Dishman v. Union Oil Co.

302 P.2d 326, 145 Cal. App. 2d 261, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 1005, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1330
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 23, 1956
DocketCiv. 21537
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 302 P.2d 326 (Dishman v. Union Oil Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dishman v. Union Oil Co., 302 P.2d 326, 145 Cal. App. 2d 261, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 1005, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1330 (Cal. Ct. App. 1956).

Opinion

DORAN, J.

The present action for declaratory relief was brought to secure a determination of the proportion or percentage of certain sums of money impounded by the respondent Union Oil Company, resulting from oil drilling operations and allocable under contract to Lot 82, La Habra Heights Tract. The defendants Roche, as joint tenants, own a portion of Lot 82, and the plaintiffs Dishman, as joint tenants, own- the remaining portion of said lot. Both the plaintiffs Dishman and the defendants Roche have appealed from the judgment.

In March, 1904, .the Rudisills, owning several thousand acres of land, granted to the Union Oil Company the oil, gas and similar items in the lands which included Lot 82 here involved. In 1940 Union determined to explore the area for oil, and as stated in the trial court’s memorandum, 11 concluded that it was advisable to enter into a contract with all the surface owners whereby they would as a unit participate to the extent of 10% of the net proceeds in any wells drilled by it in the entire large unit parcel.” On April 1, 1940, Union entered into such an agreement with surface owners including La Habra Heights Company, the then owner of part of the lands formerly owned by the Rudisills, including Lot 82. The purpose of this agreement, as found by the trial court was “to gain and maintain the cooperation and good will of the owners, and their successors in interest, of the surface rights of the real property described.”

The agreement provided that each month or period: not exceeding three months, Union would ‘‘set aside ... a sum equal to ten per cent (10%) of the value of all oil produced, saved and removed” from the area. This sum was to be paid by Union ‘‘to each signatory Owner of lands . . . subject to this agreement, in the same proportion. for each such *263 Owner as the assessed value of his holding (land and improvements thereon), subject to this agreement, bears to the total assessed value of all of the lands (and improvements thereon) then subject to this agreement, as shown by the Los Angeles County assessment roll for the fiscal tax year immediately preceding the date upon which Union may have started drilling operations . . . , which assessment roll is hereby fixed as the final criterion of proportionate values hereunder.” The assessed valuation for 1943-44 as to Lot 82 was: Land $790, Improvements $2,080 (buildings) and $250 (trees), —a total of $3,120.

It is provided in said agreement that “The right to receive payments . . . shall at all times be and. remain appurtenant to the lands in respect .to which such payments accrue and shall be and remain inseparable from the ownership of such lands. Any attempt to separate such rights and ownership, respectively, shall be without effect hereunder and shall not be binding upon Union.”

As stated in plaintiff-appellants’ brief, “Mr. and Mrs. Cole became the owners of Lot 82. The property had a very steep hill. . . . He decided to sell off this unimproved portion keeping the improved portion himself and he did so by deed dated November 21, 1944, to a Miss Deekert. By mesne conveyances this portion, deeded to Miss Deekert, became owned bydefendants Roche by deed dated January 21,1948. Mr. and Mrs. Cole retained ownership of the improved portion of Lot 82 until March 21, 1948, on which date they conveyed the same to plaintiffs Dishman. Plaintiffs Dishman paid $27,000 for this portion of Lot 82 and the defendants Roche paid $8,500 for their portion of said Lot.”

The trial court found that on the basis of acreage, the defendants Roche own 58.24 per cent of Lot 82 and the plaintiffs Dishman own 41.76 per cent, ,and in accordance with these percentages directed that division be made of the sums due Lot .82. It is plaintiffs’ contention that apportionment should be made not according to acreage but according to value. The value of the portion of Lot 82 owned by the Dishmans including the residence thereon was stipulated to be 74.235 per cent and that of defendants Roche 25.765 per cent.

Section 1467 of the Civil Code provides that “Where several persons, holdings by several titles, are subject to the burden or entitled to the benefit of a covenant funning with the land, it must be apportioned among them according to the value *264 of the property subject to it held by them respectively, if such value can be ascertained, and if not, then according to their respective interests in point of quantity.”

It appears that section 1467 has never received judicial construction but the trial court in a memorandum ruling took the position that this section “should be construed, it having been enacted prior to a discovery of oil in America, as applying to agricultural and perhaps other lands, but not to oil lands. If however, the statute should be held applicable, it seems to me that the property subject to the covenant running with the land may be construed as referring in the case of oil lands, to the land acreage, without regard to the improvements thereon. If that may not be done, then of course my view is erroneous.”

In the cross-appeal of defendants Roche, “It is submitted that Defendant as the successor of Deckert is entitled to 100% of the rights of Lot 82 in the Union Oil-La Habra Agreement” for the reason that the Cole to Deckert deed “grants all of the interest of Cole to Deckert by a writing Avhieh this Court can give full force and effect.” This is based on the fact that Mr. and Mrs. Cole, owning all of Lot 82, in selling that portion to Deckert which now belongs to cross-appellants Roche, transferred to Deckert “that certain contract and agreement dated April 1, 1940, executed by the La Habra Heights Company and the Union Oil Company. . . .” It is the Roche claim that “This language is a grant of all of the Cole interest” in the agreement, and that therefore the Dishmans have no right to receive any of the money allocated to Lot 82 under the agreement. The trial court quite properly refused to accept this view and, as hereinbefore noted, apportioned the funds on the basis of acreage owned by the respective parties. However, as will hereafter appear, the mode of apportionment on the basis of acreage, is deemed incorrect.

“The position of defendant-respondent Union Oil Company of California (not an appellant herein) is essentially one of neutrality,” as stated in Union’s brief. Attention is, however, therein called to the fact that the agreement “does not transfer any interest in the oil whatsoever,” and Union requests that therefore “this money payment be referred to as a payment and not as royalty or rent.”

The instant appeals present no serious controversy in respect to material facts, and the single point of law requiring attention relates to the mode of distribution of payments allocated to Lot 82, now owned in part by plaintiffs Dishman *265 and in part by the defendants Roche. As hereinbefore indicated, the cross-appellants’ claim that the Dishmans are entitled to no part of the Union payments and that the Roches are entitled to 100 per cent thereof, is untenable and cannot be sustained. To hold otherwise would be to adopt a forced and unnatural interpretation of the language used in the deed from the Coles to Deckert.

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Bluebook (online)
302 P.2d 326, 145 Cal. App. 2d 261, 6 Oil & Gas Rep. 1005, 1956 Cal. App. LEXIS 1330, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dishman-v-union-oil-co-calctapp-1956.