Billeaud Planters, Inc. v. Union Oil Company of California

245 F.2d 14
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 27, 1957
Docket16433
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 245 F.2d 14 (Billeaud Planters, Inc. v. Union Oil Company of California) 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
Billeaud Planters, Inc. v. Union Oil Company of California, 245 F.2d 14 (5th Cir. 1957).

Opinion

BORAH, Circuit Judge.

Appellants, Billeaud Planters, Inc. and others 1 who were joint owners of seven-eighths of the mineral rights in and under a 320-acre tract of land in Tigre Lagoon Field, Vermilion Parish, Louisiana, brought suit in the district court against their mineral lessee, Union Oil Company of California, to recover damages for drainage of gas from the “C” sand underlying their land, which was allegedly sustained between December, 1950, and February, 1954, as a result of Union’s operations on adjoining tracts of land on which it also owned mineral leases. A trial was had by the court without a jury and judgment was entered for the defendant and the complaint was dismissed. This appeal followed.

The undisputed facts are these: On March 4, 1944, Billeaud Planters, Inc. executed an oil, gas and mineral lease to appellee's assignor covering certain lands situated in the Tigre Lagoon Field. 2 3 The lease by its express terms provided that it was to remain in force for a primary term of three years and nine months from date, and so long thereafter as oil, gas, sulphur or other mineral is produced from said land, or drilling or reworking operations are prosecuted. Among the obligations of the lessee, the lease provided in paragraph 14 that:

“In the event a well or wells producing oil in paying quantities should be brought in on adjacent lands not owned by the Lessor and within six hundred sixty (660) feet of said land, Lessee agrees to drill such offset wells as a reasonably prudent operator would drill under the same or similar circumstances. * * -X- » 3

*16 And with respect to enforcement of the lease, it was expressly provided in paragraph 12, that:

“In the event Lessor considers that Lessee has not complied with all its obligations hereunder, both express and implied, Lessor shall notify Lessee in writing, setting out specifically in what respects Lessee has breached this contract. If within sixty (60) days after receipt of such notice, Lessee shall meet or commence to meet the breaches alleged by Lessor, Lessee shall not be deemed in default hereunder. The service of said notice and the lapse of sixty (60) days without Lessee meeting or commencing to meet the alleged breaches shall be a condition precedent to any action by Lessor for any cause hereunder. Neither the service of said notice nor the doing of any acts by Lessee aimed to meet all or any of the alleged breaches shall be deemed an admission or presumption that Lessee has failed to perform all its obligations hereunder.”

Following the execution of the lease and in the year 1947, appellee drilled a well on the Billeaud tract to a depth of 12,229 feet, traversing three separate productive sands known as “Planter’s” sand, “C” sand, and “D” sand. This well, subsequently designated as Unit IX, was completed in the lowest or “D” sand, but gas was not immediately produced and the well was “shut-in” for approximately three years for want of pipeline facilities.

During the period when this well was “shut-in”, appellee, who was the owner or operator of other leases in this field, completed six wells on adjacent and nearby tracts in the “C” sand. These wells which were designated as Units II, VI, VII, VIII, X and XIII R, were located north, northwest, west and south of the Billeaud tract at distances ranging from 525 feet to in excess of 3,000 feet. There were no specific State orders controlling the operation of the field, except those relating to the allowable take of gas therefrom, and appellee voluntarily operated the field on 320-acre spacings which were accepted by the respective property owners, including appellants herein. The evidence shows that appellee began pipeline production from the Tigre Lagoon Field in December, 1950, and from that date to February, 1954, the Billeaud well produced from the “D” sand, whereas the six other aforementioned wells produced from the “C” sand.

In the meantime and in the month of December, 1953, appellants had employed a geologist to inquire as to the productivity of certain other lands in the area in which they had mineral interests and also to investigate and give his opinion as to whether or not appellee was developing the Billeaud tract as a prudent administrator. When the geologist submitted his report, appellants learned for the first time that Unit VIII was located within 660 feet of the Billeaud tract, and that Units II, VI, VII, VIII, X, and XIII R were not producing from the “D” sand, but from the “C” sand. On the basis of the geologist’s report appellants concluded that the “C” sand underlying the Billeaud tract was being drained by adjoining wells and by letter of January 12, 1954, appellants demanded that appellee take steps to prevent drainage from the “C” sand by wells on adjoining lands. Production from the “D” sand having begun to ebb by that time, appellee immediately reworked the Billeaud well and recompleted it in the “C” sand on February 22, 1954, some forty-two days after receipt of appellant’s demand. The Billeaud well has been producing from the “C” sand in paying quantities since that time.

It is conceded by appellants that the recompletion of the well in the “C” sand complied with the demand made by them on January 12, 1954, and appellant is seeking here only to recover for alleged drainage from that sand prior to that recompletion. The gravamen of the complaint is that appellee violated paragraph 14 of the original lease in that it failed to drill and complete a well on the Billeaud tract in the “C” sand to offset the *17 Unit VIII well which was located 525 feet south of the Billeaud tract, and also failed to fulfill its implied obligations mbder the lease: “(1) to properly develop and operate the lease and produce the minerals for the mutual benefit of Lessor and Lessee, (2) to protect the lease from drainage or depletion by outside wells from which the royalty owners do not receive royalty, and (3) to pay the royalty owners their proportionate share of the value of the gas and condensate recovered or drained by Lessee from said land from wells located on or off the leased premises.” For answer, appellee denied that the complaint set forth a claim on which relief could be granted, denied generally the allegations of the complaint and set up as its principal defense that appellants were not entitled to relief for the reason that they had made no demand on appellee in connection with the “C” sand prior to their letter of January 12, 1954. And as appellee had complied with their demand within sixty days, as provided in paragraph 12 of the lease, appellants have no right or cause of action for any alleged failure to comply with the lease contract by production from the “C” sand prior to February 22, 1954, and that judgment should be rendered against appellants and their suit should be dismissed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
245 F.2d 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billeaud-planters-inc-v-union-oil-company-of-california-ca5-1957.