Broussard v. Phillips Petroleum Company

160 F. Supp. 905, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 892, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2581
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedApril 24, 1958
DocketCiv. A. 6389
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 160 F. Supp. 905 (Broussard v. Phillips Petroleum Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Broussard v. Phillips Petroleum Company, 160 F. Supp. 905, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 892, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2581 (W.D. La. 1958).

Opinion

HUNTER, Judge.

This suit for cancellation of an oil, gas and mineral lease (as to part of the acreage covered thereby) was instituted in state court and removed to this court by defendant on the basis of diversity. The land involved has considerable value and comprises 29.526 acres by actual survey. The delay rentals which accrued October 19, 1956, as to the land in question, were not paid or tendered by defendants; nor were drilling operations conducted on or production obtained from that portion of the land prior to that date.

Plaintiff asks for judgment on the face of the papers and both sides candidly concede that there is no factual dispute. These facts may be simply stated.

On October 19, 1953, plaintiff granted an oil, gas and mineral lease to Robert Mosbacher for a primary term of five years covering two tracts of land in the North Erath area of Vermilion Parish, Louisiana, each containing 36.2 acres. On June 28, 1955, Mosbacher assigned *907 the lease to Phillips Petroleum Company, less and except certain reserved interests.

The lease was executed on Form 42 CPM-New South Louisiana Revised 4 Pooling — a lease form in general use in South Louisiana. It contains the usual delay rental clause whereby lessee is authorized to defer drilling operations during the primary term by the annual payment of a delay rental — in this case at the rate of $5 per acre. The lease also provides that lessee may designate units not exceeding 40 acres for oil and 160 acres for gas, and that drilling operations on or production from land included in a pooled unit (whether or not on or from the land covered by the lease) will hold the entire acreage both within and without the unit. However, there is a very important addition to the lease in the form of a typewritten clause, which provides, in short, that “notunthstanding any provision” of the lease to the contrary, drilling operations on or production from a pooled unit established under Paragraph 2 of the lease, embracing a part of plaintiff’s lands and other lands will serve to maintain the lease in force and effect only as to the lands in the unit, and that the lease may be maintained as to the remainder of the land only by doing so in a manner provided for in the lease; and if it is to be done by delay rental payments, delay rentals are payable only on the acreage outside such unit. This clause, commonly known in the area as the “Pugh Clause”, is set forth fully in the footnote 1 .

Lessee paid the full delay rental accruing under the lease (for its entire acreage) on October 19, 1954 and October 19, 1955, thereby maintaining the lease in full force and effect without further action or payments until October 19, 1956. In the meantime, on October 7, 1955, lessee designated a 160-acre gas unit, as provided in the lease, comprising, with other lands, all of Tract 2 of the lease, and 6.708 acres from the southern portion of Tract 1. There was excluded from the unit 29.526 acres of Tract 1 of the lease, which is the tract involved in this suit. Shortly thereafter lessee drilled a well on Tract 2 of the lease (all of which was in the unit), and completed it in the Champagne Sand as a commercial producer of gas and distillate on December 19, 1955. This well has been continuously producing since that time.

Shortly after the completion of the above well, Tidewater Associated Oil Company (now Tidewater Oil Company) drilled a well on its U. Richard lease, to the north, and on July 5, 1956, completed it in the same sand as a producer of gas and distillate. The Tidewater lease was not included in the designated 160-acre unit above referred to, but its Richard well was located about 400 feet north of the 29.526 acres involved in this suit. The south line of the disputed parcel is approximately 1,000 feet north of the Phillips-Mosbacher well on Tract 2 of plaintiff’s lease. The tract in dispute is located between the above two wells.

The Phillips-Mosbacher well on plaintiff’s tract, Tidewater’s Richard well, and several other wells in other parts of the North Erath Field were exploratory wells and enabled the operators to better define the geology of the area. The geo *908 logical information thus obtained necessitated a revision of the unit pattern of the field (only voluntary units had been theretofore created) so that the various parties involved would receive their equitable share of production from the common pool or pools. Accordingly, on August 31, 1956, application was made to the Conservation Department for the establishment of several units for the Champagne Sand, including a 302.3+ acre unit upon which was located Tidewater’s Richard well and a 294.6+ acre unit on which was located the Phillips-Mosbacher well situated on Tract 2 of plaintiff’s lease. Plaintiff was duly notified of this application. In due course, on October 17, 1956, two days before the next rental under plaintiff’s lease, the hearing on this application was held and completed. On December 19, 1956, the Department of Conservation issued its Order No. 34-E (effective as of January 1, 1957) granting the application and establishing units in accordance therewith, including the two units above referred to. These two units included all of the land covered by plaintiff’s lease, the Phillips-Mosbacher 294.6+ acre unit including all of tract 2 and 11.959 acres of tract 1, and the Tidewater 302.3+ acre unit including the balance of Tract 1.

Order No. 34-E was based on the evidence adduced at the hearing of October 17, 1956, and it included a specific finding by the Commissioner that one well located on each of the units would “efficiently and economically drain an area the size of the unit upon which it is located, and will give the owners of acreage overlying the reservoir an opportunity to receive their just and equitable share of the reservoir content.” The order adopted the existing wells on the various units, including those on the two units above referred to, as the unit wells, and enjoined the drilling of any further wells thereon.

At this point it will be observed that: (1) plaintiff’s lease was independently held in force as to its entire acreage by delay rental payment until October 19, 1956; (2) all of plaintiff’s acreage, except the 29.526 acres here in dispute, was in a voluntary 160 acre unit which was producing, on and prior to the rental date in question (October 19, 1956), from a unit well located on tract 2 of plaintiff’s lease; (3) defendants did not pay any delay rental for the acreage (29.-526 acres) outside of the 160-acre unit on said rental date; and (4) the Conservation Department units, which included said outside acreage, were not in force on the rental date hereof, being made effective on January 1, 1957, but the hearing before the Commissioner establishing the necessity for those units and also establishing that any additional wells would be unnecessary wells causing waste had been completed prior to the rental date.

Based on the foregoing, plaintiff says that the lease contract required that defendants drill the 29.526 acre parcel or pay rental therefor and since defendants did neither on the rental date, the lease was terminated as to that property which was outside the voluntary unit prior to October 19, 1956. To this action defendant interposes several defenses, as follows:

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Bluebook (online)
160 F. Supp. 905, 9 Oil & Gas Rep. 892, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broussard-v-phillips-petroleum-company-lawd-1958.