Davis v. Laster

138 So. 2d 558, 242 La. 735, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 93, 96 A.L.R. 2d 332, 1962 La. LEXIS 489
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedFebruary 19, 1962
Docket45739
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 138 So. 2d 558 (Davis v. Laster) 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
Davis v. Laster, 138 So. 2d 558, 242 La. 735, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 93, 96 A.L.R. 2d 332, 1962 La. LEXIS 489 (La. 1962).

Opinion

SUMMERS, Justice.

Plaintiff lessor sued to cancel an oil, gas and mineral lease. The Trial Court rejected this claim. The Court of Appeal reversed the Trial Court and ordered cancellation of the lease. Certiorari was granted upon the application of defendant lessees to review the judgment of the Court of Appeal. (See 130 So.2d 479)

On January 16, 1947, Elizabeth W. Pegues and Boykin W. Pegues, as lessors, executed an oil, gas and mineral lease to Fred L. Kyle, as lessee, affecting 772 acres of land owned by them in DeSoto Parish, Louisiana. The lease provided for a primary term of ten years.

The mineral lease was thereafter acquired by defendants, E. C. Laster and Mrs. Eugenia F. Laster, insofar as it covered 480 acres thereof, including the land here involved.

In September 1948, the defendant lessees drilled a well on the leased premises in the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 34, Township 15 North, Range 14 West, which was completed as a gas well capable of producing in paying quantities between five and six million cubic feet of gas daily on open flow potential tests, according to tests made by a representative of the Commissioner of Conservation and a representative of lessees. The well, known as Pegues No. 1 Well, having been completed and potential tests having been made, was shut in for lack of a market for the gas. This well was then the only well producing gas in the area, and no purchaser of gas would undertake the expense of laying a line to receive and market the production from this well alone. Some gas was produced from the well for use in drilling operations in the vicinity of lands other than the leased premises.

Lessees had drilled two wells in the area prior to drilling the Pegues No. 1 Well. After completing the Pegues No. 1 Well they drilled nine more wells in the area of, but not on, the leased premises in an effort to find additional gas production which would warrant the laying of a pipeline into the area to market the gas. However, these wells drilled by lessees were all nonproductive.

The cost incurred in drilling the Pegues No. 1 Well was $89,736.59. Subsequent to the drilling of the Pegues No. 1 Well, in their effort to find additional gas production in the area, the lessees expended $304,117.-78 more in the drilling of nine dry holes. Sinclair Oil and Refining Company, however, did find gas production in two of the seven wells they drilled on their own leases in the area, and lessees joined with the *741 operator of these Sinclair wells and thereby secured a gas line connection to the wells. This line was being laid when this suit was filed in February 1958.

Lessees, with a delivery line available, contracted to sell gas from the Pegues No. 1 Well to Arkansas-Louisiana Gas Company, and the well was given a daily allowable of one million cubic feet per day. Commencing May 13, 1958, after the suit was filed, the well began deliveries of gas, and, through January 1960 has produced 419,-519 MCF of gas with a net %ths value of $44,080.91, and 2,690.69 barrels of condensate with an %ths value of $7,264.88.

In the course of these events, on January 16, 1952, lessees had released and relinquished their rights in the mineral lease except insofar as it affected 180 acres consisting of the West Half of the Northeast Quarter, the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 34, and the Southwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter, and the South Half of the Northwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 27, all in Township 15 North, Range 14 West.

Elizabeth W. Pegues having died on December 21, 1949, Boykin W. Pegues was recognized as her universal legatee and sole heir. On September 8, 1955, he sold the entire Pegues tract, including the 180 acres affected by the lease which lessees had not relinquished, to Riemer Calhoun subject to a prior sale of one-fourth of the minerals therein to S. E. Lyons, and reserving an additional three-eighths of the mineral rights to himself. On September 13, 1955, Riemer Calhoun sold the tract to the plaintiff, Jackson B. Davis, who thereby became the owner of three-eighths of the mineral rights in the 180 acres of land which lessees.contend is still subject to the mineral lease.

Early in 1958, prior to the filing of this suit, defendants applied to the Louisiana Commissioner of Conservation for the designation of a producing unit for the Pegues No. 1 Well; and, after the hearing, the Commissioner issued an appropriate order dated April 22, 1958, effective May 1, 1958, designating a 360-acre unit for said well composed of the Northwest Quarter, the West Half of the Northeast Quarter, the North Half of the Southwest Quarter, and the Northwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 34. This unit included the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter, and the West Half of the Northeast Quarter of Section 34, which is described in the contested mineral lease.

Upon the completion of the Pegues No. 1 Well, and having shut it in in 1948, as aforesaid, the defendant lessees continued to pay the annual delay rentals stipulated in the lease. After the 1952 release of the lease as to all but the 180 acres, these rental payments were made to cover the 180 acres retained under the lease. These annual rental payments, each in the total amount of $180.00, were made to cover each annual *743 ■period of the lease until the expiration of the primary term on January 16, 1957, and were accepted by the lessors, including plaintiff herein.

Prior to expiration of the primary term of the lease, defendant lessees tendered their check dated December 28, 1956, in the sum of $18.75, to plaintiff lessor in payment of plaintiff’s three-eighths portion of the $50.-00 per year shut-in royalty, as stipulated in Article 3(c) of the lease, for the period commencing with the expiration of the primary term on January 16, 1957, to January 16, 1958. Plaintiff lessor refused to accept this tendered payment, and by letter dated October 30, 1957, demanded of the lessees a release of the mineral lease. Prior to January 16, 1958, by check dated January 2, 1958, lessees tendered to plaintiff lessor the same sum in payment of shut-in royalty for the period January 16, 1958, to January 16, 1959. As stated before, actual production of gas from the well commenced on May 13, 1958. Plaintiff lessor, maintaining that the lease expired at the end of the primary term, has refused to accept the shut-in royalty or production royalty as stipulated in the lease, and here sues for its cancellation. Defendant lessee, E. C. Laster, died after this suit was filed, and Mrs. Eugenia F. Laster, as the Testamentary Executrix of his Succession, was substituted as a defendant for him.

The issue for decision thus presented is whether or not the oil, gas and mineral lease granted by Elizabeth W. Pegues and Boykin W. Pegues, as lessors, on January 16, 1947, and held by the defendants, as lessees, is still in force and effect as to the three-eighths (¡Hjths) mineral ownership of the plaintiff in the West Half of the Northeast Quarter and the Southeast Quarter of the Northwest Quarter of Section 34, and the Southwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter and the South Half of the Northwest Quarter of the Southeast Quarter of Section 27, all in Township 15 North, Range 14 West, DeSoto Parish, Louisiana.

The pertinent articles of the lease are:

“2.

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Bluebook (online)
138 So. 2d 558, 242 La. 735, 16 Oil & Gas Rep. 93, 96 A.L.R. 2d 332, 1962 La. LEXIS 489, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-laster-la-1962.