Delta Drilling Co. v. Oil Finance Corporation

196 So. 914, 195 La. 407, 1940 La. LEXIS 1085
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMay 27, 1940
DocketNo. 35634.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 196 So. 914 (Delta Drilling Co. v. Oil Finance Corporation) 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
Delta Drilling Co. v. Oil Finance Corporation, 196 So. 914, 195 La. 407, 1940 La. LEXIS 1085 (La. 1940).

Opinion

HIGGINS, Justice.

The Delta Drilling Company, the owner of an undivided one-half interest in an oil, gas and mineral lease covering lots 13, 14 and 15 of Block 13 of the Town of Rodessa, Caddo Parish, Louisiana, petitioned the court for a partition by licitation of the lease, there being one producing well on the property developed thereunder.

*410 The defendants, the Oil Finance Corporation and the J. Edward Jones Petroleum Corporation, owners of an undivided five-sixteenths interest and an undivided one-tenth interest, respectively, in the lease, filed a plea of estoppel based upon a contract entered into between ' the Delta Drilling Company and the J. Edward Jones Petroleum Corporation, dated December 28, 1935, at which time the Jones Petroleum Corporation owned an undivided one-half interest in the lease in question, under the terms of which agreement the Jones Petroleum Corporation advanced the Delta Drilling Company the sum of $32,500, for the drilling of the well, which is now producing, the Delta Company obligating itself .to drill the well and in the event it proved to be successful to have the complete and exclusive right to operate it.

Under this plea, the defendants contend that the contract in question is an executory one, requiring the Delta Drilling Company to operate the well, and that to allow a partition of the lease would be in effect permitting the Delta Drilling Company to escape its obligations, which it cannot otherwise do, without being liable in damages to the defendants; and that the contract in question is an agreement not to partition the lease until all of the oil or gas that may be produced thereunder shall have been produced and sold and the proceeds divided.

Counsel for the plaintiff argue that the document upon which the plea of estoppel is based is a mere agreement for the operation of the-well and neither contains. a provision that there shall not be a partition of the lease nor that the parties will hold the property in common or in indivisión for a certain limited time and, therefore, under Article 1289 of the Revised Civil Code, the plaintiff is entitled to have a partition by licitation of the lease.

There was judgment in the district court sustaining the plea of estoppel and the plaintiff has appealed.

The record shows that the Delta Drilling Company and the J. Edward Jones Petroleum Corporation owned an undivided one-half interest each in the oil, gas and mineral lease executed in their favor by John F. Nugent and others- on December 16, 1935. On December 28, 1935, these parties litigant entered into a written contract under which the Delta Drilling Company agreed to drill a well on the land covered by the lease and the Jones Petroleum Corporation bound itself to pay the Drilling Company the sum of $32,500 therefor. In the second paragraph of the agreement it is stipulated that the ownership of the well was to be vested equally in the parties. The contract further provided that the Delta Drilling Company would have complete charge of the operation of the well, and in accordance therewith, since its completion two and one-half years ago, it has continued to have complete and exclusive charge of the operations of the producing well. It was also stipulated that the costs of operating the well were to be borne equally.

Oh April 27, 1936, the Oil Finance Corporation. acquired its five-sixteenths in *412 terest by assignment from J. Edward Jones Petroleum Corporation subject to the reversion of this interest to the, J. Edward Jones Petroleum Corporation, after 125,000 barrels of oil were produced.

Article 1297 of the Revised Civil Code reads, as follows: “It can not be stipulated that there never shall be a partition of a succession or of a thing held in common. Such a stipulation would be null and of no effect.”

Article 1298 reads: “Nevertheless, the coheirs can agree that there shall not be a partition of the effects of the succession for a certain limited time, and such an agreement will be valid; but it will be assimilated in this case to a contract of partnership between the heirs, and subject to the same rules.”

We have examined the contract of operation, upon which the defendants solely rely, and there is neither a provision therein that there should be no partition of the lease nor any stipulation as t'o the time during which the parties would own the lease or the well in indivisión.

In the case of Connette v. Wright, 149 La. 478, 89 So. 626, 627, the plaintiff instituted suit against the defendant for a partition by licitation of oil and gas leases held in common with the defendant in the proportion of an undivided nine-tenths and one-tenth interest, respectively. Defendant pleaded estoppel, contending that it was not contemplated by the parties that there should be a partition of the leases between them as long as oil was produced from the property covered by the leases and that if a partition by licitation were permitted, the defendant would suffer a great hardship, as he would be forced to sacrifice his interest in the leases and the wells, and that this would be a violation of the purpose and object for which the parties acquired the oil and gas leases. In overruling the plea of estoppel, the court stated:

“Plaintiff alleges and defendant admits that they hold the described property in common, and the law declares that, unless the contrary has been agreed, any one so situated may demand that a division of the ownership be effected by'the action of partition. Plaintiff has brought that action. Has defendant alleged any agreement that there should be no partition, or no partition until all the oil or gas that may be produced under the leases in question shall have been produced and sold and the proceeds divided? We do not find it so. The allegations of the answer, as we interpret them, mean that it was defendant’s idea, or, at most, the idea of both plaintiff and defendant, in acquiring the undivided ownership of the leases in question, that they should share the proceeds of the sale of whatever oil and gas might be found, in the proportions of their respective interests in the leases, so long as they continued to occupy the relations of owners in indivisión. Such an idea, if not understanding, might perhaps be presumed as a natural and legal result of the establishment of such relation; but it cannot be deduced therefrom that either of them intended to deprive himself of the right to terminate that relation whenever he should find it to his interest to do so.They must be presumed to have known *414 that, under the law, neither of them could be compelled to hold the leases in common, even though they had so acquired them, unless it was so specifically agreed and, as we have stated, no such agreement is alleged, nor is anything alleged from which an agreement might be inferred. We therefore conclude that plaintiff is entitled to a partition.

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196 So. 914, 195 La. 407, 1940 La. LEXIS 1085, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delta-drilling-co-v-oil-finance-corporation-la-1940.