Davis v. Ross Production Co.

910 S.W.2d 209, 322 Ark. 532, 1995 Ark. LEXIS 678
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedNovember 20, 1995
Docket95-479
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 910 S.W.2d 209 (Davis v. Ross Production Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. Ross Production Co., 910 S.W.2d 209, 322 Ark. 532, 1995 Ark. LEXIS 678 (Ark. 1995).

Opinion

Tom Glaze, Justice.

This case involves partial cancellation of an oil and gas lease. On January 20, 1979, Butler-Johnson, Inc., obtained oil and gas leases in lands located in Miller County and described as follows:

Township 17 South. Range 28 West
Section 24:
The East Half of the Southeast Quarter (E 1/2 SE 14) and the Southeast Quarter of the Northeast Quarter (SE 1/4 NE 1/4) and comprising in the aggregate 120 acres, more or less[.]

The lands described above are known as the Fouke B Lease and are comprised of three quarter-quarter sections of forty acres each. Subsequently, Butler-Johnson assigned its interest in the Fouke B Lease to appellee Ross Production Company. Additionally, Ross Production acquired leases in contiguous lands known as the Fouke Estate Lease. Together, the Fouke Estate Lease and the Fouke B Lease comprised 600 acres of Section 24. 1 The oil and gas in the lands covered by the Fouke Estate Lease and the Fouke B Lease are owned by the same lessors whose respective undivided interests are the same proportions throughout the entire leased premises. However, only the Fouke B Lease is at issue here.

Subsequent to obtaining the assignment, Ross Production drilled three wells under the Fouke B Lease on each of the three governmental quarter-quarter sections. In April 1982, Ross Production drilled the B-l well in the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter (SE 1/4 SE 1/4). Because the well was not commercially productive, the B-l well was plugged and abandoned that same month as required by the Arkansas Oil & Gas Commission. On November 13, 1982, Ross Production completed the B-2 well which was a commercial producer of oil and which continues to produce. The B-2 well is located in the northeast quarter of the southeast quarter (NE 1/4 SE 1/4), and drains the Paluxy Formation. Lastly, Ross drilled the B-3 well in the Southeast quarter of the northeast quarter (SE 1/4 NE 1/4). This third well was not commercially productive and was abandoned in December 1984. Following the completion of the producing B-2 well in 1982, Ross Production applied to the Commission pursuant to regulations for the establishment of field rules applicable to the Paluxy Formation. After a public hearing on August 24,1982, the rules promulgated provided that areas contiguous with the south half of Section 24 overlying the Paluxy Formation are designated as the Boggy Creek Field, and established that forty-acre drilling units be comprised of governmental quarter-quarter sections for wells completed within the Paluxy Formation. Further, the rules provided that wells be located at no less than 280 feet from the boundary lines of each unit.

Ross Production drilled a total of twelve wells within the Boggy Creek Field. Eight of the twelve wells were on lands held under both the Fouke Estate Lease and the Fouke B Lease. Five of those were dry wells and the remaining three were completed as commercially productive. After the B-3 well was plugged and abandoned on December 6, 1984, Ross Production did no further drilling or exploration on those three forty-acre units of Section 24 under the Fouke B Lease.

In October of 1992, appellant Mike Davis acquired top leases 2 on the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of Section 24 (SE 1/4 SE 1/4). This is the same forty-acre unit under the Fouke B Lease in which Ross Production drilled and abandoned the B-l well in April 1982. This unit, hereinafter described as the B-l unit, is included in the Boggy Creek Field.

By letter dated January 18, 1994, Ross Production demanded Davis release his 1992 top leases. In response, Davis demanded Ross Production release the B-l unit from the 1979 Fouke B Lease, based on Ross Production holding the B-l unit for eleven years without further development and production. On May 12, 1994, Ross Production and Davis filed separate applications with the Commission for authority to drill a well at the same location on the B-l unit. That proposed drilling location is as close as the field rules allow to the B-2 well and the Fouke Estate No. 2 well, both of which are producing. If drilled as proposed, the new well would be located 560 feet from each of two producing wells owned by Ross Production. The Commission denied both requests pending a legal determination of which party had the right to drill and develop the B-1 unit.

On May 2, Ross Production filed a petition to remove the cloud on its leasehold and quiet title under the 1979 Fouke B Lease on behalf of itself and other owners of working interests in the Fouke B Lease, and to cancel Davis’s top leases on the B-1 unit. Davis answered pleading the affirmative defense of breach of covenants under the original oil and gas leases. Davis counterclaimed seeking cancellation of that portion of the 1979 Fouke B Lease on the B-l unit, and requested quiet title in him through his top leases for the B-l unit. Other procedural orders were entered which are not at issue here.

Following trial on the merits, the chancellor held as a matter of law the following:

The fact that [Ross Production] did not additionally explore or develop the [B-l unit] for the twelve year period that commenced with the plugging and abandonment of the Fouke Estate B-l well (April 1982) is not legally significant.

The chancellor found Ross Production began to explore or develop the B-l unit only when it learned Davis had obtained top leases on the B-l unit, and was prepared to submit to the Commission a request for permission to drill. Nonetheless, the chancellor concluded that Ross Production held the Fouke B Lease by having drilled a well on each of the three units under the lease. The chancellor also held Ross Production did not have a continuing duty to further develop the B-l unit from April 1982 through to the present. Lastly, the chancellor held as follows:

This court on the record before it does not find that the act of [Ross Production] in deferring drilling operations until such time as the price of crude oil would increase for the benefit of both the lessors and the lessee particularly when the minerals were owned in the same proportions by the owners under the entire leased premises and that not even the slightest indication has been made that drainage has occurred or that the lessors have sustained any economic loss except for the fact that a successful well within the [B-l unit] would have returned royalties to the mineral owners more quickly or at an earlier date.

In so holding, the chancellor quieted title to the leasehold on the B-l unit in Ross Production, canceled Davis’s top leases to the B-l unit, and dismissed Davis’s counterclaim with prejudice.

Davis raises the following points for reversal: (1) the chancellor erred in holding that Ross Production’s failure to develop the B-l unit for twelve years was legally insignificant; (2) the chancellor erred in holding that Ross Production had no duty to further develop the B-l unit from April 1982 to January 1995; and (31 the chancellor erred in finding that the lessors suffered no economic loss from Ross Production’s inactivity.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
910 S.W.2d 209, 322 Ark. 532, 1995 Ark. LEXIS 678, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-ross-production-co-ark-1995.