Childs v. Washington

87 So. 2d 111, 229 La. 869, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 44, 1956 La. LEXIS 1363
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 26, 1956
Docket42151
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 87 So. 2d 111 (Childs v. Washington) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Childs v. Washington, 87 So. 2d 111, 229 La. 869, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 44, 1956 La. LEXIS 1363 (La. 1956).

Opinions

FOURNET, Chief Justice.

This is a suit by a landowner to have decreed extinguished, for non-use of ten years, a certain mineral servitude affecting his-property executed on January 15, -1937; and from an adverse judgment, he prosecutes this appeal.

According to an agreed statement of facts the plaintiff, P. F. Childs, owner of an 80 acre tract of land in Webster Parish — the N/2 of the SW/4, Section 8, T. 21 N., R. 9 W. — on January 15, -1937, sold to C. P. Talbot, B. V. Bentley and O. V. Pickens one-half of the oil, gas and other minerals on and under the above described property. On April 12, 1941, the three last named persons sold to Robert F. Morgan 3/16ths of the oil, gas and other minerals in and under the tract, and some two weeks later the plaintiff, for a. valuable consideration, executed an instrument in which he formally acknowledged Morgan’s 3/16ths interest for the stated purpose of interrupting prescription as of April 12, 1941, the date of Morgan’s acquisition. Shortly thereafter Morgan [873]*873transferred a half of the interest he had acquired to Mrs. Blanche Washington, one of the defendants herein; the other defendant, Mrs. Minnie E. Abshier, claims the remaining interest of Morgan (3/32nds) as universal legatee under his will — he having died, leaving neither ascendants nor descendants and no forced heirs nor surviving spouse. It further appears from the agreed facts that while there was no drilling on any part of the tract from the date of the sale to Talbot, Bentley and Pickens, on January 15, 1937, to the time suit was filed, the Department of Conservation, following hearings held on January 11 and 12, 1950, issued its Orders Nos. 10-W and 10-X, both dated April 15, 1950, each of which included, within producing units already established by previous Orders, a portion of the acreage affected by the mineral servitude with which we are here concerned; the former Order, pooling and consolidating productive portions of the Bodcaw Sand Reservoir, was. made effective immediately, and the latter Order, affecting production in the Davis Sand, was made effective as of September 1, 1948; and accordingly, in 1953, the plaintiff and defendants each received his pro rata share of production from these respective sands and has continued to receive monthly payments. With respect to Order 10-W, affecting the Bodcaw Sand Reservoir, its provisions are implemented by the Cotton Valley Unitization and Pressure Maintenance Agreement which has been ratified by the plaintiff landowner and the defendants here, although as to the exact dates of such ratifications the record is not clear.

The trial judge, observing that the exact question — whether the mere inclusion in a producing unit, by Order of the Commissioner of Conservation, of a portion of the acreage affected by a mineral servitude, prevents accrual of prescription because of non-use of the servitude — has never been, squarely presented to this Court, and expressing the personal feeling that plaintiff’s position is more equitable and would perhaps be the best answer to the problem involved, yet felt constrained to find for the defendants because “The appellate courts have uniformly held that a servitude is indivisible and that production from a unit created by the Department of Conservation will affect lands both in and out of the unit, even though drilling is not conducted on the particular piece of property in question.”1

Counsel for plaintiff-appellant, citing cases in which (he says) the rulings of this Court have actually reduced or divided servitudes, likens the orders of the Commissioner of Conservation herein to a contract between the parties by which they di[875]*875vide the servitude; and asserting that the Commissioner, in the exercise of his police power to conserve the State’s natural resources, has power to contract for the parties, contends that he, the Commissioner, simply did that which the parties could have done by contract among themselves, and unitized those minerals within the pooled lands; but that such act did not interrupt prescription as to the remainder of the tract — citing Elson v. Mathewes, 224 La. 417, 69 So.2d 734.

While it is true that in the evolution of mineral law in this State, a mineral grant or reservation came to be defined as a servitude,2 the rights of which, according to the provisions of the Civil Code, are not susceptible of division,3 and numerous cases may be found containing expressions maintaining the indivisibility of a servitude,4 yet in the case of Ohio Oil Co. v. Ferguson, 213 La. 183, 34 So.2d 746 (which ruling was the basis for the decision of this Court on rehearing in the case of Byrd v. Forgotson, 213 La. 276, 34 So.2d 777), it was held by a divided court that since the advantages resulting from a servitude are susceptible of division5 it followed that where one acquired from the owner of a l/4th mineral interest covering a 240 acre tract, that owner’s interest in a 40 acre subdivision thereof, prescription of ten years accrued and extinguished the servitude as to the 40 acre tract notwithstanding the fact that as to the remaining 200 acres the servitude was maintained by drilling operations and production by the owner of the mineral interest therein. And, as pointed out in the recent case of Elson v. Mathewes, 224 La. 417, 69 So.2d 734, 735, “A grant by a landowner of a mineral interest, under the established jurisprudence of this court,, does create a servitude which is indivisible in the sense that the grantor thereafter [877]*877cannot contract independently with a third person to effect a division of that servitude to the disadvantage of the mineral owner. But there is no law prohibiting the landowner and the mineral owner from entering into a contract with each other, as was done by and between these litigants, whereby a division or a reduction of the servitude results”; and held that whereas, due to the said agreement, the servitude was extended as to the tract incorporated in the unit, the failure of the agreement to mention the remaining acreage affected by the mineral servitude, along with failure to use the remaining acreage during the prescriptive period, resulted at the end of ten years in the extinguishment of the servitude to the extent of the acreage outside the unit. Cf. Spears v. Nesbitt, 197 La. 931, 2 So.2d 650.

Our conservation laws relating to minerals — their purpose being to protect, conserve and replenish the natural resources of the State and to prohibit and prevent the waste or any wasteful use thereof — become a part of the contract between the parties when such contract deals with the minerals lying in and under the lands of the State.6 One of these laws, a comprehensive conservation statute enacted as Act 157 of 1940, now LSA-R.S. 30:2 et seq., requires that the 'Commissioner of Conservation, if he finds it necessary in order to prevent waste and to avoid drilling unnecessary wells, “shall establish a drilling unit or units for each pool”, LSA-R.S. 30 :9, subd. B 7 and contains the provision that owners may validly agree to pool their interests and to develop their lands as a drilling unit, but directs that in the absence of such agreement the Commissioner “* * * shall require them to do so and to develop their lands as a drilling unit * * *” — orders so requiring to be made after notice and hearing, and upon terms which will afford to each owner within the unit an opportunity to receive his just and equitable share of the oil and gas in the pool without unnecessary expense.

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Bluebook (online)
87 So. 2d 111, 229 La. 869, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 44, 1956 La. LEXIS 1363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childs-v-washington-la-1956.