Cutrer v. Humble Oil & Refining Company

202 F. Supp. 568, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 1160, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4887
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 20, 1962
DocketCiv. A. 8842-B
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 202 F. Supp. 568 (Cutrer v. Humble Oil & Refining Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cutrer v. Humble Oil & Refining Company, 202 F. Supp. 568, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 1160, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4887 (E.D. La. 1962).

Opinion

J. SHELLY WRIGHT, District Judge.

This is the second phase 1 of a long controversy involving an oil and gas lease covering a portion of the West Black Bay field in Plaquemines Parish, Louisiana. Though others are actively interested in the area, the particular dispute here concerns only the landowners and their lessee, the Humble Oil & Refining Company. The lessors want their property returned free of the lease, which they say has expired or should be cancelled for many reasons. The defendant oil company, on the contrary, asserts the continuing vitality of the lease, but claims a right to withhold a substantial portion of the royalties apparently due thereunder until the plaintiffs’ title is made secure.

The lease in suit, executed in December, 1953, nominally embraces some 1920 acres. 2 However, all but about one hun *570 dred acres are submerged, and that is the source of the difficulty. For there is a serious question concerning the plaintiffs’ title to the minerals in the water bottoms, which would normally belong to the state. 3 Indeed, even before the lease in suit was entered into, the Gulf Oil Corporation, as a co-lessee from the State of Louisiana under an instrument which it interprets as covering most of the submerged areas here involved, 4 had already drilled producing wells on the leased premises and the state had accepted its royalties.

Under the circumstances, Humble has been understandably reluctant to explore the water bottoms within the lease until the matter is settled. It did nothing until almost the end of the five-year primary term. To keep the lease in force, it paid delay rentals, but postponed drilling. In the meantime Gulf expanded its operations and successfully developed a large portion of the contested area, until the pattern of its wells surrounded the eastern half of Stone Island, one of only two land masses within the lease. 5 At this point, in .late 1958, the lease being about to expire, defendant entered into a joint operating agreement with the state’s lessees for the development of Stone Island and the immediately surrounding water bottoms, unitized under orders of the Louisiana Department of Conservation. 6 Humble’s participation in the portion of this “joint area” within the lease, about 250 acres, was calculated on the basis of the land area only, some 57 acres, on the ground that the water bottoms were excluded from the plaintiffs’ lease and were covered by the state lease. Gulf was designated the operator and promptly drilled a well on the eastern half of the Island which was completed *571 December 18, 1958, one day before the expiration of the primary term of the lease in suit. 7 While all oil sands have not yet been tapped, development of the joint area has progressed rapidly, dual wells having now been completed on each unit. 8

Just after execution of the joint operating agreement, Humble released to the plaintiffs some 80 acres of water bottoms adjacent to the joint area which Gulf had already developed. And shortly thereafter the plaintiffs filed an ejectment proceeding in a Louisiana court 9 to evict Gulf from this acreage and other portions of the lease in suit, 10 including the joint area.. As to the water bottoms, 11 Gulf defends asserting a right to possession under the state lease. The controversy still pends. In still other proceedings in another state court, 12 the present plaintiffs sought to quiet their title as against a group of persons and corporations, referred to as the Perez Group, who claimed all of the acreage here involved under tax sales and had granted a mineral lease to Helis. In this they succeeded, obtaining a consent judgment recognizing their ownership in return for conceding their opponents small mineral royalties. 13 ****And, a month thereafter, on March 9, 1959, they filed *572 the instant suit. About, a week later, defendant tendered plaintiffs the royalties attributable to the landed portion of the lease within the joint area. 14 They were refused, as they • have been on the occasion of a more recent tender. And there the matter rests.

Under the uncontroverted facts, it is perfectly clear that Humble has in effect disclaimed all interest in those portions of the leased premises lying outside the joint area. It never received possession of one large area of water bottoms, Gulf having already developed the tract before the lease in suit was entered into. 15 Though defendant probably could have attempted to evict the state’s lessee, 16 so could the plaintiffs, and it was clearly their duty to do so 17 Other water bottoms were only developed by Gulf after Humble obtained its lease. 18 As to these it can be said that Humble abandoned the premises to the adverse possessor or, on the other hand, that plaintiffs failed to defend their lessee’s possession, as they should have. 19 But it does not matter who was right and who wrong. All areas presently under development by Gulf have, as a matter of fact, escaped from the lease. Equity requires that they be formally released to the plaintiffs free of the incumbrance. And since Humble obviously cannot fulfill its lease obligations with respect to these water bottoms within the foreseeable future, there is no reason to delay the declaration of a release.

The situation is a little different, however, with respect to those portions of the leasehold outside the joint area which no one has developed. These are primarily two non-contiguous tracts, one of which includes part of an island undisputedly owned by the plaintiffs. 20 They are unproven areas. Indeed, there is no evidence whatever that prudent development of the lease would require drilling there at this time, and no witness was produced to say that he would drill. 21 Nevertheless, under the now settled jurisprudence of Louisiana, Humble has an obligation to explore within a reasonable time or suffer a partial cancellation of its lease. 22 Normally that penalty would be assessed without fur *573 ther ado in view of the long delay since the expiration of the primary term and demand.

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Bluebook (online)
202 F. Supp. 568, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 1160, 1962 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cutrer-v-humble-oil-refining-company-laed-1962.