Butler v. Bazemore

187 F. Supp. 458, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 44, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4292
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Louisiana
DecidedSeptember 24, 1960
DocketCiv. A. No. 6617
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 187 F. Supp. 458 (Butler v. Bazemore) 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
Butler v. Bazemore, 187 F. Supp. 458, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 44, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4292 (W.D. La. 1960).

Opinion

BEN C. DAWKINS, Jr., Chief Judge.

This action, brought under the Diversity Statute,1 is the successor to the case of Whittington v. Bazemore, 133 F. Supp. 163, decided by this Court on July 11, 1955, and reversed by the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals, 245 F.2d 943, on July 31, 1957. It is advisable to reiterate the facts of that case, the holdings of both Courts, and the subsequent happenings giving rise to this action.

On October 27, 1941, Keatchie Investment Corporation, a Louisiana corporation (called Keatchie), owned the undivided fee simple title to:

The Southwest Quarter of the Northeast Quarter and the Northeast Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 32, Township 14 North, Range 15 West, less that portion lying west of the Keatchie-Logansport State Highway, there being excepted 33 acres, more or less. Also the North Half of the Southwest Quarter of Section 33, Township 14 North, Range 15 West, containing in all 127 acres, more or less, DeSoto Parish, Louisiana.

On that date, Keatchie sold this property to Garvis I. Bazemore,- reserving an undivided one-half interest in the minerals.

Bazemore executed an oil, gas and mineral lease to Robertson Stores on May 1, 1947, covering this entire property, for a ten-year term. The lease contained the usual warranty clause but made no mention of the outstanding mineral interest in favor of Keatchie. Delay rentals were stipulated in the sum of $127, being $1 per acre, and the lessee had the right to reduce the rentals proportionately if the lessor should be found to own less than the entire fee simple estate. This lease is hereinafter called the Bazemore-Robertson Stores lease.

Previously, on March 11, 1947, Keatch-ie had executed an oil, gas and mineral lease covering its unexpired one-half mineral interest in this property, in favor of T. E. Robertson, a citizen of Arkansas, who took the lease on behalf of Robertson Stores. This lease likewise [460]*460was for a ten-year term, contained the same warranty clause and provided for the same delay rentals as the Bazemore-Robertson Stores lease. This lease will be called the Keatehie-Robertson lease.

Between May 1, 1947, and April 16, 1951, the Keatehie-Robertson lease and the Bazemore-Robertson Stores lease were assigned, with proper recordation, in the following manner:

(1) On October 11, 1947, Robertson Stores, Inc., assigned, or more properly, sub-leased, both leases to Sugar Field Oil Company with no mention of warranty. Assignor reserved a of % overriding royalty on all gas and oil produced.

(2) On May 16, 1948, Robertson Stores, Inc., assigned “all right, title and interest” in both leases to Dorothy Alley with no mention of warranty.

(3) On June 4, 1948, Sugar Field re-conveyed “all of its right, title and interest” in both leases to Robertson Stores, Inc., with no mention of warranty.

(4) On June 11, 1948, Dorothy Alley reassigned “all rights, title and interest” in both leases to Robertson Stores, Inc., with no mention of warranty.

(5) On June 20, 1948, Earle Johnson conveyed to Potter Oils, Inc., a ¥ei of % overriding royalty in both leases.

(6) On June 21, 1948, Robertson Stores, Inc., conveyed to Earle Johnson a of % overriding royalty interest in both leases.

(7) On August 17, 1948, Johnson conveyed to John Collins a ¥123 of % overriding royalty in both leases.

(8) On August 26, 1948, Robertson Stores, Inc., and Earle Johnson conveyed to Potter Oils, Inc., both leases, with express warranty of title.

(9) On August 28, 1948, John Collins conveyed to Potter Oils, Inc., the ¥123 of y8 overriding royalty in both leases received from Johnson on August 17, 1948.

(10) On September 3, 1948, Potter Oils, Inc., conveyed to Louis Blender-mann an undivided one-half interest in both leases, with full and express wai'-ranty of title.

(11) On May 5,1949, Potter Oils, Inc., conveyed “all of its right title and interest” in both leases, with express exclusion of warranty, to Robertson Oil Co., Inc. The connection between Robertson Stores and Robertson Oil Co. is not shown by the record.

(12) On April 10, 1951, Blendermann “conveyed and quitclaimed without any warranty whatsoever” to Robertson Oil Co., Inc., “all of his right, title and interest” in both leases.

On April 16, 1951, Robertson Oil Company, Inc., owner of the BazemoreRobertson Stores lease, assigned it to W. Paul Edman, one of the plaintiffs in the case of Whittington v. Bazemore, supra. Edman subsequently acknowledged his joint ownership with the other plaintiffs in that suit. The deed to Ed-man conveyed “ * * * all of its right, title and interest in and to all of the following described oil, gas and mineral leases covering lands situated in DeSoto Parish, Louisiana, to wit:

“ * * * 10. Lease executed by Garvis I. Bazemore in favor of Robertson Stores, Inc., dated May 1st, 1947, recorded under Registry Number 186618, Conveyance Records of DeSoto Parish, Louisiana, which covers and affects an undivided one-half interest in * * * the 127 acres involved.

The undivided one-half interest in the minerals reserved by Keatchie expired for non-user on October 27, 1951, ten years after it had been reserved.

Delay rentals were paid to Bazemore by the owners of the Bazemore-Robert-son Stores lease for 1948, 1949 and 1950 in the sum of $63.50. Bazemore did not protest about this lesser sum apparently because he recognized that the lease authorized a reduction according to the true legal ownership of the minerals. On or before May 1, 1951, Edman and his co-owners deposited $127 in the depository bank named in the lease, evidently anticipating that the outstanding one-half mineral interest held by Keat-[461]*461chie would revert to Bazemore on October 27, 1951, for non-user. The same amount was deposited each year thereafter through 1954, and Bazemore accepted these payments without protest.

On February 5, 1955, Bazemore executed an oil and gas lease in favor of C. T. Ruffin and Goodwyn H. Harris, purporting to cover an undivided one-half mineral interest in the above-described property. Suit was filed by Edman and his co-owners, doing business as Mid-Century Oil & Gas Company, on February 28, 1955, against Bazemore, Ruffin and Harris, contending that the Baze-more-Robertson Stores lease, which they owned, covered and warranted without restriction the entire mineral interest in the property, and when the outstanding Keatchie one-half mineral interest expired for non-user it automatically reverted to Bazemore, which eo instante vested the interest in them under their lease by virtue of the doctrine of “after-acquired title.”

This Court held in that case that the Bazemore-Robertson Stores lease covered the entire mineral interest; that a conclusive presumption of intention on Bazemore’s part arose so that when Keatchie’s interest prescribed, the lessee or its assigns would then hold a lease covering the entire mineral interest in the property. This resulted, we said, because Bazemore had unconditionally warranted that he owned all the minerals to which warranty the plaintiffs had become subrogated through their chain of title.

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187 F. Supp. 458, 14 Oil & Gas Rep. 44, 1960 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4292, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/butler-v-bazemore-lawd-1960.