Blake v. Texas Co.

123 F. Supp. 73, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 2051, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2962
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Oklahoma
DecidedAugust 4, 1954
DocketCiv. 3543
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 123 F. Supp. 73 (Blake v. Texas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blake v. Texas Co., 123 F. Supp. 73, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 2051, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2962 (E.D. Okla. 1954).

Opinion

WALLACE, District Judge.

Plaintiffs, as mineral owners, bring this action against the defendant oil company for alleged breaches of the implied covenants to protect against drainage and to further develop; 1 plaintiffs seek damages for such alleged drainage and ask for cancellation of 150 acres of the 160 acre lease. The defendant denies it breached either of these implied covenants.

The submitted evidence established the following facts:

(1) An oil and gas lease for a primary term of ten years, covering the SE^ of Section 21, Township 2 North, Range 8 West, Stephens County, Oklahoma, was executed in favor of Ed Y. Parsons, lessee, on August 14, 1986. On October 5, 1986, this lease (herein referred to as Blake lease) was assigned to the defendant.

(2) On October 1, 1945, defendant commenced the Ruel Blake No. 1 well in the SW14 of NW% of the Blake lease. Such well was completed as a producer in the Ruel Blake Sand (Cisco formation common source of supply) on January 9, 1946. The following September the well was re-completed as a producer of gas and distillate in the Upper Coline Sand (Cisco formation common source of supply).

(3) No delay rentals have been paid since the completion of the Ruel Blake No. 1 and no additional wells have been drilled on the instant lease. Since the expiration of the primary term on August 14, 1946, the entire 160 acres has been held by the defendant by virtue of the production from said well.

(4) The Ruel Blake No. 1 was completed by the defendant at an initial investment of $85,229. An additional $13,-108 was spent in October of 1951 in re-completing this well. As of February 28, 1954, the total net revenue to the defendant, after various deductions, was *75 some $12,000 short of having repaid defendant’s total outlay of expense. 2 At the present time this well is producing some 6 barrels of distillate and about 600,000 cubic feet of gas per day. Such production, the gross revenue from which is approximately $3000 per month, will retire the remaining deficit within a very few months and doubtless will continue for some period of time thereafter.

(5) The Oklahoma Corporation Commission on September 29, 1947, upon defendant’s application, entered an order (No. 20414, Cause CD No. 1534) establishing 40-acre drilling and spacing units for three separate common sources of supply underlying all of Sections 16, 17, 20, 21 and the W% of 22, Township 2 North, Range 8 West, Stephens County, Oklahoma. This order, which still is in effect, covered the upper Cisco, the lower Cisco and the Hoxbar formations. The order further provided that the permitted well in any of the three common sources of supply should be drilled in the center of the southwest ten acres of each quarter quarter section.

In defining what sands were included in the Hoxbar common source of supply the order stated: “That the third common source of supply underlying this area includes the upper Sears sand found at 6660 to 6713 feet, the lower Sears sand found at 6714 to 6813 feet and the Wade sand found at 7461 feet, and these sand formations constitute one common source of supply and are the Hoxbar formations of the sands of the Pennsylvania age.”

(6) On about October 1, 1952, without obtaining a spacing order exception, the def endant drilled the Olson No. 3 well in the NE% of SEi/4 of SWi/i of Section 21, a direct 10-acre offset to the SW14 of the Blake lease and a 10-acre diagonal offset to the southwest of the Ruel Blake No. 1. The Olson No. 3 is producing from the Hoxbar formation at a depth of approximately 7,934 feet. 3

(7) The Olson No. 3 was drilled, equipped and completed at a total cost to defendant of $150,999 and defendant has spent an additional $10,090 on working over. As of February 28, 1954, this well had produced 7,549 barrels of oil, having a total gross value of $17,747 and is currently producing about one barrel per day. 4 Although this well will never completely pay out the evidence indicates that said well can be plugged back to the upper Coline (the Coline sands are found at approximately 6150 feet) and thereafter produce gas and distillate comparable to the production of the Ruel Blake No. 1.

(8) The defendant has drilled six wells which immediately abut the Blake lease. These wells are the J. N. Bateman No. 2 in the SWy, of SW% of NWy4, the M. A. Bateman No. 1 in the SWy4 of SE% of NE14, the S. J. Helm No. 1 in the SWy4 of SE1/4 of NW1/4 and the H. V. Olson No. 1 in the SWyt of NE% of SWy4, all in Section 21; and, the H..V. Olson No. 3 in the NE^ of NW}4 of SWy4 and the Don Williams No. 1 (dry hole) in the SWy4 of NWy4 of SWy4, both in Section 22.

As of February 28, 1954, the total development and operating costs of the Ruel Blake No. 1 and the five wells and one dry hole just mentioned exceeded the total revenue to the defendant from said wells by $582,625. Up to the present time, of these seven holes only the Helm No. 1, which is producing from the upper and lower Sears sands, has paid out.

(9) On November 25, 1952, plaintiffs gave defendant notice to further develop the Blake lease and to protect said *76 , lease, against offset drainage by commencing a.well in the SW]/4 of the instant lease within .sixty days, or paying .offset royalty or surrendering the undeveloped .portion of the lease.

Inasmuch as the evidence before the Court indicates little or no drainage from the Blake lease has taken place, the lessee's duty under Oklahoma law to protect against drainage need not be dealt with in detail. No evidence was introduced by the plaintiff establishing directly just what drainage, if any, has occurred due to the operation of the Olson No. 3, the only producing offset (see findings 6 and 7) whereas the defendant presented specific testimony that no drainage has taken place. 5 Although the Court believes it can take judicial knowledge that some drainage has occurred inasmuch as a 40-acre spacing has been established for the common source of supply found some 500 feet above the point from which the Olson No. 3 is producing and said Olson No. 3 is a 10-acre direct offset to- the SW^i' of the Blake lease, which SWti according to defendant's own experts contains some oil, nonetheless there is no convincing proof of any substantial drainage. 6

The paramount issue in the instant case is whether the defendant has breached the implied covenant to drill additional wells.

Although no attempt will be made in this opinion to copiously review all the various Oklahoma decisions touching upon this implied obligation of the lessee, the Court has made an effort to thoroughly consider the entire body of pertinent Oklahoma holdings.

Where, as in the field of implied covenants, the underlying rationale is bottomed in equity understandably no inflexible norm can emerge from the line of decisions so as to be applicable in a “rule of thumb” manner.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 F. Supp. 73, 3 Oil & Gas Rep. 2051, 1954 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-texas-co-oked-1954.