corporation and Shell Oil Company, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
B. J. Stumpf v. Fidelity Gas Co., a Corporation, Montana-Dakota Utilities Co., a Corporation and Shell Oil Company, a Corporation, 294 F.2d 886 (9th Cir. 1961).

Opinions

POPE, Circuit Judge.

Appellant B. J. Stumpf, plaintiff below, brought this action against Fidelity Gas Co., hereafter called Fidelity, and the other appellees, its assignees, as defendants, to procure a decree that an oil and gas lease originally given by plaintiff to defendant Fidelity had been terminated and forfeited, and to recover certain stat[887]*887utory and other damages because of defendants’ refusal to release their claimed interest in the premises described in the lease. The action, originally begun in the state court, was removed to the court below on the ground of diversity of citizenship of the parties.

The lease in question was executed September 7, 1934, and provided for a so-called “primary term” of three years which could be extended by the lessee beyond the primary term by drilling a commercial oil or gas well below 2000 feet on some point on the Cedar Creek Anticline. The primary term expired September 7, 1937.1 Under date of September 3, 1957, Fidelity wrote to the plaintiff stating: “As you no doubt know, we have during the past year been drilling a deep test well in the Baker field, which well has recently been completed as a commercial oil well.” It is the theory of the plaintiff’s complaint that this statement was false. It alleges: “That no commercial oil or gas well below 2,000 feet was completed by any of defendants during the primary term of said lease as contemplated by paragraph four (4) of said lease, and said lease, therefore, by its terms, terminated and became, and still is, null and void.”

The lease contained in addition to sundry provisions common in oil leases a paragraph 112 which authorized the lessee to pool the production under the lease with other producers and owners. Lessee was granted the right to include all of lessor’s royalty interest in a unit operating agreement to that effect; and the assignee of the lessee Montana Dakota Utilities Co., another defendant, made such a unit agreement covering the lands of plaintiff and other royalty owners with itself as unit operator. This agreement became effective October 1, 1938, which was after the termination of the primary term of the lease. The agreement provided that the respective title holders party to the plan would share in the production from the unit, (called Unit No. 7), in the proportion to the number of acres held by the title holder within the area as compared with the total number of acres party to the plan. The only other reference to the unit operation contained in the lease was that referred to in footnote 1, supra.

The substance of defendants’ answer was a denial of plaintiff’s assertion that no commercial oil or gas well was completed as required during the primary term of the lease; but they further allege that the lease was perpetuated by reason of the commitment to the unit plan of development provided for by the unit agreement above referred to, and that the unit was now producing gas in commercial quantities.

In his reply, plaintiff alleged that the defendant Montana-Dakota Utilities Co., as assignee of the lease, knowing that it had not found oil or gas in commercial quantities below 2000 feet within the time required by the lease, “cheated, tricked, and defrauded the plaintiff by telling him that a search for commercial oil as aforesaid had been successful”; that he had no means of ascertaining [888]*888for himself whether the well was a commercial one and'was forced to rely and did rely upon the defendant’s “aforesaid false and fraudulent declarations”; that as soon as he learned there had been no commercial oil discovered he repudiated the lease and demanded its release.

It will be observed that here there were two contracts made which, though related, were nevertheless separate and distinct. The first contractual relationship was that between the plaintiff, as lessor, on the one hand, and the defendant lessee and its assignees on the other. This was the oil and gas lease which contained the customary provisions reserving to plaintiff, as royalty to be paid by the lessee, one-eighth of the proceeds derived from the sale of all oil or gas produced.

The second was the unit operating agreement which paragraph 11 of the lease, above referred to (footnote 2, supra), authorized the lessee to execute. In short, by that clause the lessee was granted an agent’s authority to execute the unit operating agreement and extend it to cover plaintiff’s lands; but the latter agreement was not a part of the lease.

It should be noted that the plaintiff’s complaint, first stated in three counts, the third of which was abandoned, seeks two types of relief from the defendants. The first type is that referred to in the first and second paragraphs of plaintiff’s prayer where he prays that the oil and gas lease be declared to be “forfeited, null and void”, and that the defendants be required to release of record their claimed interest in plaintiff’s premises. The second type is represented by the third and fourth paragraphs of the prayer in which plaintiff seeks statutory damages of $100 and special damages of $33,600. As the complaint shows, he asserts these damages resulted from the defendants’ failure to release said oil and gas lease.

After the action was at issue, the defendants filed a motion to dismiss it on the ground that plaintiff had failed to join certain parties listed in the motion each of whom was a party indispensably necessary to a full and final adjudication of the controversy. Listed were some 166 persons which an affidavit in support of the motion asserted constituted a listing “of the current owners (other than Montana-Dakota Utilities Co.) of operating rights or working interests committed to the Co-Operative or Unit Plan of Development, Unit No. 7,” and the “current owners (other than plaintiff) of royalty and over-riding royalty payable on gas production derived from Unit No. 7”. “Unit Plan of Development, Unit. No 7”, refers to the pooling or unit agreement to which we have previously referred.

The motion to dismiss was granted and the case dismissed without prejudice, and it is from that order that this appeal has been taken. In a memorandum accompanying the order for dismissal, the court stated: “The Court’s position is simply this, that under the unit agreement which was authorized by the lessor and by virtue of which the lease was amended, the royalty interest of each lessor in the unit is measured at a rate dependent upon production on all other tracts in the unit and that therefore each such royalty owner has a direct interest in this suit, the object of which is in part to free the premises involved from the unit agreement. Any judgment in this case would, it seems to the Court, necessarily affect all unit royalty owners and that a determination of this ease, absent such owners, would be inconsistent with equity and good conscience.”

There are cases in which it has been held that where there has been unitization or pooling for development of oil and gas leases all parties to the unit agreement are indispensable parties in a suit to try title to any parcel of land subject to a lease which has been incorporated in the unit arrangement. Leading cases to this effect are Veal v. Thomason, 138 Tex. 341, 159 S.W.2d 472, and Belt v. Texas Co., Tex.Civ.App., 175 S.W.2d 622. On the other hand, in Nadeau v. Texas Company, 104 Mont. 558,

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