Dobbins v. Hodges

23 So. 2d 26, 208 La. 143, 1945 La. LEXIS 855
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedApril 30, 1945
DocketNo. 37611.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 23 So. 2d 26 (Dobbins v. Hodges) 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
Dobbins v. Hodges, 23 So. 2d 26, 208 La. 143, 1945 La. LEXIS 855 (La. 1945).

Opinion

PONDER, Justice.

The three suits involved herein' were consolidated for the purpose of trial. The plaintiffs, the landowners,' instituted slander of title suits against the various defendants, asking for the cancellation of certain mineral deeds which they allege are prescribed by the non-use of the servD tudes over a period of ten years. The defendants rely on a certain contract-of lease dated November 14, 1931. They contend that the contract is a community lease, land that the mineral and royalty interests can *147 not prescribe as long as there is production from any portion of the leased premises.

In Suit No. 16,881 of the docket of the lower court, the plaintiff landowner, W. Morphis Dobbins, seeks to have cancelled and erased from the records a certain mineral deed dated November 14, 1924 wherein Mrs. H. E. and W. T. Dobbins conveyed to the defendant, W. H. Hodges, Jr., one-half of the minerals in and under certain lands insofar as it affects the S% of the NE% of the NW% of Section 12, Township 19 North, Range 6 West in Claiborne Parish.

In Suit No. 16,882 of the docket of the lower court, the plaintiffs and landowners, W. Morphis Dobbins, individually and as tutor of the minors, Opal Erline, Chloie Mildred and Loy Henderson Dobbins, seek to have cancelled and erased from the records a certain mineral deed dated October 2, 1924 wherein W. T. and W. M. Dobbins conveyed to the defendant, W. H. Hodges, Jr., one-half of the minerals in and under the following lands situated in Claiborne Parish: the W% of the SW% of Section 1, and the NW% of the NW% of Section 12, and one-half acre off the north end of the SW% of the NW% of Section 12, all in Township 19 North, Range 6 West. They also seek to have cancelled and erased a certain mineral deed wherein W. H. Plodges, Jr., the defendant, sold to O’Brien Brothers, Inc. a portion of his mineral interest in this property.

In Suit No. 16,884 of the docket of the lower court, the plaintiffs and landowners, W. Morphis Dobbins, individually and as tutor of the minors, Opal Erline, Chloie Mildred and Loy Henderson Dobbins, seek to have a mineral deed executed by. W. T. and W. M. Dobbins to Wm. H. Cook on October 17, 1924 conveying one-fourth of the minerals in and under the NW% of the SWJ4 of Section 1, Township 19 North, Range 6 West, cancelled and erased from the records of Claiborne Parish. They also seek to have cancelled and erased from the records two certain deeds whereby the defendant Cook subsequently transferred a one-sixteenth interest of the mineral rights to T. G. Hibbler.

Since the institution of suits 16,881 and 16,882 of the docket of the lower court, W. H. Hodges, Jr., has died, and his heirs have been substituted in his place.

All three suits are based on the ground that the servitudes have prescribed because of non-use during the ten-year prescriptive period.

The defendants rely on a certain lease dated November 14, 1931 as a defense to all three suits. They take the position that the landowners,. having joined with the mineral owners in a community lease, are bound by the terms of the lease contract.

Upon trial of these suits, the lower court gave judgment ordering the cancellation of the mineral deeds from the records of Claiborne Parish as prayed for by the plaintiffs. The defendants have appealed.

The defendants take the position that the judgment of the lower court failed to give effect to the community lease.

The servitudes involved in these suits are contiguous and embrace an area of 140% acres of land which we shall hereinafter refer to as the West 140% acres. *149 The land and mineral owners of this 140% acres of land joined in. a contract on November 14, 1931 with the land and mineral owners of another tract of land, containing 140 acres, hereinafter referred to as the East 140 acres, wherein all of the outstanding leases on the entire 280% acres were consolidated and leased to the Standard Oil Company of Louisiana, United Gas Public Service Company, and the Sugar Creek Syndicate, Inc. This contract was signed by the lessees and all of the land and mineral owners, except O’Brien Brothers, Inc., on the day it was executed.

The contract provides that all parties desire to consolidate and pool the leases covering all of the property. It is agreed therein that the oil and gas royalties of the mineral owners accruing under all leases are pooled for the life of the leases and no longer to the same extent as if the mineral owners were each the owner of an undivided interest in the minerals in the proportion which the interest of each bears to the whole 280% acres of land. It is provided that the lessees are authorized to distribute the royalties according to the division of interests set forth in Schedule A attached to the contract. Schedule A provides for distribution of royalties among the lessors and mineral owners in proportion to the mineral interest that each bears to the 280% acres of land. It is provided that, for the purpose of development of the property all the leases shall be considered as forming one lease covering the entire tract of land, and any and all wells drilled on any part or portion of the property shall be considered as being drilled under all of the leases. It is stated in the comract that it is executed in consideration of the advantages accruing to the parties by clarifying the provisions of the pooled leases with reference to the payment of royalties and in consideration of the obligation of the lessees to commence drilling operations on or before November 15, 1931 and to continue such operations until the Sugar Creek producing horizon is reached. It is further provided that the terms and provisions of this contract shall be irrevocable as long as the pooled leases as modified by this agreement shall remain in force and effect.

After this agreement was entered into, the lessees completed a producing well on January 3, 1932 which is still in operation. This well is situated on the East 140 aGres of land. The East 140 acres of land are not contiguous to the West 140% acres but merely connect at a corner.

During the spring of 1942, a producing well was brought in on the West 140% acres. Another producing well was brought in on this tract of land during the month of September, 1942. The present suits were instituted thereafter on November 24, 1942.

In the case of Robinson v. Horton, 197 La. 919, 2 So.2d 647, we had occasion to pass on a contract similar to the one involved herein and arrived at the conclusion that, where the land and mineral owners entered into a contract unitizing and integrating their mineral interests by creating one whole lease in favor of a lessee for the purpose of developing the property and dividing the royalties in proportion to the interest that each bore to the entire *151 acreage covered by the contract, the law of contract governs, and that as long as the lease is kept alive under the terms of the contract the royalties would not prescribe.

The lessees complied with the provisions 'of the contract by drilling a well on the leased premises.

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Bluebook (online)
23 So. 2d 26, 208 La. 143, 1945 La. LEXIS 855, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dobbins-v-hodges-la-1945.