Bohrer v. Ramsey Petroleum Co.

44 P.2d 239, 141 Kan. 781, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 240
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedMay 4, 1935
DocketNo. 32,187
StatusPublished

This text of 44 P.2d 239 (Bohrer v. Ramsey Petroleum Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bohrer v. Ramsey Petroleum Co., 44 P.2d 239, 141 Kan. 781, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 240 (kan 1935).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Hutchison, J.:

This is a controversy between the lessors and the lessee of an ordinary oil lease as to the amount of the royalty due thereunder to the lessors, where the lease is subsequently modified by a city ordinance limiting the number of oil wells to one in a block and requiring.the payment of certain royalties to all the other lot owners in the block.' The plaintiffs claim the lessee should stand a share of the loss sustained by paying royalty to other lot owners in the block rather than the lessors to stand all of it.

[782]*782The plaintiffs herein own an undivided six-sevenths interest in four lots in block 5 in the city of Chase, in Rice county, Kansas, a city of the third class. The owner of the remaining one-seventh interest, Dave Robinson, is not a party to this action, but did join with the plaintiffs in executing the lease in question, so it will be practical to consider the plaintiffs as representing the entire ownership of these four lots, although the holder of the one-seventh interest may not be bound by the ruling in this case. The four lots constitute approximately one-third of the total area or square footage of the block. The exact amount is stated in a stipulation filed by the parties during the trial of the case and also in the conclusions of law rendered by the trial court. We will in this opinion speak generally of the interest of the plaintiffs as being one-third the total footage of the block.

The lease on these four lots was executed by all the owners to the defendant company on September 13, 1932, giving it the right to drill thereon for oil within one year from its date and to continue as long as oil is produced from the lots by the lessee. The lessee promised therein to deliver to the credit of the lessors one-eighth of all oil produced and saved from the leased premises.

The lessee within the year allowed by the lease began the drilling of ah oil well on one of these four lots. However, before it began to drill two city ordinances were passed by the mayor and council of the city of Chase, the second ordinance being an amendment of section six of the original ordinance extending the provisions of the ordinance to lot owners in the block who may have signed a community lease, as well as to those not having signed any lease whatever when the drilling of the well in their block had commenced. In this instance, all the other lot owners in this block had signed a community lease in which the defendant herein was the lessee, and it was executed prior to the enactment of the city ordinances.

Both parties concede the right of the mayor and city council in the exercise of their police power to limit the number of wells in a block to one, and to require the driller to deliver to the credit of the other lot owners in the block a share of the oil produced and saved from the only well being drilled on the block, the amended ordinance providing—

“. . . that if parts of a block are included within the terms of a community lease, it shall be a condition of said permit that the permittee, its successors or assigns, shall deliver to the credit of such community lessors a [783]*783share of all the oil produced, saved or marketed from such well equal to one-eighth of the proportion of the whole production of such well that the square feet of ground covered by such lease in said block bears to the square feet contained in said block, exclusive of streets and alleys. . .”

Section six of the original ordinance provided only for those lot owners whose lots were not under lease, and it required the driller to give to them the proportion of one-eighth of the whole production from such well that the square feet of ground so owned and unleased in said block bears to the square feet contained in such block, exclusive of streets and alleys. In other words, section six of the original ordinance was providing for the owners of unleased lots in the block and giving them a proportionate share of a one-eighth royalty. An ordinance practically the same as this original one in the city of Chase was the one involved in the case familiarly known as the Oxford case, Helmerich & Payne, Inc., v. Roxana Petroleum Corp., 136 Kan. 254, 14 P. 2d 663.

In the trial of the case at bar the court heard and passed upon some matters involved in the pleadings which we think will not materially affect the real question here to be determined, viz., a proper proportion of the oil for the lessors and the lessee, there being no controversy here now as to the share of the oil to go to the other lot owners. In the Oxford case the lessee was a party thereto but was not included in the appeal to this court, and its share of interest in the oil produced and saved was therefore not directly under consideration, and it was there held:

“The ordinance of the city of Oxford regulating the drilling and operation of oil wells within the city interpreted, and held, the provisions relating to distribution of oil produced superseded the terms of a lease between a lessor and his lessee.” (Syl.)

In that case, with the lessee being dropped out of the appeal, the amount given the other lot owners reduced the amount the lessor would have received had it not been for the ordinance. Counsel for appellants puts this proposition in the form of a question, as follows:

“. . . should this burden be borne solely by the lessors, or should it be borne by lessors and lessees proportionately as they are interested in the lease, i. e., % by the lessees and % by the lessors?”

The trial court after making findings of fact in detail, but substantially as heretofore indicated in this opinion, then made the following conclusions of la\v based thereon:

“1. That the plaintiffs in this action are not entitled to the relief prayed for or to any relief in this action.
[784]*784“2. That the defendant's herein are entitled to the relief- prayed for in their answer. ...
“3. That the provisions of said lease relating to the distribution of oil produced was and is superseded by the terms of ordinances Nos. '116 and 120 of the city of Chase, Rice county, Kansas.
“4. That the defendants are entitled to and should distribute the proceeds from the oil produced from the well on said lot 15 in block 5 of the city of Chase, Kansas, according to the provisions of ordinances Nos. 116 and 120, and the plaintiffs and Dave Robinson and Ella Robinson, his wife, are entitled to receive .3,329,053 of the one-eighth of the oil produced and saved from the leased pi'emises.”

Our attention has not been directed to anything in the opinion in the Oxford case, accepted by both parties in this case as applicable thereto, which would tend to fasten the whole of this burden imposed by ordinance upon either lessor or lessee alone, but there are three expressions which might strengthen the contention of the appellants in favor of a division of the burden or loss sustained by giving shares to other lot owners. The first two relate to the free right of the lessor under the ordinance to contract for the amount,of royalty to be paid with respect to his own land. And concerning this right it was said on page 256 of the opinion:

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Related

Herman v. Sawyer
209 P. 663 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1922)
Dey v. Knights & Ladies of Security
213 P. 1066 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1923)
Hughes v. Cressler
287 P. 271 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1930)
Helmerich & Payne, Inc. v. Roxana Petroleum Corp.
14 P.2d 663 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1932)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 P.2d 239, 141 Kan. 781, 1935 Kan. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bohrer-v-ramsey-petroleum-co-kan-1935.