D'Lo Royalties, Inc. v. Shell Oil Company

389 F. Supp. 538, 51 Oil & Gas Rep. 43, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13704
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 21, 1975
DocketCiv. A. 72J-35(R)
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 389 F. Supp. 538 (D'Lo Royalties, Inc. v. Shell Oil Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Lo Royalties, Inc. v. Shell Oil Company, 389 F. Supp. 538, 51 Oil & Gas Rep. 43, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13704 (S.D. Miss. 1975).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

DAN M. RUSSELL, Jr., Chief Judge.

Plaintiff, D’Lo Royalties, Inc., a Jackson, Mississippi corporation, brought this diversity of citizenship action against Shell Oil Company, organized and existing under the laws of Delaware, seeking to cancel certain oil, gas and mineral leases, which plaintiff claims expired prior to the time the defendant commenced operations toward the drilling of a test well on the leased premises. Plaintiff claims that the defendant drilled a well, after the expiration of all four leases, on acreage covered by one of the leases resulting in a dry hole, and that defendant’s entry constituted a wrongful ouster of plaintiff and a trespass which has condemned the minerals owned by plaintiff in the remaining leased premises. Plaintiff seeks damages equal to the market value of the alleged condemned minerals.

Defendant, Shell Oil Company, in its response, averred that, on and before the expiration date, it had in fact and in good faith commenced operations toward the drilling of a test well on a portion of the leased premises and that said well, D’Lo No. 1, was subsequently drilled in accordance with the provisions of said leases. By way of further answer defendant claimed that it duly tendered delay rentals provided for under the leases; that plaintiff accepted same and only undertook to return same prior to filing suit and that plaintiff is now es-topped to question the validity of the leases.

Prior to trial plaintiff set forth in a pre-trial order a summary of facts claimed by it as follows:

“Although on March 14, 1969, some preliminary activities, which plaintiff contends were not diligently pursued, had taken place concerning the preparation of the location for the drilling of a test well in Section 27, Township 4 North, Range 3 East, Rankin County, Mississippi, which was covered by plaintiff’s leases to defendant, no drilling rig was located on the premises as of March 14, 1969. On March 28, 1969, the Board of Directors of plaintiff contacted Mr. John C. Marshall, Onshore Division Land Manager for defendant, concerning the defendant’s intentions at that time to drill the test well as called for by the leases. Prior to talking to Mr. Marshall, the Board of Directors of plaintiff had contacted Mr. Herman Bridges, *540 an employee of defendant, and asked him what defendant’s intentions were as to the drilling of a test well to the required depth. He replied he did not have authority to provide an answer to plaintiff but would put them in touch with Mr. Marshall who did have such authority. Mr. Marshall’s reply was that at that time not even the President of Shell Oil Company could answer the question posed by the plaintiff’s Directors and until the Garrett Well, located on Section 28, had been tested, no one in defendant’s organization could say whether the well required under plaintiff’s leases to defendant would be drilled. Mr. Marshall further stated that if the Garrett Well tested as high as 75% CO 2 then a well on plaintiff’s property would not be drilled. Upon receiving this information, plaintiff informed defendant that it considered the leases terminated for failure to comply with the drilling provisions contained therein. Plaintiff contends that defendant as of March 14, 1969, did not have an unconditional and unqualified intent to drill the well called for by the lease contract and, as a result, none of defendant’s preparatory activities prior to March 14, 1969, served to keep the leases in full force and effect. Plaintiff contends that it was not until after the Garrett Well was tested and determined to be commercially ' productive did defendant form the requisite intent to comply with its contract as evidenced by, among other facts, that it was not until after the Garrett Well was tested that defendant approved an AFE for the expenditure of funds, applied for and received a permit to drill the well from the Oil and Gas Board, set conductor pipe, or entered into valid, binding contracts for the drilling of the well. Defendant, after notice from plaintiff that the lease had expired, drilled a well on lands covered by the four leases which was dry and, as a result thereof, condemned the minerals under the lands covered by Exhibits ‘B’, ‘C’, and ‘D’ to the complaint.
As to the lands covered by Exhibit ‘A’ to the complaint, the plaintiff further contends that a portion of the lands covered thereby were included in the unit for the Shell-Burch No. 1, which was shut in on November 9, 1971. Under the terms and provisions of Exhibit ‘A’, shut-in royalty payments were due as to the acreage included in the Burch Unit within ninety days of the shutting in of the unit well. The shut-in payment was made by defendant to plaintiff on April 27, 1972, which is in excess of 90 days from the date of shut-in.”

The defendant summed up its side of the case as follows:

“The four Leases provided that within one year from their date Shell would commence ‘ . . . operations toward the drilling of a test well . ’ Prior to March 14, 1969, Shell commenced reasonable, necessary and good faith operations toward the drilling of the test well. The result of these operations was that before March 14, 1969, the well location had been determined and staked, a site contractor had been engaged by Shell, a right-of-way had been cleared for the road which was to connect the well location to the existing public road, construction of the roadbed had begun, and clearing of the location site and pit areas was underway. All of this work was known by D’Lo to be required as a basis for and in advance of the actual drilling.
Officers of D’Lo observed the road and well location construction on March 14, 1969, and thereafter, but in late March 1969, having seen no rig at the site, D’Lo inquired of Shell’s Land Division as to whether the operations then in progress would continue. Although at that time the operations toward drilling were being handled by Shell’s Production Division subject to the direct control of the General Manager, Shell’s Land Division Manager *541 informed D’Lo that while Shell was proceeding with operations toward the drilling of a test well, no particular representative of Shell could assure D’Lo that Shell would continue drilling operations to a depth of 17,000 feet, or to a depth sufficient to reach the Jurassic, if at some later date Shell should find it to be impossible or impractical to continue the drilling operation. The substance of the conversation was that Shell was then doing everything possible toward commencement of actual drilling and intended to continue, although he could not personally assure D’Lo that Shell’s management might later find it necessary to abandon drilling operations.
Officers of D’Lo made additional visits to the well site and found no indication at any time that the operations were being abandoned. In fact, in March 1969 Shell completed the construction of the roadbed, laid a board road, constructed a reserve pit and a fresh water pit and levelled the location and provided necessary drainage. In early April 1969, Shell secured a drilling permit from the State Oil and Gas Board (which routinely was applied for and granted following necessary pre-drilling activity), a rig mat and turn-around area were constructed, the surface conductor pipe was set, the water well was drilled and an initial rig was moved in. The well was spudded April 21,1969.

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Bluebook (online)
389 F. Supp. 538, 51 Oil & Gas Rep. 43, 1975 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 13704, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dlo-royalties-inc-v-shell-oil-company-mssd-1975.